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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Michael Strogoff, by Jules Verne
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+Michael Strogoff
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+by Jules Verne
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+August, 1999 [Etext #1842]
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+
+
+Michael Strogoff
+
+or
+
+The Courier of the Czar
+
+by Jules Verne
+
+
+
+Michael Strogoff
+
+BOOK I
+
+CHAPTER I
+A FETE AT THE NEW PALACE
+
+SIRE, a fresh dispatch."
+
+"Whence?"
+
+"From Tomsk?"
+
+"Is the wire cut beyond that city?"
+
+"Yes, sire, since yesterday."
+
+"Telegraph hourly to Tomsk, General, and
+keep me informed of all that occurs."
+
+"Sire, it shall be done," answered General Kissoff.
+
+These words were exchanged about two hours after mid-
+night, at the moment when the fete given at the New Palace
+was at the height of its splendor.
+
+During the whole evening the bands of the Preobra-
+jensky and Paulowsky regiments had played without cessa-
+tion polkas, mazurkas, schottisches, and waltzes from among
+the choicest of their repertoires. Innumerable couples of
+dancers whirled through the magnificent saloons of the pal-
+ace, which stood at a few paces only from the "old house
+of stones" -- in former days the scene of so many terrible
+dramas, the echoes of whose walls were this night awakened
+by the gay strains of the musicians.
+
+The grand-chamberlain of the court, was, besides, well
+seconded in his arduous and delicate duties. The grand-
+dukes and their aides-de-camp, the chamberlains-in-waiting
+and other officers of the palace, presided personally in the
+arrangement of the dances. The grand duchesses, covered
+with diamonds, the ladies-in-waiting in their most exquisite
+costumes, set the example to the wives of the military and
+civil dignitaries of the ancient "city of white stone." When,
+therefore, the signal for the "polonaise" resounded through
+the saloons, and the guests of all ranks took part in that
+measured promenade, which on occasions of this kind has
+all the importance of a national dance, the mingled costumes,
+the sweeping robes adorned with lace, and uniforms covered
+with orders, presented a scene of dazzling splendor, lighted
+by hundreds of lusters multiplied tenfold by the numerous
+mirrors adorning the walls.
+
+The grand saloon, the finest of all those contained in the
+New Palace, formed to this procession of exalted person-
+ages and splendidly dressed women a frame worthy of the
+magnificence they displayed. The rich ceiling, with its gild-
+ing already softened by the touch of time, appeared as if
+glittering with stars. The embroidered drapery of the cur-
+tains and doors, falling in gorgeous folds, assumed rich and
+varied hues, broken by the shadows of the heavy masses of
+damask.
+
+Through the panes of the vast semicircular bay-windows
+the light, with which the saloons were filled, shone forth
+with the brilliancy of a conflagration, vividly illuminating
+the gloom in which for some hours the palace had been
+shrouded. The attention of those of the guests not taking
+part in the dancing was attracted by the contrast. Resting
+in the recesses of the windows, they could discern, standing
+out dimly in the darkness, the vague outlines of the count-
+less towers, domes, and spires which adorn the ancient city.
+Below the sculptured balconies were visible numerous sen-
+tries, pacing silently up and down, their rifles carried hori-
+zontally on the shoulder, and the spikes of their helmets
+glittering like flames in the glare of light issuing from the
+palace. The steps also of the patrols could be heard beat-
+ing time on the stones beneath with even more regularity
+than the feet of the dancers on the floor of the saloon.
+From time to time the watchword was repeated from post to
+post, and occasionally the notes of a trumpet, mingling with
+the strains of the orchestra, penetrated into their midst. Still
+farther down, in front of the facade, dark masses obscured
+the rays of light which proceeded from the windows of the
+New Palace. These were boats descending the course of a
+river, whose waters, faintly illumined by a few lamps,
+washed the lower portion of the terraces.
+
+The principal personage who has been mentioned, the
+giver of the fete, and to whom General Kissoff had been
+speaking in that tone of respect with which sovereigns alone
+are usually addressed, wore the simple uniform of an officer
+of chasseurs of the guard. This was not affectation on his
+part, but the custom of a man who cared little for dress, his
+contrasting strongly with the gorgeous costumes amid which
+he moved, encircled by his escort of Georgians, Cossacks,
+and Circassians -- a brilliant band, splendidly clad in the glit-
+tering uniforms of the Caucasus.
+
+This personage, of lofty stature, affable demeanor, and
+physiognomy calm, though bearing traces of anxiety, moved
+from group to group, seldom speaking, and appearing to
+pay but little attention either to the merriment of the younger
+guests or the graver remarks of the exalted dignitaries or
+members of the diplomatic corps who represented at the
+Russian court the principal governments of Europe. Two
+or three of these astute politicians -- physiognomists by vir-
+tue of their profession -- failed not to detect on the counte-
+nance of their host symptoms of disquietude, the source of
+which eluded their penetration; but none ventured to inter-
+rogate him on the subject.
+
+It was evidently the intention of the officer of chasseurs
+that his own anxieties should in no way cast a shade over
+the festivities; and, as he was a personage whom almost
+the population of a world in itself was wont to obey, the
+gayety of the ball was not for a moment checked.
+
+Nevertheless, General Kissoff waited until the officer to
+whom he had just communicated the dispatch forwarded
+from Tomsk should give him permission to withdraw; but
+the latter still remained silent. He had taken the telegram,
+he had read it carefully, and his visage became even more
+clouded than before. Involuntarily he sought the hilt of
+his sword, and then passed his hand for an instant before his
+eyes, as though, dazzled by the brilliancy of the light, he
+wished to shade them, the better to see into the recesses of
+his own mind.
+
+"We are, then," he continued, after having drawn Gen-
+eral Kissoff aside towards a window, "since yesterday with-
+out intelligence from the Grand Duke?"
+
+"Without any, sire; and it is to be feared that in a
+short time dispatches will no longer cross the Siberian
+frontier."
+
+"But have not the troops of the provinces of Amoor and
+Irkutsk, as those also of the Trans-Balkan territory, received
+orders to march immediately upon Irkutsk?"
+
+"The orders were transmitted by the last telegram we
+were able to send beyond Lake Baikal."
+
+"And the governments of Yeniseisk, Omsk, Semipola-
+tinsk, and Tobolsk -- are we still in direct communication
+with them as before the insurrection?"
+
+"Yes, sire; our dispatches have reached them, and we
+are assured at the present moment that the Tartars have not
+advanced beyond the Irtish and the Obi."
+
+"And the traitor Ivan Ogareff, are there no tidings of
+him?"
+
+"None," replied General Kissoff. "The head of the
+police cannot state whether or not he has crossed the fron-
+tier."
+
+"Let a description of him be immediately dispatched to
+Nijni-Novgorod, Perm, Ekaterenburg, Kasirnov, Tioumen,
+Ishim, Omsk, Tomsk, and to all the telegraphic stations with
+which communication is yet open."
+
+"Your majesty's orders shall be instantly carried out."
+
+"You will observe the strictest silence as to this."
+
+The General, having made a sign of respectful assent,
+bowing low, mingled with the crowd, and finally left the
+apartments without his departure being remarked.
+
+The officer remained absorbed in thought for a few mo-
+ments, when, recovering himself, he went among the various
+groups in the saloon, his countenance reassuming that calm
+aspect which had for an instant been disturbed.
+
+Nevertheless, the important occurrence which had occa-
+sioned these rapidly exchanged words was not so unknown
+as the officer of the chasseurs of the guard and General
+Kissoff had possibly supposed. It was not spoken of of-
+ficially, it is true, nor even officiously, since tongues were not
+free; but a few exalted personages had been informed, more
+or less exactly, of the events which had taken place beyond
+the frontier. At any rate, that which was only slightly
+known, that which was not matter of conversation even
+between members of the corps diplomatique, two guests,
+distinguished by no uniform, no decoration, at this reception
+in the New Palace, discussed in a low voice, and with ap-
+parently very correct information.
+
+By what means, by the exercise of what acuteness had
+these two ordinary mortals ascertained that which so many
+persons of the highest rank and importance scarcely even
+suspected? It is impossible to say. Had they the gifts of
+foreknowledge and foresight? Did they possess a supple-
+mentary sense, which enabled them to see beyond that lim-
+ited horizon which bounds all human gaze? Had they ob-
+tained a peculiar power of divining the most secret events?
+Was it owing to the habit, now become a second nature,
+of living on information, that their mental constitution had
+thus become really transformed? It was difficult to escape
+from this conclusion.
+
+Of these two men, the one was English, the other French;
+both were tall and thin, but the latter was sallow as are the
+southern Provencals, while the former was ruddy like a
+Lancashire gentleman. The Anglo-Norman, formal, cold,
+grave, parsimonious of gestures and words, appeared only
+to speak or gesticulate under the influence of a spring operat-
+ing at regular intervals. The Gaul, on the contrary, lively
+and petulant, expressed himself with lips, eyes, hands, all at
+once, having twenty different ways of explaining his
+thoughts, whereas his interlocutor seemed to have only one,
+immutably stereotyped on his brain.
+
+The strong contrast they presented would at once have
+struck the most superficial observer; but a physiognomist,
+regarding them closely, would have defined their particular
+characteristics by saying, that if the Frenchman was "all
+eyes," the Englishman was "all ears."
+
+In fact, the visual apparatus of the one had been sin-
+gularly perfected by practice. The sensibility of its retina
+must have been as instantaneous as that of those conjurors
+who recognize a card merely by a rapid movement in cutting
+the pack or by the arrangement only of marks invisible to
+others. The Frenchman indeed possessed in the highest de-
+gree what may be called "the memory of the eye."
+
+The Englishman, on the contrary, appeared especially
+organized to listen and to hear. When his aural apparatus
+had been once struck by the sound of a voice he could not
+forget it, and after ten or even twenty years he would have
+recognized it among a thousand. His ears, to be sure, had
+not the power of moving as freely as those of animals who
+are provided with large auditory flaps; but, since scientific
+men know that human ears possess, in fact, a very limited
+power of movement, we should not be far wrong in affirm-
+ing that those of the said Englishman became erect, and
+turned in all directions while endeavoring to gather in the
+sounds, in a manner apparent only to the naturalist. It
+must be observed that this perfection of sight and hearing
+was of wonderful assistance to these two men in their voca-
+tion, for the Englishman acted as correspondent of the
+Daily Telegraph, and the Frenchman, as correspondent of
+what newspaper, or of what newspapers, he did not say;
+and when asked, he replied in a jocular manner that he cor-
+responded with "his cousin Madeleine." This Frenchman,
+however, neath his careless surface, was wonderfully
+shrewd and sagacious. Even while speaking at random,
+perhaps the better to hide his desire to learn, he never forgot
+himself. His loquacity even helped him to conceal his
+thoughts, and he was perhaps even more discreet than his
+confrere of the Daily Telegraph. Both were present at this
+fete given at the New Palace on the night of the 15th of
+July in their character of reporters.
+
+It is needless to say that these two men were devoted to
+their mission in the world -- that they delighted to throw
+themselves in the track of the most unexpected intelligence
+-- that nothing terrified or discouraged them from succeed-
+ing -- that they possessed the imperturbable sang froid and
+the genuine intrepidity of men of their calling. Enthusiastic
+jockeys in this steeplechase, this hunt after information, they
+leaped hedges, crossed rivers, sprang over fences, with the
+ardor of pure-blooded racers, who will run "a good first"
+or die!
+
+Their journals did not restrict them with regard to money
+-- the surest, the most rapid, the most perfect element of
+information known to this day. It must also be added, to
+their honor, that neither the one nor the other ever looked
+over or listened at the walls of private life, and that they
+only exercised their vocation when political or social inter-
+ests were at stake. In a word, they made what has been
+for some years called "the great political and military re-
+ports."
+
+It will be seen, in following them, that they had generally
+an independent mode of viewing events, and, above all, their
+consequences, each having his own way of observing and
+appreciating.
+
+The French correspondent was named Alcide Jolivet.
+Harry Blount was the name of the Englishman. They
+had just met for the first time at this fete in the New Palace,
+of which they had been ordered to give an account in their
+papers. The dissimilarity of their characters, added to a
+certain amount of jealousy, which generally exists between
+rivals in the same calling, might have rendered them but
+little sympathetic. However, they did not avoid each other,
+but endeavored rather to exchange with each other the chat
+of the day. They were sportsmen, after all, hunting on the
+same ground. That which one missed might be advan-
+tageously secured by the other, and it was to their interest
+to meet and converse.
+
+This evening they were both on the look out; they felt,
+in fact, that there was something in the air.
+
+"Even should it be only a wildgoose chase," said Alcide
+Jolivet to himself, "it may be worth powder and shot."
+
+The two correspondents therefore began by cautiously
+sounding each other.
+
+"Really, my dear sir, this little fete is charming!" said
+Alcide Jolivet pleasantly, thinking himself obliged to begin
+the conversation with this eminently French phrase.
+
+"I have telegraphed already, 'splendid!'" replied Harry
+Blount calmly, employing the word specially devoted to ex-
+pressing admiration by all subjects of the United Kingdom.
+
+"Nevertheless," added Alcide Jolivet, "I felt compelled
+to remark to my cousin --"
+
+"Your cousin?" repeated Harry Blount in a tone of sur-
+prise, interrupting his brother of the pen.
+
+"Yes," returned Alcide Jolivet, "my cousin Madeleine.
+It is with her that I correspond, and she likes to be quickly
+and well informed, does my cousin. I therefore remarked
+to her that, during this fete, a sort of cloud had appeared to
+overshadow the sovereign's brow."
+
+"To me, it seemed radiant," replied Harry Blount, who
+perhaps, wished to conceal his real opinion on this topic.
+
+"And, naturally, you made it 'radiant,' in the columns
+of the Daily Telegraph."
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Do you remember, Mr. Blount, what occurred at Zakret
+in 1812?"
+
+"I remember it as well as if I had been there, sir,"
+replied the English correspondent.
+
+"Then," continued Alcide Jolivet, "you know that, in
+the middle of a fete given in his honor, it was announced
+to the Emperor Alexander that Napoleon had just crossed
+the Niemen with the vanguard of the French army.
+Nevertheless the Emperor did not leave the fete, and not-
+withstanding the extreme gravity of intelligence which
+might cost him his empire, he did not allow himself to show
+more uneasiness."
+
+"Than our host exhibited when General Kissoff informed
+him that the telegraphic wires had just been cut between the
+frontier and the government of Irkutsk."
+
+"Ah! you are aware of that?"
+
+"I am!"
+
+"As regards myself, it would be difficult to avoid know-
+ing it, since my last telegram reached Udinsk," observed
+Alcide Jolivet, with some satisfaction.
+
+"And mine only as far as Krasnoiarsk," answered Harry
+Blount, in a no less satisfied tone.
+
+"Then you know also that orders have been sent to the
+troops of Nikolaevsk?"
+
+"I do, sir; and at the same time a telegram was sent
+to the Cossacks of the government of Tobolsk to concentrate
+their forces."
+
+"Nothing can be more true, Mr. Blount; I was equally
+well acquainted with these measures, and you may be sure
+that my dear cousin shall know of them to-morrow."
+
+"Exactly as the readers of the Daily Telegraph shall
+know it also, M. Jolivet."
+
+"Well, when one sees all that is going on. . . ."
+
+"And when one hears all that is said. . . ."
+
+"An interesting campaign to follow, Mr. Blount."
+
+"I shall follow it, M. Jolivet!"
+
+"Then it is possible that we shall find ourselves on
+ground less safe, perhaps, than the floor of this ball-room."
+
+"Less safe, certainly, but --"
+
+"But much less slippery," added Alcide Jolivet, holding
+up his companion, just as the latter, drawing back, was
+about to lose his equilibrium.
+
+Thereupon the two correspondents separated, pleased that
+the one had not stolen a march on the other.
+
+At that moment the doors of the rooms adjoining the
+great reception saloon were thrown open, disclosing to view
+several immense tables beautifully laid out, and groaning
+under a profusion of valuable china and gold plate. On
+the central table, reserved for the princes, princesses, and
+members of the corps diplomatique, glittered an epergne
+of inestimable price, brought from London, and around this
+chef-d'oeuvre of chased gold reflected under the light of
+the lusters a thousand pieces of most beautiful service
+from the manufactories of Sevres.
+
+The guests of the New Palace immediately began to
+stream towards the supper-rooms.
+
+At that moment. General Kissoff, who had just re-en-
+tered, quickly approached the officer of chasseurs.
+
+"Well?" asked the latter abruptly, as he had done the
+former time.
+
+"Telegrams pass Tomsk no longer, sire."
+
+"A courier this moment!"
+
+The officer left the hall and entered a large antechamber
+adjoining. It was a cabinet with plain oak furniture,
+situated in an angle of the New Palace. Several pictures,
+amongst others some by Horace Vernet, hung on the wall.
+
+The officer hastily opened a window, as if he felt the
+want of air, and stepped out on a balcony to breathe the
+pure atmosphere of a lovely July night. Beneath his eyes,
+bathed in moonlight, lay a fortified inclosure, from which
+rose two cathedrals, three palaces, and an arsenal. Around
+this inclosure could be seen three distinct towns: Kitai-
+Gorod, Beloi-Gorod, Zemlianai-Gorod -- European, Tartar,
+and Chinese quarters of great extent, commanded by towers,
+belfries, minarets, and the cupolas of three hundred
+churches, with green domes, surmounted by the silver cross.
+A little winding river, here and there reflected the rays of
+the moon.
+
+This river was the Moskowa; the town Moscow; the
+fortified inclosure the Kremlin; and the officer of chasseurs
+of the guard, who, with folded arms and thoughtful brow,
+was listening dreamily to the sounds floating from the New
+Palace over the old Muscovite city, was the Czar.
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+RUSSIANS AND TARTARS
+
+THE Czar had not so suddenly left the ball-room of the
+New Palace, when the fete he was giving to the civil and
+military authorities and principal people of Moscow was at
+the height of its brilliancy, without ample cause; for he
+had just received information that serious events were tak-
+ing place beyond the frontiers of the Ural. It had become
+evident that a formidable rebellion threatened to wrest the
+Siberian provinces from the Russian crown.
+
+Asiatic Russia, or Siberia, covers a superficial area of
+1,790,208 square miles, and contains nearly two millions of
+inhabitants. Extending from the Ural Mountains, which
+separate it from Russia in Europe, to the shores of the
+Pacific Ocean, it is bounded on the south by Turkestan and
+the Chinese Empire; on the north by the Arctic Ocean,
+from the Sea of Kara to Behring's Straits. It is divided
+into several governments or provinces, those of Tobolsk,
+Yeniseisk, Irkutsk, Omsk, and Yakutsk; contains two dis-
+tricts, Okhotsk and Kamtschatka; and possesses two coun-
+tries, now under the Muscovite dominion -- that of the
+Kirghiz and that of the Tshouktshes. This immense extent
+of steppes, which includes more than one hundred and ten
+degrees from west to east, is a land to which criminals and
+political offenders are banished.
+
+Two governor-generals represent the supreme authority
+of the Czar over this vast country. The higher one resides
+at Irkutsk, the far capital of Eastern Siberia. The River
+Tchouna separates the two Siberias.
+
+No rail yet furrows these wide plains, some of which
+are in reality extremely fertile. No iron ways lead from
+those precious mines which make the Siberian soil far richer
+below than above its surface. The traveler journeys in sum-
+mer in a kibick or telga; in winter, in a sledge.
+
+An electric telegraph, with a single wire more than eight
+thousand versts in length, alone affords communication be-
+tween the western and eastern frontiers of Siberia. On
+issuing from the Ural, it passes through Ekaterenburg,
+Kasirnov, Tioumen, Ishim, Omsk, Elamsk, Kolyvan, Tomsk,
+Krasnoiarsk, Nijni-Udinsk, Irkutsk, Verkne-Nertschink,
+Strelink, Albazine, Blagowstenks, Radde, Orlomskaya,
+Alexandrowskoe, and Nikolaevsk; and six roubles and nine-
+teen copecks are paid for every word sent from one end
+to the other. From Irkutsk there is a branch to Kiatka, on
+the Mongolian frontier; and from thence, for thirty copecks
+a word, the post conveys the dispatches to Pekin in a fort-
+night.
+
+It was this wire, extending from Ekaterenburg to Niko-
+laevsk, which had been cut, first beyond Tomsk, and then
+between Tomsk and Kolyvan.
+
+This was why the Czar, to the communication made to
+him for the second time by General Kissoff, had answered
+by the words, "A courier this moment!"
+
+The Czar remained motionless at the window for a few
+moments, when the door was again opened. The chief of
+police appeared on the threshold.
+
+"Enter, General," said the Czar briefly, "and tell me
+all you know of Ivan Ogareff."
+
+"He is an extremely dangerous man, sire," replied the
+chief of police.
+
+"He ranked as colonel, did he not?"
+
+"Yes, sire."
+
+"Was he an intelligent officer?"
+
+"Very intelligent, but a man whose spirit it was im-
+possible to subdue; and possessing an ambition which stopped
+at nothing, he became involved in secret intrigues, and was
+degraded from his rank by his Highness the Grand Duke,
+and exiled to Siberia."
+
+"How long ago was that?"
+
+"Two years since. Pardoned after six months of exile
+by your majesty's favor, he returned to Russia."
+
+"And since that time, has he not revisited Siberia?"
+
+"Yes, sire; but he voluntarily returned there," replied
+the chief of police, adding, and slightly lowering his voice,
+"there was a time, sire, when NONE returned from Siberia."
+
+"Well, whilst I live, Siberia is and shall be a country
+whence men CAN return."
+
+The Czar had the right to utter these words with some
+pride, for often, by his clemency, he had shown that Rus-
+sian justice knew how to pardon.
+
+The head of the police did not reply to this observation,
+but it was evident that he did not approve of such half-
+measures. According to his idea, a man who had once
+passed the Ural Mountains in charge of policemen, ought
+never again to cross them. Now, it was not thus under the
+new reign, and the chief of police sincerely deplored it.
+What! no banishment for life for other crimes than those
+against social order! What! political exiles returning from
+Tobolsk, from Yakutsk, from Irkutsk! In truth, the chief
+of police, accustomed to the despotic sentences of the ukase
+which formerly never pardoned, could not understand this
+mode of governing. But he was silent, waiting until the
+Czar should interrogate him further. The questions were
+not long in coming.
+
+"Did not Ivan Ogareff," asked the Czar, "return to
+Russia a second time, after that journey through the
+Siberian provinces, the object of which remains unknown?"
+
+"He did."
+
+"And have the police lost trace of him since?"
+
+"No, sire; for an offender only becomes really dangerous
+from the day he has received his pardon."
+
+The Czar frowned. Perhaps the chief of police feared
+that he had gone rather too far, though the stubbornness
+of his ideas was at least equal to the boundless devotion he
+felt for his master. But the Czar, disdaining to reply to
+these indirect reproaches cast on his policy, continued his
+questions. "Where was Ogareff last heard of?"
+
+"In the province of Perm."
+
+"In what town?"
+
+"At Perm itself."
+
+"What was he doing?"
+
+"He appeared unoccupied, and there was nothing sus-
+picious in his conduct."
+
+"Then he was not under the surveillance of the secret
+police?"
+
+"No, sire."
+
+"When did he leave Perm?"
+
+"About the month of March?"
+
+"To go...?"
+
+"Where, is unknown."
+
+"And it is not known what has become of him?"
+
+"No, sire; it is not known."
+
+"Well, then, I myself know," answered the Czar. "I
+have received anonymous communications which did not
+pass through the police department; and, in the face of
+events now taking place beyond the frontier, I have every
+reason to believe that they are correct."
+
+"Do you mean, sire," cried the chief of police, "that
+Ivan Ogareff has a hand in this Tartar rebellion?"
+
+"Indeed I do; and I will now tell you something which
+you are ignorant of. After leaving Perm, Ivan Ogareff
+crossed the Ural mountains, entered Siberia, and penetrated
+the Kirghiz steppes, and there endeavored, not without suc-
+cess, to foment rebellion amongst their nomadic population.
+He then went so far south as free Turkestan; there, in the
+provinces of Bokhara, Khokhand, and Koondooz, he found
+chiefs willing to pour their Tartar hordes into Siberia, and
+excite a general rising in Asiatic Russia. The storm has
+been silently gathering, but it has at last burst like a thunder-
+clap, and now all means of communication between Eastern
+and Western Siberia have been stopped. Moreover, Ivan
+Ogareff, thirsting for vengeance, aims at the life of my
+brother!"
+
+The Czar had become excited whilst speaking, and now
+paced up and down with hurried steps. The chief of police
+said nothing, but he thought to himself that, during the
+time when the emperors of Russia never pardoned an exile,
+schemes such as those of Ivan Ogareff could never have
+been realized. Approaching the Czar, who had thrown
+himself into an armchair, he asked, "Your majesty has of
+course given orders so that this rebellion may be suppressed
+as soon as possible?"
+
+"Yes," answered the Czar. "The last telegram which
+reached Nijni-Udinsk would set in motion the troops in the
+governments of Yenisei, Irkutsk, Yakutsk, as well as those
+in the provinces of the Amoor and Lake Baikal. At the
+same time, the regiments from Perm and Nijni-Novgorod,
+and the Cossacks from the frontier, are advancing by forced
+marches towards the Ural Mountains; but some weeks must
+pass before they can attack the Tartars."
+
+"And your majesty's brother, his Highness the Grand
+Duke, is now isolated in the government of Irkutsk, and
+is no longer in direct communication with Moscow?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"But by the last dispatches, he must know what measures
+have been taken by your majesty, and what help he may
+expect from the governments nearest Irkutsk?"
+
+"He knows that," answered the Czar; "but what he
+does not know is, that Ivan Ogareff, as well as being a
+rebel, is also playing the part of a traitor, and that in him
+he has a personal and bitter enemy. It is to the Grand
+Duke that Ogareff owes his first disgrace; and what is more
+serious is, that this man is not known to him. Ogareff's
+plan, therefore, is to go to Irkutsk, and, under an assumed
+name, offer his services to the Grand Duke. Then, after
+gaining his confidence, when the Tartars have invested
+Irkutsk, he will betray the town, and with it my brother,
+whose life he seeks. This is what I have learned from my
+secret intelligence; this is what the Grand Duke does not
+know; and this is what he must know!"
+
+"Well, sire, an intelligent, courageous courier . . ."
+
+"I momentarily expect one."
+
+"And it is to be hoped he will be expeditious," added
+the chief of police; "for, allow me to add, sire, that Siberia
+is a favorable land for rebellions."
+
+"Do you mean to say. General, that the exiles would
+make common cause with the rebels?" exclaimed the Czar.
+
+"Excuse me, your majesty," stammered the chief of
+police, for that was really the idea suggested to him by his
+uneasy and suspicious mind.
+
+"I believe in their patriotism," returned the Czar.
+
+"There are other offenders besides political exiles in
+Siberia," said the chief of police.
+
+"The criminals? Oh, General, I give those up to you!
+They are the vilest, I grant, of the human race. They
+belong to no country. But the insurrection, or rather, the
+rebellion, is not to oppose the emperor; it is raised against
+Russia, against the country which the exiles have not lost
+all hope of again seeing -- and which they will see again.
+No, a Russian would never unite with a Tartar, to weaken,
+were it only for an hour, the Muscovite power!"
+
+The Czar was right in trusting to the patriotism of
+those whom his policy kept, for a time, at a distance.
+Clemency, which was the foundation of his justice, when
+he could himself direct its effects, the modifications he had
+adopted with regard to applications for the formerly ter-
+rible ukases, warranted the belief that he was not mis-
+taken. But even without this powerful element of success
+in regard to the Tartar rebellion, circumstances were not
+the less very serious; for it was to be feared that a large
+part of the Kirghiz population would join the rebels.
+
+The Kirghiz are divided into three hordes, the greater,
+the lesser, and the middle, and number nearly four hundred
+thousand "tents," or two million souls. Of the different
+tribes some are independent and others recognize either
+the sovereignty of Russia or that of the Khans of Khiva,
+Khokhand, and Bokhara, the most formidable chiefs of
+Turkestan. The middle horde, the richest, is also the larg-
+est, and its encampments occupy all the space between the
+rivers Sara Sou, Irtish, and the Upper Ishim, Lake Saisang
+and Lake Aksakal. The greater horde, occupying the coun-
+tries situated to the east of the middle one, extends as far
+as the governments of Omsk and Tobolsk. Therefore, if
+the Kirghiz population should rise, it would be the rebel-
+lion of Asiatic Russia, and the first thing would be the
+separation of Siberia, to the east of the Yenisei.
+
+It is true that these Kirghiz, mere novices in the art of
+war, are rather nocturnal thieves and plunderers of cara-
+vans than regular soldiers. As M. Levchine says, "a firm
+front or a square of good infantry could repel ten times the
+number of Kirghiz; and a single cannon might destroy a
+frightful number."
+
+That may be; but to do this it is necessary for the square
+of good infantry to reach the rebellious country, and the
+cannon to leave the arsenals of the Russian provinces, per-
+haps two or three thousand versts distant. Now, except by
+the direct route from Ekaterenburg to Irkutsk, the often
+marshy steppes are not easily practicable, and some weeks
+must certainly pass before the Russian troops could reach
+the Tartar hordes.
+
+Omsk is the center of that military organization of West-
+ern Siberia which is intended to overawe the Kirghiz popu-
+lation. Here are the bounds, more than once infringed by
+the half-subdued nomads, and there was every reason to be-
+lieve that Omsk was already in danger. The line of military
+stations, that is to say, those Cossack posts which are ranged
+in echelon from Omsk to Semipolatinsk, must have been
+broken in several places. Now, it was to be feared that the
+"Grand Sultans," who govern the Kirghiz districts would
+either voluntarily accept, or involuntarily submit to, the
+dominion of Tartars, Mussulmen like themselves, and that
+to the hate caused by slavery was not united the hate due to
+the antagonism of the Greek and Mussulman religions.
+For some time, indeed, the Tartars of Turkestan had en-
+deavored, both by force and persuasion, to subdue the
+Kirghiz hordes.
+
+A few words only with respect to these Tartars. The
+Tartars belong more especially to two distinct races, the
+Caucasian and the Mongolian. The Caucasian race, which,
+as Abel de Remusat says, "is regarded in Europe as the
+type of beauty in our species, because all the nations in this
+part of the world have sprung from it," includes also the
+Turks and the Persians. The purely Mongolian race com-
+prises the Mongols, Manchoux, and Thibetans.
+
+The Tartars who now threatened the Russian Empire, be-
+longed to the Caucasian race, and occupied Turkestan.
+This immense country is divided into different states, gov-
+erned by Khans, and hence termed Khanats. The principal
+khanats are those of Bokhara, Khokhand, Koondooz, etc.
+At this period, the most important and the most formidable
+khanat was that of Bokhara. Russia had already been
+several times at war with its chiefs, who, for their own in-
+terests, had supported the independence of the Kirghiz
+against the Muscovite dominion. The present chief,
+Feofar-Khan, followed in the steps of his predecessors.
+
+The khanat of Bokhara has a population of two million
+five hundred thousand inhabitants, an army of sixty thou-
+sand men, trebled in time of war, and thirty thousand horse-
+men. It is a rich country, with varied animal, vegetable,
+and mineral products, and has been increased by the acces-
+sion of the territories of Balkh, Aukoi, and Meimaneh. It
+possesses nineteen large towns. Bokhara, surrounded by a
+wall measuring more than eight English miles, and flanked
+with towers, a glorious city, made illustrious by Avicenna
+and other learned men of the tenth century, is regarded as
+the center of Mussulman science, and ranks among the
+most celebrated cities of Central Asia. Samarcand, which
+contains the tomb of Tamerlane and the famous palace
+where the blue stone is kept on which each new khan must
+seat himself on his accession, is defended by a very strong
+citadel. Karschi, with its triple cordon, situated in an
+oasis, surrounded by a marsh peopled with tortoises and
+lizards, is almost impregnable, Is-chardjoui is defended
+by a population of twenty thousand souls. Protected by its
+mountains, and isolated by its steppes, the khanat of Bok-
+hara is a most formidable state; and Russia would need a
+large force to subdue it.
+
+The fierce and ambitious Feofar now governed this corner
+of Tartary. Relying on the other khans -- principally those
+of Khokhand and Koondooz, cruel and rapacious warriors,
+all ready to join an enterprise so dear to Tartar instincts --
+aided by the chiefs who ruled all the hordes of Central Asia,
+he had placed himself at the head of the rebellion of which
+Ivan Ogareff was the instigator. This traitor, impelled by
+insane ambition as much as by hate, had ordered the move-
+ment so as to attack Siberia. Mad indeed he was, if he
+hoped to rupture the Muscovite Empire. Acting under his
+suggestion, the Emir -- which is the title taken by the khans
+of Bokhara -- had poured his hordes over the Russian
+frontier. He invaded the government of Semipolatinsk,
+and the Cossacks, who were only in small force there, had
+been obliged to retire before him. He had advanced farther
+than Lake Balkhash, gaining over the Kirghiz population
+on his way. Pillaging, ravaging, enrolling those who sub-
+mitted, taking prisoners those who resisted, he marched
+from one town to another, followed by those impedimenta
+of Oriental sovereignty which may be called his household,
+his wives and his slaves -- all with the cool audacity of a
+modern Ghengis-Khan. It was impossible to ascertain
+where he now was; how far his soldiers had marched be-
+fore the news of the rebellion reached Moscow; or to what
+part of Siberia the Russian troops had been forced to retire.
+All communication was interrupted. Had the wire between
+Kolyvan and Tomsk been cut by Tartar scouts, or had the
+Emir himself arrived at the Yeniseisk provinces? Was all
+the lower part of Western Siberia in a ferment? Had the
+rebellion already spread to the eastern regions? No one
+could say. The only agent which fears neither cold nor
+heat, which can neither be stopped by the rigors of winter
+nor the heat of summer, and which flies with the rapidity of
+lightning -- the electric current -- was prevented from trav-
+ersing the steppes, and it was no longer possible to warn
+the Grand Duke, shut up in Irkutsk, of the danger threaten-
+ing him from the treason of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+A courier only could supply the place of the interrupted
+current. It would take this man some time to traverse the
+five thousand two hundred versts between Moscow and
+Irkutsk. To pass the ranks of the rebels and invaders he
+must display almost superhuman courage and intelligence.
+But with a clear head and a firm heart much can be done.
+
+"Shall I be able to find this head and heart?" thought
+the Czar.
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+MICHAEL STROGOFF MEETS THE CZAR
+
+THE door of the imperial cabinet was again opened and
+General Kissoff was announced.
+
+"The courier?" inquired the Czar eagerly.
+
+"He is here, sire," replied General Kissoff.
+
+"Have you found a fitting man?"
+
+"I will answer for him to your majesty."
+
+"Has he been in the service of the Palace?"
+
+"Yes, sire."
+
+"You know him?"
+
+"Personally, and at various times he has fulfilled difficult
+missions with success."
+
+"Abroad?"
+
+"In Siberia itself."
+
+"Where does he come from?"
+
+"From Omsk. He is a Siberian."
+
+"Has he coolness, intelligence, courage?"
+
+"Yes, sire; he has all the qualities necessary to succeed,
+even where others might possibly fail."
+
+"What is his age?"
+
+"Thirty."
+
+"Is he strong and vigorous?"
+
+"Sire, he can bear cold, hunger, thirst, fatigue, to the
+very last extremities."
+
+"He must have a frame of iron."
+
+"Sire, he has."
+
+"And a heart?"
+
+"A heart of gold."
+
+"His name?"
+
+"Michael Strogoff."
+
+"Is he ready to set out?"
+
+"He awaits your majesty's orders in the guard-room."
+
+"Let him come in," said the Czar.
+
+In a few moments Michael Strogoff, the courier, entered
+the imperial library. He was a tall, vigorous, broad-shoul-
+dered, deep-chested man. His powerful head possessed the
+fine features of the Caucasian race. His well-knit frame
+seemed built for the performance of feats of strength. It
+would have been a difficult task to move such a man against
+his will, for when his feet were once planted on the ground,
+it was as if they had taken root. As he doffed his Mus-
+covite cap, locks of thick curly hair fell over his broad,
+massive forehead. When his ordinarily pale face became at
+all flushed, it arose solely from a more rapid action of the
+heart. His eyes, of a deep blue, looked with clear, frank,
+firm gaze. The slightly-contracted eyebrows indicated lofty
+heroism -- "the hero's cool courage," according to the defini-
+tion of the physiologist. He possessed a fine nose, with
+large nostrils; and a well-shaped mouth, with the slightly-
+projecting lips which denote a generous and noble heart.
+
+Michael Strogoff had the temperament of the man of
+action, who does not bite his nails or scratch his head in
+doubt and indecision. Sparing of gestures as of words, he
+always stood motionless like a soldier before his superior;
+but when he moved, his step showed a firmness, a freedom
+of movement, which proved the confidence and vivacity of
+his mind.
+
+Michael Strogoff wore a handsome military uniform
+something resembling that of a light-cavalry officer in the
+field -- boots, spurs, half tightly-fitting trousers, brown
+pelisse, trimmed with fur and ornamented with yellow braid.
+On his breast glittered a cross and several medals.
+
+Michael Strogoff belonged to the special corps of the
+Czar's couriers, ranking as an officer among those picked
+men. His most discernible characteristic -- particularly in
+his walk, his face, in the whole man, and which the Czar
+perceived at a glance -- was, that he was "a fulfiller of
+orders." He therefore possessed one of the most service-
+able qualities in Russia -- one which, as the celebrated novel-
+ist Tourgueneff says, "will lead to the highest positions in
+the Muscovite empire."
+
+In short, if anyone could accomplish this journey from
+Moscow to Irkutsk, across a rebellious country, surmount
+obstacles, and brave perils of all sorts, Michael Strogoff was
+the man.
+
+A circumstance especially favorable to the success of
+his plan was, that he was thoroughly acquainted with the
+country which he was about to traverse, and understood its
+different dialects -- not only from having traveled there be-
+fore, but because he was of Siberian origin.
+
+His father -- old Peter Strogoff, dead ten years since --
+inhabited the town of Omsk, situated in the government
+of the same name; and his mother, Marfa Strogoff, lived
+there still. There, amid the wild steppes of the provinces
+of Omsk and Tobolsk, had the famous huntsman brought
+up his son Michael to endure hardship. Peter Strogoff was
+a huntsman by profession. Summer and winter -- in the
+burning heat, as well as when the cold was sometimes fifty
+degrees below zero -- he scoured the frozen plains, the
+thickets of birch and larch, the pine forests; setting traps;
+watching for small game with his gun, and for large game
+with the spear or knife. The large game was nothing less
+than the Siberian bear, a formidable and ferocious animal,
+in size equaling its fellow of the frozen seas. Peter
+Strogoff had killed more than thirty-nine bears -- that is
+to say, the fortieth had fallen under his blows; and, accord-
+ing to Russian legends, most huntsmen who have been lucky
+enough up to the thirty-ninth bear, have succumbed to the
+fortieth.
+
+Peter Strogoff had, however, passed the fatal number
+without even a scratch. From that time, his son Michael,
+aged eleven years, never failed to accompany him to the
+hunt, carrying the ragatina or spear to aid his father, who
+was armed only with the knife. When he was fourteen,
+Michael Strogoff had killed his first bear, quite alone -- that
+was nothing; but after stripping it he dragged the gigantic
+animal's skin to his father's house, many versts distant, ex-
+hibiting remarkable strength in a boy so young.
+
+This style of life was of great benefit to him, and when
+he arrived at manhood he could bear any amount of cold,
+heat, hunger, thirst, or fatigue. Like the Yakout of the
+northern countries, he was made of iron. He could go
+four-and-twenty hours without eating, ten nights without
+sleeping, and could make himself a shelter in the open
+steppe where others would have been frozen to death.
+Gifted with marvelous acuteness, guided by the instinct
+of the Delaware of North America, over the white plain,
+when every object is hidden in mist, or even in higher
+latitudes, where the polar night is prolonged for many
+days, he could find his way when others would have had
+no idea whither to turn. All his father's secrets were
+known to him. He had learnt to read almost imperceptible
+signs -- the forms of icicles, the appearance of the small
+branches of trees, mists rising far away in the horizon,
+vague sounds in the air, distant reports, the flight of birds
+through the foggy atmosphere, a thousand circumstances
+which are so many words to those who can decipher them.
+Moreover, tempered by snow like a Damascus blade in the
+waters of Syria, he had a frame of iron, as General Kissoff
+had said, and, what was no less true, a heart of gold.
+
+The only sentiment of love felt by Michael Strogoff was
+that which he entertained for his mother, the aged Marfa,
+who could never be induced to leave the house of the
+Strogoffs, at Omsk, on the banks of the Irtish, where the
+old huntsman and she had lived so long together. When
+her son left her, he went away with a full heart, but promis-
+ing to come and see her whenever he could possibly do so;
+and this promise he had always religiously kept.
+
+When Michael was twenty, it was decided that he should
+enter the personal service of the Emperor of Russia, in the
+corps of the couriers of the Czar. The hardy, intelligent,
+zealous, well-conducted young Siberian first distinguished
+himself especially, in a journey to the Caucasus, through
+the midst of a difficult country, ravaged by some restless
+successors of Schamyl; then later, in an important mission
+to Petropolowski, in Kamtschatka, the extreme limit of
+Asiatic Russia. During these long journeys he displayed
+such marvelous coolness, prudence, and courage, as to gain
+him the approbation and protection of his chiefs, who
+rapidly advanced him in his profession.
+
+The furloughs which were his due after these distant
+missions, he never failed to devote to his old mother. Hav-
+ing been much employed in the south of the empire, he had
+not seen old Marfa for three years -- three ages! -- the first
+time in his life he had been so long absent from her. Now,
+however, in a few days he would obtain his furlough, and he
+had accordingly already made preparations for departure
+for Omsk, when the events which have been related occurred.
+Michael Strogoff was therefore introduced into the Czar's
+presence in complete ignorance of what the emperor ex-
+pected from him.
+
+The Czar fixed a penetrating look upon him without
+uttering a word, whilst Michael stood perfectly motionless.
+
+The Czar, apparently satisfied with his scrutiny, motioned
+to the chief of police to seat himself, and dictated in a low
+voice a letter of not more than a few lines.
+
+The letter penned, the Czar re-read it attentively, then
+signed it, preceding his name with the words "Byt po
+semou," which, signifying "So be it," constitutes the deci-
+sive formula of the Russian emperors.
+
+The letter was then placed in an envelope, which was
+sealed with the imperial arms.
+
+The Czar, rising, told Michael Strogoff to draw near.
+
+Michael advanced a few steps, and then stood motionless,
+ready to answer.
+
+The Czar again looked him full in the face and their
+eyes met. Then in an abrupt tone, "Thy name?" he asked.
+
+"Michael Strogoff, sire."
+
+"Thy rank?"
+
+"Captain in the corps of couriers of the Czar."
+
+"Thou dost know Siberia?"
+
+"I am a Siberian."
+
+"A native of?"
+
+"Omsk, sire."
+
+"Hast thou relations there?"
+
+"Yes sire."
+
+"What relations?"
+
+"My old mother."
+
+The Czar suspended his questions for a moment. Then,
+pointing to the letter which he held in his hand, "Here is a
+letter which I charge thee, Michael Strogoff, to deliver into
+the hands of the Grand Duke, and to no other but him."
+
+"I will deliver it, sire."
+
+"The Grand Duke is at Irkutsk."
+
+"I will go to Irkutsk."
+
+"Thou wilt have to traverse a rebellious country, invaded
+by Tartars, whose interest it will be to intercept this letter."
+
+"I will traverse it."
+
+"Above all, beware of the traitor, Ivan Ogareff, who
+will perhaps meet thee on the way."
+
+"I will beware of him."
+
+"Wilt thou pass through Omsk?"
+
+"Sire, that is my route."
+
+"If thou dost see thy mother, there will be the risk of
+being recognized. Thou must not see her!"
+
+Michael Strogoff hesitated a moment.
+
+"I will not see her," said he.
+
+"Swear to me that nothing will make thee acknowledge
+who thou art, nor whither thou art going."
+
+"I swear it."
+
+"Michael Strogoff," continued the Czar, giving the letter
+to the young courier, "take this letter; on it depends the
+safety of all Siberia, and perhaps the life of my brother the
+Grand Duke."
+
+"This letter shall be delivered to his Highness the Grand
+Duke."
+
+"Then thou wilt pass whatever happens?"
+
+"I shall pass, or they shall kill me."
+
+"I want thee to live."
+
+"I shall live, and I shall pass," answered Michael
+Strogoff.
+
+The Czar appeared satisfied with Strogoff's calm and
+simple answer.
+
+"Go then, Michael Strogoff," said he, "go for God, for
+Russia, for my brother, and for myself!"
+
+The courier, having saluted his sovereign, immediately
+left the imperial cabinet, and, in a few minutes, the New
+Palace.
+
+"You made a good choice there, General," said the Czar.
+
+"I think so, sire," replied General Kissoff; "and your
+majesty may be sure that Michael Strogoff will do all that
+a man can do."
+
+"He is indeed a man," said the Czar.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+FROM MOSCOW TO NIJNI-NOVGOROD
+
+THE distance between Moscow and Irkutsk, about to be
+traversed by Michael Strogoff, was three thousand four
+hundred miles. Before the telegraph wire extended from
+the Ural Mountains to the eastern frontier of Siberia, the
+dispatch service was performed by couriers, those who trav-
+eled the most rapidly taking eighteen days to get from
+Moscow to Irkutsk. But this was the exception, and the
+journey through Asiatic Russia usually occupied from four
+to five weeks, even though every available means of trans-
+port was placed at the disposal of the Czar's messengers.
+
+Michael Strogoff was a man who feared neither frost nor
+snow. He would have preferred traveling during the severe
+winter season, in order that he might perform the whole
+distance by sleighs. At that period of the year the diffi-
+culties which all other means of locomotion present are
+greatly diminished, the wide steppes being leveled by snow,
+while there are no rivers to cross, but simply sheets of glass,
+over which the sleigh glides rapidly and easily.
+
+Perhaps certain natural phenomena are most to be feared
+at that time, such as long-continuing and dense fogs, exces-
+sive cold, fearfully heavy snow-storms, which sometimes
+envelop whole caravans and cause their destruction. Hungry
+wolves also roam over the plain in thousands. But it would
+have been better for Michael Strogoff to face these risks;
+for during the winter the Tartar invaders would have been
+stationed in the towns, any movement of their troops would
+have been impracticable, and he could consequently have
+more easily performed his journey. But it was not in his
+power to choose either weather or time. Whatever the cir-
+cumstances, he must accept them and set out.
+
+Such were the difficulties which Michael Strogoff boldly
+confronted and prepared to encounter.
+
+In the first place, he must not travel as a courier of the
+Czar usually would. No one must even suspect what he
+really was. Spies swarm in a rebellious country; let him
+be recognized, and his mission would be in danger. Also,
+while supplying him with a large sum of money, which was
+sufficient for his journey, and would facilitate it in some
+measure, General Kissoff had not given him any document
+notifying that he was on the Emperor's service, which is the
+Sesame par excellence. He contented himself with furnish-
+ing him with a "podorojna."
+
+This podorojna was made out in the name of Nicholas
+Korpanoff, merchant, living at Irkutsk. It authorized
+Nicholas Korpanoff to be accompanied by one or more per-
+sons, and, moreover, it was, by special notification, made
+available in the event of the Muscovite government forbid-
+ding natives of any other countries to leave Russia.
+
+The podorojna is simply a permission to take post-
+horses; but Michael Strogoff was not to use it unless he
+was sure that by so doing he would not excite suspicion
+as to his mission, that is to say, whilst he was on European
+territory. The consequence was that in Siberia, whilst
+traversing the insurgent provinces, he would have no
+power over the relays, either in the choice of horses in
+preference to others, or in demanding conveyances for his
+personal use; neither was Michael Strogoff to forget that
+he was no longer a courier, but a plain merchant, Nicholas
+Korpanoff, traveling from Moscow to Irkutsk, and, as such
+exposed to all the impediments of an ordinary journey.
+
+To pass unknown, more or less rapidly, but to pass some-
+how, such were the directions he had received.
+
+Thirty years previously, the escort of a traveler of rank
+consisted of not less than two hundred mounted Cossacks,
+two hundred foot-soldiers, twenty-five Baskir horsemen,
+three hundred camels, four hundred horses, twenty-five
+wagons, two portable boats, and two pieces of cannon. All
+this was requisite for a journey in Siberia.
+
+Michael Strogoff, however, had neither cannon, nor horse-
+men, nor foot-soldiers, nor beasts of burden. He would
+travel in a carriage or on horseback, when he could; on foot,
+when he could not.
+
+There would be no difficulty in getting over the first
+thousand miles, the distance between Moscow and the Rus-
+sian frontier. Railroads, post-carriages, steamboats, re-
+lays of horses, were at everyone's disposal, and consequently
+at the disposal of the courier of the Czar.
+
+Accordingly, on the morning of the 16th of July, having
+doffed his uniform, with a knapsack on his back, dressed in
+the simple Russian costume -- tightly-fitting tunic, the tradi-
+tional belt of the Moujik, wide trousers, gartered at the
+knees, and high boots -- Michael Strogoff arrived at the sta-
+tion in time for the first train. He carried no arms, openly
+at least, but under his belt was hidden a revolver and in his
+pocket, one of those large knives, resembling both a cutlass
+and a yataghan, with which a Siberian hunter can so neatly
+disembowel a bear, without injuring its precious fur.
+
+A crowd of travelers had collected at the Moscow station.
+The stations on the Russian railroads are much used as
+places for meeting, not only by those who are about to pro-
+ceed by the train, but by friends who come to see them off.
+The station resembles, from the variety of characters as-
+sembled, a small news exchange.
+
+The train in which Michael took his place was to set him
+down at Nijni-Novgorod. There terminated at that time,
+the iron road which, uniting Moscow and St. Petersburg,
+has since been continued to the Russian frontier. It was a
+journey of under three hundred miles, and the train would
+accomplish it in ten hours. Once arrived at Nijni-Nov-
+gorod, Strogoff would either take the land route or the
+steamer on the Volga, so as to reach the Ural Mountains as
+soon as possible.
+
+Michael Strogoff ensconced himself in his corner, like a
+worthy citizen whose affairs go well with him, and who
+endeavors to kill time by sleep. Nevertheless, as he was
+not alone in his compartment, he slept with one eye open,
+and listened with both his ears.
+
+In fact, rumor of the rising of the Kirghiz hordes, and
+of the Tartar invasion had transpired in some degree. The
+occupants of the carriage, whom chance had made his trav-
+eling companions, discussed the subject, though with that
+caution which has become habitual among Russians, who
+know that spies are ever on the watch for any treasonable
+expressions which may be uttered.
+
+These travelers, as well as the large number of persons
+in the train, were merchants on their way to the celebrated
+fair of Nijni-Novgorod; -- a very mixed assembly, composed
+of Jews, Turks, Cossacks, Russians, Georgians, Kalmucks,
+and others, but nearly all speaking the national tongue.
+
+They discussed the pros and cons of the serious events
+which were taking place beyond the Ural, and those mer-
+chants seemed to fear lest the government should be led to
+take certain restrictive measures, especially in the provinces
+bordering on the frontier -- measures from which trade
+would certainly suffer. They apparently thought only of the
+struggle from the single point of view of their threatened
+interests. The presence of a private soldier, clad in his uni-
+form -- and the importance of a uniform in Russia is great
+-- would have certainly been enough to restrain the mer-
+chants' tongues. But in the compartment occupied by
+Michael Strogoff, there was no one who seemed a military
+man, and the Czar's courier was not the person to betray
+himself. He listened, then.
+
+"They say that caravan teas are up," remarked a Per-
+sian, known by his cap of Astrakhan fur, and his ample
+brown robe, worn threadbare by use.
+
+"Oh, there's no fear of teas falling," answered an old
+Jew of sullen aspect. "Those in the market at Nijni-
+Novgorod will be easily cleared off by the West; but, un-
+fortunately, it won't be the same with Bokhara carpets."
+
+"What! are you expecting goods from Bokhara?" asked
+the Persian.
+
+"No, but from Samarcand, and that is even more ex-
+posed. The idea of reckoning on the exports of a country
+in which the khans are in a state of revolt from Khiva to
+the Chinese frontier!"
+
+"Well," replied the Persian, "if the carpets do not arrive,
+the drafts will not arrive either, I suppose."
+
+"And the profits, Father Abraham!" exclaimed the little
+Jew, "do you reckon them as nothing?"
+
+"You are right," said another; "goods from Central
+Asia run a great risk in the market, and it will be the same
+with the tallow and shawls from the East."
+
+"Why, look out, little father," said a Russian traveler,
+in a bantering tone; "you'll grease your shawls terribly if
+you mix them up with your tallow."
+
+"That amuses you," sharply answered the merchant, who
+had little relish for that sort of joke.
+
+"Well, if you tear your hair, or if you throw ashes on
+your head," replied the traveler, "will that change the
+course of events? No; no more than the course of the
+Exchange."
+
+"One can easily see that you are not a merchant," ob-
+served the little Jew.
+
+"Faith, no, worthy son of Abraham! I sell neither
+hops, nor eider-down, nor honey, nor wax, nor hemp-seed,
+nor salt meat, nor caviare, nor wood, nor wool, nor ribbons,
+nor, hemp, nor flax, nor morocco, nor furs."
+
+"But do you buy them?" asked the Persian, interrupt-
+ing the traveler's list.
+
+"As little as I can, and only for my own private use,"
+answered the other, with a wink.
+
+"He's a wag," said the Jew to the Persian.
+
+"Or a spy," replied the other, lowering his voice. "We
+had better take care, and not speak more than necessary.
+The police are not over-particular in these times, and you
+never can know with whom you are traveling."
+
+In another corner of the compartment they were speaking
+less of mercantile affairs, and more of the Tartar invasion
+and its annoying consequences.
+
+"All the horses in Siberia will be requisitioned," said
+a traveler, "and communication between the different prov-
+inces of Central Asia will become very difficult."
+
+"Is it true," asked his neighbor, "that the Kirghiz of the
+middle horde have joined the Tartars?"
+
+"So it is said," answered the traveler, lowering his voice;
+"but who can flatter themselves that they know anything
+really of what is going on in this country?"
+
+"I have heard speak of a concentration of troops on the
+frontier. The Don Cossacks have already gathered along
+the course of the Volga, and they are to be opposed to the
+rebel Kirghiz."
+
+"If the Kirghiz descend the Irtish, the route to Irkutsk
+will not be safe," observed his neighbor. "Besides, yester-
+day I wanted to send a telegram to Krasnoiarsk, and it
+could not be forwarded. It's to be feared that before long
+the Tartar columns will have isolated Eastern Siberia."
+
+"In short, little father," continued the first speaker,
+"these merchants have good reason for being uneasy about
+their trade and transactions. After requisitioning the
+horses, they will take the boats, carriages, every means of
+transport, until presently no one will be allowed to take even
+one step in all the empire."
+
+"I'm much afraid that the Nijni-Novgorod fair won't
+end as brilliantly as it has begun," responded the other,
+shaking his head. "But the safety and integrity of the
+Russian territory before everything. Business is business."
+
+If in this compartment the subject of conversation varied
+but little -- nor did it, indeed, in the other carriages of the
+train -- in all it might have been observed that the talkers
+used much circumspection. When they did happen to ven-
+ture out of the region of facts, they never went so far as to
+attempt to divine the intentions of the Muscovite govern-
+ment, or even to criticize them.
+
+This was especially remarked by a traveler in a carriage
+at the front part of the train. This person -- evidently a
+stranger -- made good use of his eyes, and asked numberless
+questions, to which he received only evasive answers. Every
+minute leaning out of the window, which he would keep
+down, to the great disgust of his fellow-travelers, he lost
+nothing of the views to the right. He inquired the names
+of the most insignificant places, their position, what were
+their commerce, their manufactures, the number of their
+inhabitants, the average mortality, etc., and all this he wrote
+down in a note-book, already full.
+
+This was the correspondent Alcide Jolivet, and the reason
+of his putting so many insignificant questions was, that
+amongst the many answers he received, he hoped to find
+some interesting fact "for his cousin." But, naturally
+enough, he was taken for a spy, and not a word treating of
+the events of the day was uttered in his hearing.
+
+Finding, therefore, that he could learn nothing of the
+Tartar invasion, he wrote in his book, "Travelers of great
+discretion. Very close as to political matters."
+
+Whilst Alcide Jolivet noted down his impressions thus
+minutely, his confrere, in the same train, traveling for the
+same object, was devoting himself to the same work of ob-
+servation in another compartment. Neither of them had
+seen each other that day at the Moscow station, and they
+were each ignorant that the other had set out to visit the
+scene of the war. Harry Blount, speaking little, but listen-
+ing much, had not inspired his companions with the sus-
+picions which Alcide Jolivet had aroused. He was not
+taken for a spy, and therefore his neighbors, without con-
+straint, gossiped in his presence, allowing themselves even
+to go farther than their natural caution would in most cases
+have allowed them. The correspondent of the Daily Tele-
+graph had thus an opportunity of observing how much re-
+cent events preoccupied the merchants of Nijni-Novgorod,
+and to what a degree the commerce with Central Asia was
+threatened in its transit.
+
+He therefore noted in his book this perfectly correct ob-
+servation, "My fellow-travelers extremely anxious. Noth-
+ing is talked of but war, and they speak of it, with a freedom
+which is astonishing, as having broken out between the
+Volga and the Vistula."
+
+The readers of the Daily Telegraph would not fail to be
+as well informed as Alcide Jolivet's "cousin." But as
+Harry Blount, seated at the left of the train, only saw one
+part of the country, which was hilly, without giving him-
+self the trouble of looking at the right side, which was com-
+posed of wide plains, he added, with British assurance,
+"Country mountainous between Moscow and Wladimir."
+
+It was evident that the Russian government purposed
+taking severe measures to guard against any serious
+eventualities even in the interior of the empire. The rebel
+lion had not crossed the Siberian frontier, but evil influences
+might be feared in the Volga provinces, so near to the coun-
+try of the Kirghiz.
+
+The police had as yet found no traces of Ivan Ogareff.
+It was not known whether the traitor, calling in the
+foreigner to avenge his personal rancor, had rejoined
+Feofar-Khan, or whether he was endeavoring to foment a
+revolt in the government of Nijni-Novgorod, which at this
+time of year contained a population of such diverse ele-
+ments. Perhaps among the Persians, Armenians, or Kal-
+mucks, who flocked to the great market, he had agents,
+instructed to provoke a rising in the interior. All this was
+possible, especially in such a country as Russia. In fact,
+this vast empire, 4,000,000 square miles in extent, does
+not possess the homogeneousness of the states of Western
+Europe. The Russian territory in Europe and Asia
+contains more than seventy millions of inhabitants. In
+it thirty different languages are spoken. The Sclavonian
+race predominates, no doubt, but there are besides Rus-
+sians, Poles, Lithuanians, Courlanders. Add to these,
+Finns, Laplanders, Esthonians, several other northern tribes
+with unpronounceable names, the Permiaks, the Germans,
+the Greeks, the Tartars, the Caucasian tribes, the Mongol,
+Kalmuck, Samoid, Kamtschatkan, and Aleutian hordes, and
+one may understand that the unity of so vast a state must
+be difficult to maintain, and that it could only be the work
+of time, aided by the wisdom of many successive rulers.
+
+Be that as it may, Ivan Ogareff had hitherto managed
+to escape all search, and very probably he might have
+rejoined the Tartar army. But at every station where the
+train stopped, inspectors came forward who scrutinized the
+travelers and subjected them all to a minute examination,
+as by order of the superintendent of police, these officials
+were seeking Ivan Ogareff. The government, in fact, be-
+lieved it to be certain that the traitor had not yet been able
+to quit European Russia. If there appeared cause to sus-
+pect any traveler, he was carried off to explain himself at
+the police station, and in the meantime the train went on its
+way, no person troubling himself about the unfortunate
+one left behind.
+
+With the Russian police, which is very arbitrary, it is
+absolutely useless to argue. Military rank is conferred on
+its employees, and they act in military fashion. How can
+anyone, moreover, help obeying, unhesitatingly, orders
+which emanate from a monarch who has the right to
+employ this formula at the head of his ukase: "We, by
+the grace of God, Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russias
+of Moscow, Kiev, Wladimir, and Novgorod, Czar of Kasan
+and Astrakhan, Czar of Poland, Czar of Siberia, Czar of
+the Tauric Chersonese, Seignior of Pskov, Prince of
+Smolensk, Lithuania, Volkynia, Podolia, and Finland,
+Prince of Esthonia, Livonia, Courland, and of Semigallia,
+of Bialystok, Karelia, Sougria, Perm, Viatka, Bulgaria,
+and many other countries; Lord and Sovereign Prince of the
+territory of Nijni-Novgorod, Tchemigoff, Riazan, Polotsk,
+Rostov, Jaroslavl, Bielozersk, Oudoria, Obdoria, Kondinia,
+Vitepsk, and of Mstislaf, Governor of the Hyperborean
+Regions, Lord of the countries of Iveria, Kartalinia, Grou-
+zinia, Kabardinia, and Armenia, Hereditary Lord and
+Suzerain of the Scherkess princes, of those of the moun-
+tains, and of others; heir of Norway, Duke of Schleswig-
+Holstein, Stormarn, Dittmarsen, and Oldenburg." A
+powerful lord, in truth, is he whose arms are an eagle with
+two heads, holding a scepter and a globe, surrounded by the
+escutcheons of Novgorod, Wladimir, Kiev, Kasan, Astrak-
+han, and of Siberia, and environed by the collar of the order
+of St. Andrew, surmounted by a royal crown!
+
+As to Michael Strogoff, his papers were in order, and he
+was, consequently, free from all police supervision.
+
+At the station of Wladimir the train stopped for several
+minutes, which appeared sufficient to enable the correspon-
+dent of the Daily Telegraph to take a twofold view, physical
+and moral, and to form a complete estimate of this ancient
+capital of Russia.
+
+At the Wladimir station fresh travelers joined the train.
+Among others, a young girl entered the compartment oc-
+cupied by Michael Strogoff. A vacant place was found op-
+posite the courier. The young girl took it, after placing by
+her side a modest traveling-bag of red leather, which seemed
+to constitute all her luggage. Then seating herself with
+downcast eyes, not even glancing at the fellow-travelers
+whom chance had given her, she prepared for a journey
+which was still to last several hours.
+
+Michael Strogoff could not help looking attentively at
+his newly-arrived fellow-traveler. As she was so placed
+as to travel with her back to the engine, he even offered
+her his seat, which he might prefer to her own, but she
+thanked him with a slight bend of her graceful neck.
+
+The young girl appeared to be about sixteen or seven-
+teen years of age. Her head, truly charming, was of the
+purest Sclavonic type -- slightly severe, and likely in a few
+summers to unfold into beauty rather than mere prettiness.
+From beneath a sort of kerchief which she wore on her head
+escaped in profusion light golden hair. Her eyes were
+brown, soft, and expressive of much sweetness of temper.
+The nose was straight, and attached to her pale and some-
+what thin cheeks by delicately mobile nostrils. The lips
+were finely cut, but it seemed as if they had long since for-
+gotten how to smile.
+
+The young traveler was tall and upright, as far as could
+be judged of her figure from the very simple and ample
+pelisse that covered her. Although she was still a very
+young girl in the literal sense of the term, the development
+of her high forehead and clearly-cut features gave the idea
+that she was the possessor of great moral energy -- a point
+which did not escape Michael Strogoff. Evidently this
+young girl had already suffered in the past, and the future
+doubtless did not present itself to her in glowing colors;
+but she had surely known how to struggle still with the trials
+of life. Her energy was evidently both prompt and per-
+sistent, and her calmness unalterable, even under circum-
+stances in which a man would be likely to give way or lose
+his self-command.
+
+Such was the impression which she produced at first sight.
+Michael Strogoff, being himself of an energetic tempera-
+ment, was naturally struck by the character of her physiog-
+nomy, and, while taking care not to cause her annoyance
+by a too persistent gaze, he observed his neighbor with no
+small interest. The costume of the young traveler was
+both extremely simple and appropriate. She was not rich
+-- that could be easily seen; but not the slightest mark of
+negligence was to be discerned in her dress. All her
+luggage was contained in the leather bag which, for want
+of room, she held on her lap.
+
+She wore a long, dark pelisse, gracefully adjusted at the
+neck by a blue tie. Under this pelisse, a short skirt, also
+dark, fell over a robe which reached the ankles. Half-
+boots of leather, thickly soled, as if chosen in anticipation
+of a long journey, covered her small feet.
+
+Michael Strogoff fancied that he recognized, by certain
+details, the fashion of the costume of Livonia, and thought
+his neighbor a native of the Baltic provinces.
+
+But whither was this young girl going, alone, at an age
+when the fostering care of a father, or the protection of a
+brother, is considered a matter of necessity? Had she now
+come, after an already long journey, from the provinces of
+Western Russia? Was she merely going to Nijni-Nov-
+gorod, or was the end of her travels beyond the eastern
+frontiers of the empire? Would some relation, some
+friend, await her arrival by the train? Or was it
+not more probable, on the contrary, that she would
+find herself as much isolated in the town as she was in this
+compartment? It was probable.
+
+In fact, the effect of habits contracted in solitude was
+clearly manifested in the bearing of the young girl. The
+manner in which she entered the carriage and prepared
+herself for the journey, the slight disturbance she caused
+among those around her, the care she took not to incom-
+mode or give trouble to anyone, all showed that she was
+accustomed to be alone, and to depend on herself only.
+
+Michael Strogoff observed her with interest, but, himself
+reserved, he sought no opportunity of accosting her. Once
+only, when her neighbor -- the merchant who had jumbled
+together so imprudently in his remarks tallow and shawls --
+being asleep, and threatening her with his great head, which
+was swaying from one shoulder to the other, Michael
+Strogoff awoke him somewhat roughly, and made him un-
+derstand that he must hold himself upright.
+
+The merchant, rude enough by nature, grumbled some
+words against "people who interfere with what does not
+concern them," but Michael Strogoff cast on him a glance
+so stern that the sleeper leant on the opposite side, and re-
+lieved the young traveler from his unpleasant vicinity.
+
+The latter looked at the young man for an instant, and
+mute and modest thanks were in that look.
+
+But a circumstance occurred which gave Strogoff a just
+idea of the character of the maiden. Twelve versts before
+arriving at Nijni-Novgorod, at a sharp curve of the iron
+way, the train experienced a very violent shock. Then, for
+a minute, it ran onto the slope of an embankment.
+
+Travelers more or less shaken about, cries, confusion,
+general disorder in the carriages -- such was the effect at
+first produced. It was to be feared that some serious acci-
+dent had happened. Consequently, even before the train had
+stopped, the doors were opened, and the panic-stricken pas-
+sengers thought only of getting out of the carriages.
+
+Michael Strogoff thought instantly of the young girl;
+but, while the passengers in her compartment were pre-
+cipitating themselves outside, screaming and struggling,
+she had remained quietly in her place, her face scarcely
+changed by a slight pallor.
+
+She waited -- Michael Strogoff waited also.
+
+Both remained quiet.
+
+"A determined nature!" thought Michael Strogoff.
+
+However, all danger had quickly disappeared. A break-
+age of the coupling of the luggage-van had first caused the
+shock to, and then the stoppage of, the train, which in an-
+other instant would have been thrown from the top of the
+embankment into a bog. There was an hour's delay. At
+last, the road being cleared, the train proceeded, and at
+half-past eight in the evening arrived at the station of Nijni-
+Novgorod.
+
+Before anyone could get out of the carriages, the in-
+spectors of police presented themselves at the doors and
+examined the passengers.
+
+Michael Strogoff showed his podorojna, made out in the
+name of Nicholas Korpanoff. He had consequently no
+difficulty. As to the other travelers in the compartment,
+all bound for Nijni-Novgorod, their appearance, happily
+for them, was in nowise suspicious.
+
+The young girl in her turn, exhibited, not a passport,
+since passports are no longer required in Russia, but a per-
+mit indorsed with a private seal, and which seemed to be
+of a special character. The inspector read the permit with
+attention. Then, having attentively examined the person
+whose description it contained:
+
+"You are from Riga?" he said.
+
+"Yes," replied the young girl.
+
+"You are going to Irkutsk?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"By what route?"
+
+"By Perm."
+
+"Good!" replied the inspector. "Take care to have
+your permit vised, at the police station of Nijni-Novgorod."
+
+The young girl bent her head in token of assent.
+
+Hearing these questions and replies, Michael Strogoff
+experienced a mingled sentiment both of surprise and pity.
+What! this young girl, alone, journeying to that far-off
+Siberia, and at a time when, to its ordinary dangers, were
+added all the perils of an invaded country and one in a state
+of insurrection! How would she reach it? What would
+become of her?
+
+The inspection ended, the doors of the carriages were
+then opened, but, before Michael Strogoff could move to-
+wards her, the young Livonian, who had been the first to
+descend, had disappeared in the crowd which thronged the
+platforms of the railway station.
+
+CHAPTER V
+THE TWO ANNOUNCEMENTS
+
+NIJNI-NOVGOROD, Lower Novgorod, situate at the junc-
+tion of the Volga and the Oka, is the chief town in the dis-
+trict of the same name. It was here that Michael Strogoff
+was obliged to leave the railway, which at the time did not
+go beyond that town. Thus, as he advanced, his traveling
+would become first less speedy and then less safe.
+
+Nijni-Novgorod, the fixed population of which is only
+from thirty to thirty-five thousand inhabitants, contained at
+that time more than three hundred thousand; that is to
+say, the population was increased tenfold. This addition
+was in consequence of the celebrated fair, which was held
+within the walls for three weeks. Formerly Makariew had
+the benefit of this concourse of traders, but since 1817 the
+fair had been removed to Nijni-Novgorod.
+
+Even at the late hour at which Michael Strogoff left the
+platform, there was still a large number of people in the two
+towns, separated by the stream of the Volga, which com-
+pose Nijni-Novgorod. The highest of these is built on a
+steep rock. and defended by a fort called in Russia "kreml."
+
+Michael Strogoff expected some trouble in finding a
+hotel, or even an inn, to suit him. As he had not to start
+immediately, for he was going to take a steamer, he was
+compelled to look out for some lodging; but, before doing
+so, he wished to know exactly the hour at which the steam-
+boat would start. He went to the office of the company
+whose boats plied between Nijni-Novgorod and Perm.
+There, to his great annoyance, he found that no boat started
+for Perm till the following day at twelve o'clock. Seven-
+teen hours to wait! It was very vexatious to a man so
+pressed for time. However, he never senselessly murmured.
+Besides, the fact was that no other conveyance could take
+him so quickly either to Perm or Kasan. It would be bet-
+ter, then, to wait for the steamer, which would enable him
+to regain lost time.
+
+Here, then, was Michael Strogoff, strolling through the
+town and quietly looking out for some inn in which to pass
+the night. However, he troubled himself little on this
+score, and, but that hunger pressed him, he would probably
+have wandered on till morning in the streets of Nijni-Nov-
+gorod. He was looking for supper rather than a bed. But
+he found both at the sign of the City of Constantinople.
+There, the landlord offered him a fairly comfortable room,
+with little furniture, it is true, but not without an image
+of the Virgin, and a few saints framed in yellow gauze.
+
+A goose filled with sour stuffing swimming in thick
+cream, barley bread, some curds, powdered sugar mixed
+with cinnamon, and a jug of kwass, the ordinary Russian
+beer, were placed before him, and sufficed to satisfy his
+hunger. He did justice to the meal, which was more than
+could be said of his neighbor at table, who, having, in his
+character of "old believer" of the sect of Raskalniks, made
+the vow of abstinence, rejected the potatoes in front of him,
+and carefully refrained from putting sugar in his tea.
+
+His supper finished, Michael Strogoff, instead of going
+up to his bedroom, again strolled out into the town. But,
+although the long twilight yet lingered, the crowd was al-
+ready dispersing, the streets were gradually becoming
+empty, and at length everyone retired to his dwelling.
+
+Why did not Michael Strogoff go quietly to bed, as would
+have seemed more reasonable after a long railway journey?
+Was he thinking of the young Livonian girl who had been
+his traveling companion? Having nothing better to do,
+he WAS thinking of her. Did he fear that, lost in this busy
+city, she might be exposed to insult? He feared so, and
+with good reason. Did he hope to meet her, and, if need
+were, to afford her protection? No. To meet would be
+difficult. As to protection -- what right had he --
+
+"Alone," he said to himself, "alone, in the midst of these
+wandering tribes! And yet the present dangers are noth-
+ing compared to those she must undergo. Siberia! Irkutsk!
+I am about to dare all risks for Russia, for the Czar, while
+she is about to do so -- For whom? For what? She is
+authorized to cross the frontier! The country beyond is in
+revolt! The steppes are full of Tartar bands!"
+
+Michael Strogoff stopped for an instant, and reflected.
+
+"Without doubt," thought he, "she must have deter-
+mined on undertaking her journey before the invasion.
+Perhaps she is even now ignorant of what is happening.
+But no, that cannot be; the merchants discussed before her
+the disturbances in Siberia -- and she did not seem surprised.
+She did not even ask an explanation. She must have
+known it then, and knowing it, is still resolute. Poor girl!
+Her motive for the journey must be urgent indeed! But
+though she may be brave -- and she certainly is so -- her
+strength must fail her, and, to say nothing of dangers and
+obstacles, she will be unable to endure the fatigue of such
+a journey. Never can she reach Irkutsk!"
+
+Indulging in such reflections, Michael Strogoff wandered
+on as chance led him; being well acquainted with the town,
+he knew that he could easily retrace his steps.
+
+Having strolled on for about an hour, he seated himself
+on a bench against the wall of a large wooden cottage,
+which stood, with many others, on a vast open space. He
+had scarcely been there five minutes when a hand was laid
+heavily on his shoulder.
+
+"What are you doing here?" roughly demanded a tall
+and powerful man, who had approached unperceived.
+
+"I am resting," replied Michael Strogoff.
+
+"Do you mean to stay all night on the bench?"
+
+"Yes, if I feel inclined to do so," answered Michael
+Strogoff, in a tone somewhat too sharp for the simple mer-
+chant he wished to personate.
+
+"Come forward, then, so I can see you," said the man.
+
+Michael Strogoff, remembering that, above all, prudence
+was requisite, instinctively drew back. "It is not neces-
+sary," he replied, and calmly stepped back ten paces.
+
+The man seemed, as Michael observed him well, to have
+the look of a Bohemian, such as are met at fairs, and with
+whom contact, either physical or moral, is unpleasant.
+Then, as he looked more attentively through the dusk, he
+perceived, near the cottage, a large caravan, the usual travel-
+ing dwelling of the Zingaris or gypsies, who swarm in
+Russia wherever a few copecks can be obtained.
+
+As the gypsy took two or three steps forward, and was
+about to interrogate Michael Strogoff more closely, the
+door of the cottage opened. He could just see a woman,
+who spoke quickly in a language which Michael Strogoff
+knew to be a mixture of Mongol and Siberian.
+
+"Another spy! Let him alone, and come to supper.
+The papluka is waiting for you."
+
+Michael Strogoff could not help smiling at the epithet
+bestowed on him, dreading spies as he did above all else.
+
+In the same dialect, although his accent was very differ-
+ent, the Bohemian replied in words which signify, "You
+are right, Sangarre! Besides, we start to-morrow."
+
+"To-morrow?" repeated the woman in surprise.
+
+"Yes, Sangarre," replied the Bohemian; "to-morrow,
+and the Father himself sends us -- where we are going!"
+
+Thereupon the man and woman entered the cottage, and
+carefully closed the door.
+
+"Good!" said Michael Strogoff, to himself; "if these
+gipsies do not wish to be understood when they speak be-
+fore me, they had better use some other language."
+
+From his Siberian origin, and because he had passed his
+childhood in the Steppes, Michael Strogoff, it has been said,
+understood almost all the languages in usage from Tartary
+to the Sea of Ice. As to the exact signification of the
+words he had heard, he did not trouble his head. For why
+should it interest him?
+
+It was already late when he thought of returning to his
+inn to take some repose. He followed, as he did so, the
+course of the Volga, whose waters were almost hidden un-
+der the countless number of boats floating on its bosom.
+
+An hour after, Michael Strogoff was sleeping soundly
+on one of those Russian beds which always seem so hard
+to strangers, and on the morrow, the 17th of July, he awoke
+at break of day.
+
+He had still five hours to pass in Nijni-Novgorod; it
+seemed to him an age. How was he to spend the morning
+unless in wandering, as he had done the evening before,
+through the streets? By the time he had finished his break-
+fast, strapped up his bag, had his podorojna inspected at
+the police office, he would have nothing to do but start.
+But he was not a man to lie in bed after the sun had risen;
+so he rose, dressed himself, placed the letter with the im-
+perial arms on it carefully at the bottom of its usual pocket
+within the lining of his coat, over which he fastened his
+belt; he then closed his bag and threw it over his shoulder.
+This done, he had no wish to return to the City of Con-
+stantinople, and intending to breakfast on the bank of the
+Volga near the wharf, he settled his bill and left the inn.
+By way of precaution, Michael Strogoff went first to the
+office of the steam-packet company, and there made sure
+that the Caucasus would start at the appointed hour. As
+he did so, the thought for the first time struck him that,
+since the young Livonian girl was going to Perm, it was
+very possible that her intention was also to embark in the
+Caucasus, in which case he should accompany her.
+
+The town above with its kremlin, whose circumference
+measures two versts, and which resembles that of Moscow,
+was altogether abandoned. Even the governor did not re-
+side there. But if the town above was like a city of the
+dead, the town below, at all events, was alive.
+
+Michael Strogoff, having crossed the Volga on a bridge
+of boats, guarded by mounted Cossacks, reached the square
+where the evening before he had fallen in with the gipsy
+camp. This was somewhat outside the town, where the
+fair of Nijni-Novgorod was held. In a vast plain rose
+the temporary palace of the governor-general, where by
+imperial orders that great functionary resided during the
+whole of the fair, which, thanks to the people who com-
+posed it, required an ever-watchful surveillance.
+
+This plain was now covered with booths symmetrically
+arranged in such a manner as to leave avenues broad enough
+to allow the crowd to pass without a crush.
+
+Each group of these booths, of all sizes and shapes,
+formed a separate quarter particularly dedicated to some
+special branch of commerce. There was the iron quarter,
+the furriers' quarter, the woolen quarter, the quarter of the
+wood merchants, the weavers' quarter, the dried fish quar-
+ter, etc. Some booths were even built of fancy materials,
+some of bricks of tea, others of masses of salt meat -- that
+is to say, of samples of the goods which the owners thus
+announced were there to the purchasers -- a singular, and
+somewhat American, mode of advertisement.
+
+In the avenues and long alleys there was already a large
+assemblage of people -- the sun, which had risen at four
+o'clock, being well above the horizon -- an extraordinary
+mixture of Europeans and Asiatics, talking, wrangling,
+haranguing, and bargaining. Everything which can be
+bought or sold seemed to be heaped up in this square.
+Furs, precious stones, silks, Cashmere shawls, Turkey car-
+pets, weapons from the Caucasus, gauzes from Smyrna and
+Ispahan. Tiflis armor, caravan teas. European bronzes,
+Swiss clocks, velvets and silks from Lyons, English cottons,
+harness, fruits, vegetables, minerals from the Ural, mala-
+chite, lapis-lazuli, spices, perfumes, medicinal herbs, wood,
+tar, rope, horn, pumpkins, water-melons, etc -- all the pro-
+ducts of India, China, Persia, from the shores of the
+Caspian and the Black Sea, from America and Europe, were
+united at this corner of the globe.
+
+It is scarcely possible truly to portray the moving mass
+of human beings surging here and there, the excitement,
+the confusion, the hubbub; demonstrative as were the na-
+tives and the inferior classes, they were completely outdone
+by their visitors. There were merchants from Central
+Asia, who had occupied a year in escorting their merchan-
+dise across its vast plains, and who would not again see their
+shops and counting-houses for another year to come. In
+short, of such importance is this fair of Nijni-Novgorod,
+that the sum total of its transactions amounts yearly to
+nearly a hundred million dollars.
+
+On one of the open spaces between the quarters of this
+temporary city were numbers of mountebanks of every de-
+scription; gypsies from the mountains, telling fortunes to
+the credulous fools who are ever to be found in such as-
+semblies; Zingaris or Tsiganes -- a name which the Russians
+give to the gypsies who are the descendants of the ancient
+Copts -- singing their wildest melodies and dancing their
+most original dances; comedians of foreign theaters, acting
+Shakespeare, adapted to the taste of spectators who crowded
+to witness them. In the long avenues the bear showmen ac-
+companied their four-footed dancers, menageries resounded
+with the hoarse cries of animals under the influence of the
+stinging whip or red-hot irons of the tamer; and, besides all
+these numberless performers, in the middle of the central
+square, surrounded by a circle four deep of enthusiastic
+amateurs, was a band of "mariners of the Volga," sitting
+on the ground, as on the deck of their vessel, imitating the
+action of rowing, guided by the stick of the master of the
+orchestra, the veritable helmsman of this imaginary vessel!
+A whimsical and pleasing custom!
+
+Suddenly, according to a time-honored observance in the
+fair of Nijni-Novgorod, above the heads of the vast con-
+course a flock of birds was allowed to escape from the cages
+in which they had been brought to the spot. In return for
+a few copecks charitably offered by some good people, the
+bird-fanciers opened the prison doors of their captives, who
+flew out in hundreds, uttering their joyous notes.
+
+It should be mentioned that England and France, at all
+events, were this year represented at the great fair of Nijni-
+Novgorod by two of the most distinguished products of
+modern civilization, Messrs. Harry Blount and Alcide
+Jolivet. Jolivet, an optimist by nature, found everything
+agreeable, and as by chance both lodging and food were
+to his taste, he jotted down in his book some memoranda
+particularly favorable to the town of Nijni-Novgorod.
+Blount, on the contrary, having in vain hunted for a supper,
+had been obliged to find a resting-place in the open air.
+He therefore looked at it all from another point of view, and
+was preparing an article of the most withering character
+against a town in which the landlords of the inns refused
+to receive travelers who only begged leave to be flayed,
+"morally and physically."
+
+Michael Strogoff, one hand in his pocket, the other hold-
+ing his cherry-stemmed pipe, appeared the most indifferent
+and least impatient of men; yet, from a certain contraction
+of his eyebrows every now and then, a careful observer
+would have seen that he was burning to be off.
+
+For two hours he kept walking about the streets, only
+to find himself invariably at the fair again. As he passed
+among the groups of buyers and sellers he discovered that
+those who came from countries on the confines of Asia
+manifested great uneasiness. Their trade was visibly
+suffering. Another symptom also was marked. In Russia
+military uniforms appear on every occasion. Soldiers are
+wont to mix freely with the crowd, the police agents being
+almost invariably aided by a number of Cossacks, who,
+lance on shoulder, keep order in the crowd of three hundred
+thousand strangers. But on this occasion the soldiers,
+Cossacks and the rest, did not put in an appearance at the
+great market. Doubtless, a sudden order to move having
+been foreseen, they were restricted to their barracks.
+
+Moreover, while no soldiers were to be seen, it was not
+so with their officers. Since the evening before, aides-de-
+camp, leaving the governor's palace, galloped in every direc-
+tion. An unusual movement was going forward which a
+serious state of affairs could alone account for. There
+were innumerable couriers on the roads both to Wladimir
+and to the Ural Mountains. The exchange of telegraphic
+dispatches with Moscow was incessant.
+
+Michael Strogoff found himself in the central square
+when the report spread that the head of police had been
+summoned by a courier to the palace of the governor-gen-
+eral. An important dispatch from Moscow, it was said,
+was the cause of it.
+
+"The fair is to be closed," said one.
+
+"The regiment of Nijni-Novgorod has received the
+route," declared another.
+
+"They say that the Tartars menace Tomsk!"
+
+"Here is the head of police!" was shouted on every side.
+A loud clapping of hands was suddenly raised, which sub-
+sided by degrees, and finally was succeeded by absolute
+silence. The head of police arrived in the middle of the
+central square, and it was seen by all that he held in his
+hand a dispatch.
+
+Then, in a loud voice, he read the following announce-
+ments: "By order of the Governor of Nijni-Novgorod.
+
+"1st. All Russian subjects are forbidden to quit the
+province upon any pretext whatsoever.
+
+"2nd. All strangers of Asiatic origin are commanded to
+leave the province within twenty-four hours."
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+BROTHER AND SISTER
+
+HOWEVER disastrous these measures might be to private
+interests, they were, under the circumstances, perfectly
+justifiable.
+
+"All Russian subjects are forbidden to leave the pro-
+vince;" if Ivan Ogareff was still in the province, this would
+at any rate prevent him, unless with the greatest difficulty,
+from rejoining Feofar-Khan, and becoming a very formid-
+able lieutenant to the Tartar chief.
+
+"All foreigners of Asiatic origin are ordered to leave the
+province in four-and-twenty hours;" this would send off
+in a body all the traders from Central Asia, as well as the
+bands of Bohemians, gipsies, etc., having more or less
+sympathy with the Tartars. So many heads, so many
+spies -- undoubtedly affairs required their expulsion.
+
+It is easy to understand the effect produced by these two
+thunder-claps bursting over a town like Nijni-Novgorod,
+so densely crowded with visitors, and with a commerce so
+greatly surpassing that of all other places in Russia. The
+natives whom business called beyond the Siberian frontier
+could not leave the province for a time at least. The tenor
+of the first article of the order was express; it admitted of
+no exception. All private interests must yield to the public
+weal. As to the second article of the proclamation, the
+order of expulsion which it contained admitted of no evas-
+ion either. It only concerned foreigners of Asiatic origin,
+but these could do nothing but pack up their merchandise
+and go back the way they came. As to the mountebanks,
+of which there were a considerable number, they had nearly
+a thousand versts to go before they could reach the nearest
+frontier. For them it was simply misery.
+
+At first there rose against this unusual measure a murmur
+of protestation, a cry of despair, but this was quickly sup-
+pressed by the presence of the Cossacks and agents of police.
+Immediately, what might be called the exodus from the
+immense plain began. The awnings in front of the stalls
+were folded up; the theaters were taken to pieces; the fires
+were put out; the acrobats' ropes were lowered; the old
+broken-winded horses of the traveling vans came back from
+their sheds. Agents and soldiers with whip or stick
+stimulated the tardy ones, and made nothing of pulling
+down the tents even before the poor Bohemians had left
+them.
+
+Under these energetic measures the square of Nijni-
+Novgorod would, it was evident, be entirely evacuated be-
+fore the evening, and to the tumult of the great fair would
+succeed the silence of the desert.
+
+It must again be repeated -- for it was a necessary aggra-
+vation of these severe measures -- that to all those nomads
+chiefly concerned in the order of expulsion even the steppes
+of Siberia were forbidden, and they would be obliged to
+hasten to the south of the Caspian Sea, either to Persia,
+Turkey, or the plains of Turkestan. The post of the Ural,
+and the mountains which form, as it were, a prolongation of
+the river along the Russian frontier, they were not allowed
+to pass. They were therefore under the necessity of
+traveling six hundred miles before they could tread a free
+soil.
+
+Just as the reading of the proclamation by the head of
+the police came to an end, an idea darted instinctively into
+the mind of Michael Strogoff. "What a singular coin-
+cidence," thought he, "between this proclamation expelling
+all foreigners of Asiatic origin, and the words exchanged
+last evening between those two gipsies of the Zingari race.
+'The Father himself sends us where we wish to go,' that
+old man said. But 'the Father' is the emperor! He is
+never called anything else among the people. How could
+those gipsies have foreseen the measure taken against them?
+how could they have known it beforehand, and where do
+they wish to go? Those are suspicious people, and it seems
+to me that to them the government proclamation must be
+more useful than injurious."
+
+But these reflections were completely dispelled by another
+which drove every other thought out of Michael's mind.
+He forgot the Zingaris, their suspicious words, the strange
+coincidence which resulted from the proclamation. The
+remembrance of the young Livonian girl suddenly rushed
+into his mind. "Poor child!" he thought to himself.
+"She cannot now cross the frontier."
+
+In truth the young girl was from Riga; she was Livonian,
+consequently Russian, and now could not leave Russian
+territory! The permit which had been given her before
+the new measures had been promulgated was no longer
+available. All the routes to Siberia had just been pitilessly
+closed to her, and, whatever the motive taking her to
+Irkutsk, she was now forbidden to go there.
+
+This thought greatly occupied Michael Strogoff. He
+said to himself, vaguely at first, that, without neglecting
+anything of what was due to his important mission, it would
+perhaps be possible for him to be of some use to this brave
+girl; and this idea pleased him. Knowing how serious were
+the dangers which he, an energetic and vigorous man, would
+have personally to encounter, he could not conceal from
+himself how infinitely greater they would prove to a young
+unprotected girl. As she was going to Irkutsk, she would
+be obliged to follow the same road as himself, she would
+have to pass through the bands of invaders, as he was about
+to attempt doing himself. If, moreover, she had at her
+disposal only the money necessary for a journey taken un-
+der ordinary circumstances, how could she manage to ac-
+complish it under conditions which made it not only perilous
+but expensive?
+
+"Well," said he, "if she takes the route to Perm, it is
+nearly impossible but that I shall fall in with her. Then, I
+will watch over her without her suspecting it; and as she
+appears to me as anxious as myself to reach Irkutsk, she
+will cause me no delay."
+
+But one thought leads to another. Michael Strogoff had
+till now thought only of doing a kind action; but now an-
+other idea flashed into his brain; the question presented it-
+self under quite a new aspect.
+
+"The fact is," said he to himself, "that I have much
+more need of her than she can have of me. Her presence
+will be useful in drawing off suspicion from me. A man
+traveling alone across the steppe, may be easily guessed to
+be a courier of the Czar. If, on the contrary, this young
+girl accompanies me, I shall appear, in the eyes of all, the
+Nicholas Korpanoff of my podorojna. Therefore, she
+must accompany me. Therefore, I must find her again at
+any cost. It is not probable that since yesterday evening
+she has been able to get a carriage and leave Nijni-Nov-
+gorod. I must look for her. And may God guide me!"
+
+Michael left the great square of Nijni-Novgorod, where
+the tumult produced by the carrying out of the prescribed
+measures had now reached its height. Recriminations
+from the banished strangers, shouts from the agents and
+Cossacks who were using them so brutally, together made
+an indescribable uproar. The girl for whom he searched
+could not be there. It was now nine o'clock in the morn-
+ing. The steamboat did not start till twelve. Michael
+Strogoff had therefore nearly two hours to employ in
+searching for her whom he wished to make his traveling
+companion.
+
+He crossed the Volga again and hunted through the quar-
+ters on the other side, where the crowd was much less con-
+siderable. He entered the churches, the natural refuge for
+all who weep, for all who suffer. Nowhere did he meet
+with the young Livonian.
+
+"And yet," he repeated, "she could not have left Nijni-
+Novgorod yet. We'll have another look." He wandered
+about thus for two hours. He went on without stopping,
+feeling no fatigue, obeying a potent instinct which allowed
+no room for thought. All was in vain.
+
+It then occurred to him that perhaps the girl had not
+heard of the order -- though this was improbable enough,
+for such a thunder-clap could not have burst without being
+heard by all. Evidently interested in knowing the smallest
+news from Siberia, how could she be ignorant of the meas-
+ures taken by the governor, measures which concerned her
+so directly?
+
+But, if she was ignorant of it, she would come in an hour
+to the quay, and there some merciless agent would refuse
+her a passage! At any cost, he must see her beforehand,
+and enable her to avoid such a repulse.
+
+But all his endeavors were in vain, and he at length al-
+most despaired of finding her again. It was eleven o'clock,
+and Michael thought of presenting his podorojna at the
+office of the head of police. The proclamation evidently
+did not concern him, since the emergency had been fore-
+seen for him, but he wished to make sure that nothing would
+hinder his departure from the town.
+
+Michael then returned to the other side of the Volga, to
+the quarter in which was the office of the head of police.
+An immense crowd was collected there; for though all
+foreigners were ordered to quit the province, they had not-
+withstanding to go through certain forms before they could
+depart.
+
+Without this precaution, some Russian more or less im-
+plicated in the Tartar movement would have been able, in
+a disguise, to pass the frontier -- just those whom the or-
+der wished to prevent going. The strangers were sent
+away, but still had to gain permission to go.
+
+Mountebanks, gypsies, Tsiganes, Zingaris, mingled with
+merchants from Persia, Turkey, India, Turkestan, China,
+filled the court and offices of the police station.
+
+Everyone was in a hurry, for the means of transport
+would be much sought after among this crowd of banished
+people, and those who did not set about it soon ran a great
+risk of not being able to leave the town in the prescribed
+time, which would expose them to some brutal treatment
+from the governor's agents.
+
+Owing to the strength of his elbows Michael was able
+to cross the court. But to get into the office and up to
+the clerk's little window was a much more difficult business.
+However, a word into an inspector's ear and a few
+judiciously given roubles were powerful enough to gain
+him a passage. The man, after taking him into the wait-
+ing-room, went to call an upper clerk. Michael Strogoff
+would not be long in making everything right with the police
+and being free in his movements.
+
+Whilst waiting, he looked about him, and what did he
+see? There, fallen, rather than seated, on a bench, was
+a girl, prey to a silent despair, although her face could
+scarcely be seen, the profile alone being visible against the
+wall. Michael Strogoff could not be mistaken. He in-
+stantly recognized the young Livonian.
+
+Not knowing the governor's orders, she had come to the
+police office to get her pass signed. They had refused to
+sign it. No doubt she was authorized to go to Irkutsk,
+but the order was peremptory -- it annulled all previous au-
+thorizations, and the routes to Siberia were closed to her.
+Michael, delighted at having found her again, approached
+the girl.
+
+She looked up for a moment and her face brightened on
+recognizing her traveling companion. She instinctively
+rose and, like a drowning man who clutches at a spar, she
+was about to ask his help.
+
+At that moment the agent touched Michael on the
+shoulder, "The head of police will see you," he said.
+
+"Good," returned Michael. And without saying a word
+to her for whom he had been searching all day, without
+reassuring her by even a gesture, which might compromise
+either her or himself, he followed the man.
+
+The young Livonian, seeing the only being to whom she
+could look for help disappear, fell back again on her bench.
+
+Three minutes had not passed before Michael Strogoff
+reappeared, accompanied by the agent. In his hand he
+held his podorojna, which threw open the roads to Siberia
+for him. He again approached the young Livonian, and
+holding out his hand: "Sister," said he.
+
+She understood. She rose as if some sudden inspiration
+prevented her from hesitating a moment.
+
+"Sister," repeated Michael Strogoff, "we are authorized
+to continue our journey to Irkutsk. Will you come with
+me?"
+
+"I will follow you, brother," replied the girl, putting her
+hand into that of Michael Strogoff. And together they
+left the police station.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+GOING DOWN THE VOLGA
+
+A LITTLE before midday, the steamboat's bell drew to
+the wharf on the Volga an unusually large concourse of
+people, for not only were those about to embark who had
+intended to go, but the many who were compelled to go
+contrary to their wishes. The boilers of the Caucasus were
+under full pressure; a slight smoke issued from its funnel,
+whilst the end of the escape-pipe and the lids of the valves
+were crowned with white vapor. It is needless to say that
+the police kept a close watch over the departure of the
+Caucasus, and showed themselves pitiless to those travelers
+who did not satisfactorily answer their questions.
+
+Numerous Cossacks came and went on the quay, ready
+to assist the agents, but they had not to interfere, as no one
+ventured to offer the slightest resistance to their orders.
+Exactly at the hour the last clang of the bell sounded, the
+powerful wheels of the steamboat began to beat the water,
+and the Caucasus passed rapidly between the two towns of
+which Nijni-Novgorod is composed.
+
+Michael Strogoff and the young Livonian had taken a
+passage on board the Caucasus. Their embarkation was
+made without any difficulty. As is known, the podorojna,
+drawn up in the name of Nicholas Korpanoff, authorized
+this merchant to be accompanied on his journey to Siberia.
+They appeared, therefore, to be a brother and sister travel-
+ing under the protection of the imperial police. Both,
+seated together at the stern, gazed at the receding town, so
+disturbed by the governor's order. Michael had as yet said
+nothing to the girl, he had not even questioned her. He
+waited until she should speak to him, when that was neces-
+sary. She had been anxious to leave that town, in which,
+but for the providential intervention of this unexpected pro-
+tector, she would have remained imprisoned. She said
+nothing, but her looks spoke her thanks.
+
+The Volga, the Rha of the ancients, the largest river in
+all Europe, is almost three thousand miles in length. Its
+waters, rather unwholesome in its upper part, are improved
+at Nijni-Novgorod by those of the Oka, a rapid affluent,
+issuing from the central provinces of Russia. The system
+of Russian canals and rivers has been justly compared to a
+gigantic tree whose branches spread over every part of the
+empire. The Volga forms the trunk of this tree, and it
+has for roots seventy mouths opening into the Caspian Sea.
+It is navigable as far as Rjef, a town in the government of
+Tver, that is, along the greater part of its course.
+
+The steamboats plying between Perm and Nijni-Nov-
+gorod rapidly perform the two hundred and fifty miles
+which separate this town from the town of Kasan. It is
+true that these boats have only to descend the Volga, which
+adds nearly two miles of current per hour to their own
+speed; but on arriving at the confluence of the Kama, a
+little below Kasan, they are obliged to quit the Volga for
+the smaller river, up which they ascend to Perm. Power-
+ful as were her machines, the Caucasus could not thus, after
+entering the Kama, make against the current more than
+ten miles an hour. Including an hour's stoppage at Kasan,
+the voyage from Nijni-Novgorod to Perm would take
+from between sixty to sixty-two hours.
+
+The steamer was very well arranged, and the passengers,
+according to their condition or resources, occupied three
+distinct classes on board. Michael Strogoff had taken care
+to engage two first-class cabins, so that his young compan-
+ion might retire into hers whenever she liked.
+
+The Caucasus was loaded with passengers of every de-
+scription. A number of Asiatic traders had thought it best
+to leave Nijni-Novgorod immediately. In that part of the
+steamer reserved for the first-class might be seen Armenians
+in long robes and a sort of miter on their heads; Jews,
+known by their conical caps; rich Chinese in their traditional
+costume, a very wide blue, violet, or black robe; Turks,
+wearing the national turban; Hindoos, with square caps,
+and a simple string for a girdle, some of whom, hold in
+their hands all the traffic of Central Asia; and, lastly, Tar-
+tars, wearing boots, ornamented with many-colored braid,
+and the breast a mass of embroidery. All these merchants
+had been obliged to pile up their numerous bales and chests
+in the hold and on the deck; and the transport of their bag-
+gage would cost them dear, for, according to the regulations,
+each person had only a right to twenty pounds' weight.
+
+In the bows of the Caucasus were more numerous groups
+of passengers, not only foreigners, but also Russians, who
+were not forbidden by the order to go back to their towns
+in the province. There were mujiks with caps on their
+heads, and wearing checked shirts under their wide pelisses;
+peasants of the Volga, with blue trousers stuffed into their
+boots, rose-colored cotton shirts, drawn in by a cord, felt
+caps; a few women, habited in flowery-patterned cotton
+dresses, gay-colored aprons, and bright handkerchiefs on
+their heads. These were principally third-class passengers,
+who were, happily, not troubled by the prospect of a long
+return voyage. The Caucasus passed numerous boats being
+towed up the stream, carrying all sorts of merchandise to
+Nijni-Novgorod. Then passed rafts of wood intermin-
+ably long, and barges loaded to the gunwale, and nearly
+sinking under water. A bootless voyage they were mak-
+ing, since the fair had been abruptly broken up at its outset.
+
+The waves caused by the steamer splashed on the banks,
+covered with flocks of wild duck, who flew away uttering
+deafening cries. A little farther, on the dry fields, bordered
+with willows, and aspens, were scattered a few cows, sheep,
+and herds of pigs. Fields, sown with thin buckwheat and
+rye, stretched away to a background of half-cultivated hills,
+offering no remarkable prospect. The pencil of an artist
+in quest of the picturesque would have found nothing to
+reproduce in this monotonous landscape.
+
+The Caucasus had been steaming on for almost two
+hours, when the young Livonian, addressing herself to
+Michael, said, "Are you going to Irkutsk, brother?"
+
+"Yes, sister," answered the young man. "We are
+going the same way. Consequently, where I go, you shall
+go."
+
+"To-morrow, brother, you shall know why I left the
+shores of the Baltic to go beyond the Ural Mountains."
+
+"I ask you nothing, sister."
+
+"You shall know all," replied the girl, with a faint smile.
+"A sister should hide nothing from her brother. But I
+cannot to-day. Fatigue and sorrow have broken me."
+
+"Will you go and rest in your cabin?" asked Michael
+Strogoff.
+
+"Yes -- yes; and to-morrow --"
+
+"Come then --"
+
+He hesitated to finish his sentence, as if he had wished to
+end it by the name of his companion, of which he was still
+ignorant.
+
+"Nadia," said she, holding out her hand.
+
+"Come, Nadia," answered Michael, "and make what
+use you like of your brother Nicholas Korpanoff." And
+he led the girl to the cabin engaged for her off the saloon.
+
+Michael Strogoff returned on deck, and eager for any
+news which might bear on his journey, he mingled in the
+groups of passengers, though without taking any part in the
+conversation. Should he by any chance be questioned, and
+obliged to reply, he would announce himself as the merchant
+Nicholas Korpanoff, going back to the frontier, for he did
+not wish it to be suspected that a special permission au-
+thorized him to travel to Siberia.
+
+The foreigners in the steamer could evidently speak of
+nothing but the occurrences of the day, of the order and its
+consequences. These poor people, scarcely recovered from
+the fatigue of a journey across Central Asia, found them-
+selves obliged to return, and if they did not give loud vent
+to their anger and despair, it was because they dared not.
+Fear, mingled with respect, restrained them. It was pos-
+sible that inspectors of police, charged with watching the
+passengers, had secretly embarked on board the Caucasus,
+and it was just as well to keep silence; expulsion, after all,
+was a good deal preferable to imprisonment in a fortress.
+Therefore the men were either silent, or spoke with so much
+caution that it was scarcely possible to get any useful in-
+formation.
+
+Michael Strogoff thus could learn nothing here; but if
+mouths were often shut at his approach -- for they did not
+know him -- his ears were soon struck by the sound of one
+voice, which cared little whether it was heard or not.
+
+The man with the hearty voice spoke Russian, but with
+a French accent; and another speaker answered him more
+reservedly. "What," said the first, "are you on board this
+boat, too, my dear fellow; you whom I met at the imperial
+fete in Moscow, and just caught a glimpse of at Nijni-Nov-
+gorod?"
+
+"Yes, it's I," answered the second drily.
+
+"Really, I didn't expect to be so closely followed."
+
+"I am not following you sir; I am preceding you."
+
+"Precede! precede! Let us march abreast, keeping step,
+like two soldiers on parade, and for the time, at least, let
+us agree, if you will, that one shall not pass the other."
+
+"On the contrary, I shall pass you."
+
+"We shall see that, when we are at the seat of war; but
+till then, why, let us be traveling companions. Later, we
+shall have both time and occasion to be rivals."
+
+"Enemies."
+
+"Enemies, if you like. There is a precision in your
+words, my dear fellow, particularly agreeable to me. One
+may always know what one has to look for, with you."
+
+"What is the harm?"
+
+"No harm at all. So, in my turn, I will ask your per-
+mission to state our respective situations."
+
+"State away."
+
+"You are going to Perm -- like me?"
+
+"Like you."
+
+"And probably you will go from Perm to Ekaterenburg,
+since that is the best and safest route by which to cross the
+Ural Mountains?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"Once past the frontier, we shall be in Siberia, that is
+to say in the midst of the invasion."
+
+"We shall be there."
+
+"Well! then, and only then, will be the time to say, Each
+for himself, and God for --"
+
+"For me."
+
+"For you, all by yourself! Very well! But since we
+have a week of neutral days before us, and since it is very
+certain that news will not shower down upon us on the
+way, let us be friends until we become rivals again."
+
+"Enemies."
+
+"Yes; that's right, enemies. But till then, let us act to-
+gether, and not try and ruin each other. All the same, I
+promise you to keep to myself all that I can see --"
+
+"And I, all that I can hear."
+
+"Is that agreed?"
+
+"It is agreed."
+
+"Your hand?"
+
+"Here it is." And the hand of the first speaker, that is
+to say, five wide-open fingers, vigorously shook the two
+fingers coolly extended by the other.
+
+"By the bye," said the first, "I was able this morning to
+telegraph the very words of the order to my cousin at
+seventeen minutes past ten."
+
+"And I sent it to the Daily Telegraph at thirteen minutes
+past ten."
+
+"Bravo, Mr. Blount!"
+
+"Very good, M. Jolivet."
+
+"I will try and match that!"
+
+"It will be difficult."
+
+"I can try, however."
+
+So saying, the French correspondent familiarly saluted
+the Englishman, who bowed stiffly. The governor's proc-
+lamation did not concern these two news-hunters, as they
+were neither Russians nor foreigners of Asiatic origin.
+However, being urged by the same instinct, they had left
+Nijni-Novgorod together. It was natural that they should
+take the same means of transport, and that they should fol-
+low the same route to the Siberian steppes. Traveling com-
+panions, whether enemies or friends, they had a week to
+pass together before "the hunt would be open." And then
+success to the most expert! Alcide Jolivet had made the
+first advances, and Harry Blount had accepted them though
+he had done so coldly.
+
+That very day at dinner the Frenchman open as ever and
+even too loquacious, the Englishman still silent and grave,
+were seen hobnobbing at the same table, drinking genuine
+Cliquot, at six roubles the bottle, made from the fresh sap
+of the birch-trees of the country. On hearing them
+chatting away together, Michael Strogoff said to himself:
+"Those are inquisitive and indiscreet fellows whom I shall
+probably meet again on the way. It will be prudent for
+me to keep them at a distance."
+
+The young Livonian did not come to dinner. She was
+asleep in her cabin, and Michael did not like to awaken her.
+It was evening before she reappeared on the deck of the
+Caucasus. The long twilight imparted a coolness to the
+atmosphere eagerly enjoyed by the passengers after the
+stifling heat of the day. As the evening advanced, the
+greater number never even thought of going into the
+saloon. Stretched on the benches, they inhaled with de-
+light the slight breeze caused by the speed of the steamer.
+At this time of year, and under this latitude, the sky scarcely
+darkened between sunset and dawn, and left the steersman
+light enough to guide his steamer among the numerous ves-
+sels going up or down the Volga.
+
+Between eleven and two, however, the moon being new,
+it was almost dark. Nearly all the passengers were then
+asleep on the deck, and the silence was disturbed only by
+the noise of the paddles striking the water at regular in-
+tervals. Anxiety kept Michael Strogoff awake. He
+walked up and down, but always in the stern of the steamer.
+Once, however, he happened to pass the engine-room. He
+then found himself in the part reserved for second and
+third-class passengers.
+
+There, everyone was lying asleep, not only on the benches,
+but also on the bales, packages, and even the deck itself.
+Some care was necessary not to tread on the sleepers, who
+were lying about everywhere. They were chiefly mujiks,
+accustomed to hard couches, and quite satisfied with the
+planks of the deck. But no doubt they would, all the same,
+have soundly abused the clumsy fellow who roused them
+with an accidental kick.
+
+Michael Strogoff took care, therefore, not to disturb any-
+one. By going thus to the end of the boat, he had no other
+idea but that of striving against sleep by a rather longer
+walk. He reached the forward deck, and was already
+climbing the forecastle ladder, when he heard someone
+speaking near him. He stopped. The voices appeared to
+come from a group of passengers enveloped in cloaks and
+wraps. It was impossible to recognize them in the dark,
+though it sometimes happened that, when the steamer's
+chimney sent forth a plume of ruddy flames, the sparks
+seemed to fall amongst the group as though thousands of
+spangles had been suddenly illuminated.
+
+Michael was about to step up the ladder, when a few
+words reached his ear, uttered in that strange tongue which
+he had heard during the night at the fair. Instinctively
+he stopped to listen. Protected by the shadow of the fore-
+castle, he could not be perceived himself. As to seeing the
+passengers who were talking, that was impossible. He must
+confine himself to listening.
+
+The first words exchanged were of no importance -- to
+him at least -- but they allowed him to recognize the voices
+of the man and woman whom he had heard at Nijni-Nov-
+gorod. This, of course, made him redouble his attention.
+It was, indeed, not at all impossible that these same Tsiganes,
+now banished, should be on board the Caucasus.
+
+And it was well for him that he listened, for he dis-
+tinctly heard this question and answer made in the Tartar
+idiom: "It is said that a courier has set out from Moscow
+for Irkutsk."
+
+"It is so said, Sangarre; but either this courier will ar-
+rive too late, or he will not arrive at all."
+
+Michael Strogoff started involuntarily at this reply, which
+concerned him so directly. He tried to see if the man and
+woman who had just spoken were really those whom he
+suspected, but he could not succeed.
+
+In a few moments Michael Strogoff had regained the
+stern of the vessel without having been perceived, and, tak-
+ing a seat by himself, he buried his face in his hands. It
+might have been supposed that he was asleep.
+
+He was not asleep, however, and did not even think of
+sleeping. He was reflecting, not without a lively appre-
+hension: "Who is it knows of my departure, and who can
+have any interest in knowing it?"
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+GOING UP THE KAMA
+
+THE next day, the 18th of July, at twenty minutes to
+seven in the morning, the Caucasus reached the Kasan quay,
+seven versts from the town.
+
+Kasan is situated at the confluence of the Volga and
+Kasanka. It is an important chief town of the government,
+and a Greek archbishopric, as well as the seat of a uni-
+versity. The varied population preserves an Asiatic char-
+acter. Although the town was so far from the landing-
+place, a large crowd was collected on the quay. They had
+come for news. The governor of the province had pub-
+lished an order identical with that of Nijni-Novgorod.
+Police officers and a few Cossacks kept order among the
+crowd, and cleared the way both for the passengers who
+were disembarking and also for those who were embarking
+on board the Caucasus, minutely examining both classes of
+travelers. The one were the Asiatics who were being ex-
+pelled; the other, mujiks stopping at Kasan.
+
+Michael Strogoff unconcernedly watched the bustle which
+occurs at all quays on the arrival of a steam vessel. The
+Caucasus would stay for an hour to renew her fuel. Michael
+did not even think of landing. He was unwilling to leave
+the young Livonian girl alone on board, as she had not yet
+reappeared on deck.
+
+The two journalists had risen at dawn, as all good hunts-
+men should do. They went on shore and mingled with the
+crowd, each keeping to his own peculiar mode of proceed-
+ing; Harry Blount, sketching different types, or noting some
+observation; Alcide Jolivet contenting himself with ask-
+ing questions, confiding in his memory, which never failed
+him.
+
+There was a report along all the frontier that the insur-
+rection and invasion had reached considerable proportions.
+Communication between Siberia and the empire was al-
+ready extremely difficult. All this Michael Strogoff heard
+from the new arrivals. This information could not but
+cause him great uneasiness, and increase his wish of being
+beyond the Ural Mountains, so as to judge for himself of
+the truth of these rumors, and enable him to guard against
+any possible contingency. He was thinking of seeking
+more direct intelligence from some native of Kasan, when
+his attention was suddenly diverted.
+
+Among the passengers who were leaving the Caucasus,
+Michael recognized the troop of Tsiganes who, the day
+before, had appeared in the Nijni-Novgorod fair. There,
+on the deck of the steamboat were the old Bohemian and
+the woman. With them, and no doubt under their direc-
+tion, landed about twenty dancers and singers, from fifteen
+to twenty years of age, wrapped in old cloaks, which cov-
+ered their spangled dresses. These dresses, just then glanc-
+ing in the first rays of the sun, reminded Michael of the
+curious appearance which he had observed during the night.
+It must have been the glitter of those spangles in the bright
+flames issuing from the steamboat's funnel which had at-
+tracted his attention.
+
+"Evidently," said Michael to himself, "this troop of
+Tsiganes, after remaining below all day, crouched under
+the forecastle during the night. Were these gipsies trying
+to show themselves as little as possible? Such is not ac-
+cording to the usual custom of their race."
+
+Michael Strogoff no longer doubted that the expressions
+he had heard, had proceeded from this tawny group, and
+had been exchanged between the old gypsy and the woman
+to whom he gave the Mongolian name of Sangarre.
+Michael involuntarily moved towards the gangway, as the
+Bohemian troop was leaving the steamboat.
+
+The old Bohemian was there, in a humble attitude, little
+conformable with the effrontery natural to his race. One
+would have said that he was endeavoring rather to avoid
+attention than to attract it. His battered hat, browned by
+the suns of every clime, was pulled forward over his wrin-
+kled face. His arched back was bent under an old cloak,
+wrapped closely round him, notwithstanding the heat. It
+would have been difficult, in this miserable dress, to judge
+of either his size or face. Near him was the Tsigane, San-
+garre, a woman about thirty years old. She was tall and
+well made, with olive complexion, magnificent eyes, and
+golden hair.
+
+Many of the young dancers were remarkably pretty, all
+possessing the clear-cut features of their race. These
+Tsiganes are generally very attractive, and more than one
+of the great Russian nobles, who try to vie with the English
+in eccentricity, has not hesitated to choose his wife from
+among these gypsy girls. One of them was humming a
+song of strange rhythm, which might be thus rendered:
+
+ "Glitters brightly the gold
+ In my raven locks streaming
+ Rich coral around
+ My graceful neck gleaming;
+ Like a bird of the air,
+ Through the wide world I roam."
+
+The laughing girl continued her song, but Michael Stro-
+goff ceased to listen. It struck him just then that the
+Tsigane, Sangarre, was regarding him with a peculiar gaze,
+as if to fix his features indelibly in her memory.
+
+It was but for a few moments, when Sangarre herself
+followed the old man and his troop, who had already left
+the vessel. "That's a bold gypsy," said Michael to him-
+self. "Could she have recognized me as the man whom
+she saw at Nijni-Novgorod? These confounded Tsiganes
+have the eyes of a cat! They can see in the dark; and that
+woman there might well know --"
+
+Michael Strogoff was on the point of following Sangarre
+and the gypsy band, but he stopped. "No," thought he,
+"no unguarded proceedings. If I were to stop that old
+fortune teller and his companions my incognito would run
+a risk of being discovered. Besides, now they have landed,
+before they can pass the frontier I shall be far beyond it.
+They may take the route from Kasan to Ishim, but that
+affords no resources to travelers. Besides a tarantass,
+drawn by good Siberian horses, will always go faster than
+a gypsy cart! Come, friend Korpanoff, be easy."
+
+By this time the man and Sangarre had disappeared.
+
+Kasan is justly called the "Gate of Asia" and consid-
+ered as the center of Siberian and Bokharian commerce;
+for two roads begin here and lead across the Ural Moun-
+tains. Michael Strogoff had very judiciously chosen the
+one by Perm and Ekaterenburg. It is the great stage road,
+well supplied with relays kept at the expense of the govern-
+ment, and is prolonged from Ishim to Irkutsk.
+
+It is true that a second route -- the one of which Michael
+had just spoken -- avoiding the slight detour by Perm, also
+connects Kasan with Ishim. It is perhaps shorter than
+the other, but this advantage is much diminished by the ab-
+sence of post-houses, the bad roads, and lack of villages.
+Michael Strogoff was right in the choice he had made, and
+if, as appeared probable, the gipsies should follow the sec-
+ond route from Kasan to Ishim, he had every chance of
+arriving before them.
+
+An hour afterwards the bell rang on board the Caucasus,
+calling the new passengers, and recalling the former ones.
+It was now seven o'clock in the morning. The requisite
+fuel had been received on board. The whole vessel began
+to vibrate from the effects of the steam. She was ready
+to start. Passengers going from Kasan to Perm were
+crowding on the deck.
+
+Michael noticed that of the two reporters Blount alone
+had rejoined the steamer. Was Alcide Jolivet about to miss
+his passage?
+
+But just as the ropes were being cast off, Jolivet appeared,
+tearing along. The steamer was already sheering off, the
+gangway had been drawn onto the quay, but Alcide Jolivet
+would not stick at such a little thing as that, so, with a
+bound like a harlequin, he alighted on the deck of the
+Caucasus almost in his rival's arms.
+
+"I thought the Caucasus was going without you," said
+the latter.
+
+"Bah!" answered Jolivet, "I should soon have caught
+you up again, by chartering a boat at my cousin's expense,
+or by traveling post at twenty copecks a verst, and on horse-
+back. What could I do? It was so long a way from the
+quay to the telegraph office."
+
+"Have you been to the telegraph office?" asked Harry
+Blount, biting his lips.
+
+"That's exactly where I have been!" answered Jolivet,
+with his most amiable smile.
+
+"And is it still working to Kolyvan?"
+
+"That I don't know, but I can assure you, for instance,
+that it is working from Kasan to Paris."
+
+"You sent a dispatch to your cousin?"
+
+"With enthusiasm."
+
+"You had learnt then --?"
+
+"Look here, little father, as the Russians say," replied
+Alcide Jolivet, "I'm a good fellow, and I don't wish to
+keep anything from you. The Tartars, and Feofar-Khan
+at their head, have passed Semipolatinsk, and are descend-
+ing the Irtish. Do what you like with that!"
+
+What! such important news, and Harry Blount had not
+known it; and his rival, who had probably learned it from
+some inhabitant of Kasan, had already transmitted it to
+Paris. The English paper was distanced! Harry Blount,
+crossing his hands behind him, walked off and seated him-
+self in the stern without uttering a word.
+
+About ten o'clock in the morning, the young Livonian,
+leaving her cabin, appeared on deck. Michael Strogoff
+went forward and took her hand. "Look, sister!" said
+he, leading her to the bows of the Caucasus.
+
+The view was indeed well worth seeing. The Caucasus
+had reached the confluence of the Volga and the Kama.
+There she would leave the former river, after having
+descended it for nearly three hundred miles, to ascend the
+latter for a full three hundred.
+
+The Kama was here very wide, and its wooded banks
+lovely. A few white sails enlivened the sparkling water.
+The horizon was closed by a line of hills covered with
+aspens, alders, and sometimes large oaks.
+
+But these beauties of nature could not distract the
+thoughts of the young Livonian even for an instant. She
+had left her hand in that of her companion, and turning to
+him, "At what distance are we from Moscow?" she asked.
+
+"Nine hundred versts," answered Michael.
+
+"Nine hundred, out of seven thousand!" murmured the
+girl.
+
+The bell now announced the breakfast hour. Nadia fol-
+lowed Michael Strogoff to the restaurant. She ate little,
+and as a poor girl whose means are small would do. Michael
+thought it best to content himself with the fare which sat-
+isfied his companion; and in less than twenty minutes he
+and Nadia returned on deck. There they seated themselves
+in the stern, and without preamble, Nadia, lowering her
+voice to be heard by him alone, began:
+
+"Brother, I am the daughter of an exile. My name is
+Nadia Fedor. My mother died at Riga scarcely a month
+ago, and I am going to Irkutsk to rejoin my father and
+share his exile."
+
+"I, too, am going to Irkutsk," answered Michael," and
+I shall thank Heaven if it enables me to give Nadia Fedor
+safe and sound into her father's hands."
+
+"Thank you, brother," replied Nadia.
+
+Michael Strogoff then added that he had obtained a spe-
+cial podorojna for Siberia, and that the Russian authori-
+ties could in no way hinder his progress.
+
+Nadia asked nothing more. She saw in this fortunate
+meeting with Michael a means only of accelerating her
+journey to her father.
+
+"I had," said she, "a permit which authorized me to go
+to Irkutsk, but the new order annulled that; and but for
+you, brother, I should have been unable to leave the town,
+in which, without doubt, I should have perished."
+
+"And dared you, alone, Nadia," said Michael, "attempt
+to cross the steppes of Siberia?"
+
+"The Tartar invasion was not known when I left Riga.
+It was only at Moscow that I learnt the news."
+
+"And despite it, you continued your journey?"
+
+"It was my duty."
+
+The words showed the character of the brave girl.
+
+She then spoke of her father, Wassili Fedor. He was
+a much-esteemed physician at Riga. But his connection
+with some secret society having been asserted, he received
+orders to start for Irkutsk. The police who brought the
+order conducted him without delay beyond the frontier.
+
+Wassili Fedor had but time to embrace his sick wife
+and his daughter, so soon to be left alone, when, shedding
+bitter tears, he was led away. A year and a half after
+her husband's departure, Madame Fedor died in the arms
+of her daughter, who was thus left alone and almost penni-
+less. Nadia Fedor then asked, and easily obtained from
+the Russian government, an authorization to join her father
+at Irkutsk. She wrote and told him she was starting. She
+had barely enough money for this long journey, and yet
+she did not hesitate to undertake it. She would do what she
+could. God would do the rest.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+DAY AND NIGHT IN A TARANTASS
+
+THE next day, the 19th of July, the Caucasus reached
+Perm, the last place at which she touched on the Kama.
+
+The government of which Perm is the capital is one of
+the largest in the Russian Empire, and, extending over the
+Ural Mountains, encroaches on Siberian territory. Marble
+quarries, mines of salt, platina, gold, and coal are worked
+here on a large scale. Although Perm, by its situation, has
+become an important town, it is by no means attractive,
+being extremely dirty, and without resources. This want
+of comfort is of no consequence to those going to Siberia,
+for they come from the more civilized districts, and are sup-
+plied with all necessaries.
+
+At Perm travelers from Siberia resell their vehicles, more
+or less damaged by the long journey across the plains.
+There, too, those passing from Europe to Asia purchase
+carriages, or sleighs in the winter season.
+
+Michael Strogoff had already sketched out his pro-
+gramme. A vehicle carrying the mail usually runs across
+the Ural Mountains, but this, of course, was discontinued.
+Even if it had not been so, he would not have taken it, as
+he wished to travel as fast as possible, without depending
+on anyone. He wisely preferred to buy a carriage, and
+journey by stages, stimulating the zeal of the postillions
+by well-applied "na vodkou," or tips.
+
+Unfortunately, in consequence of the measures taken
+against foreigners of Asiatic origin, a large number of trav-
+elers had already left Perm, and therefore conveyances
+were extremely rare. Michael was obliged to content him-
+self with what had been rejected by others. As to horses,
+as long as the Czar's courier was not in Siberia, he could
+exhibit his podorojna, and the postmasters would give him
+the preference. But, once out of Europe, he had to de-
+pend alone on the power of his roubles.
+
+But to what sort of a vehicle should he harness his
+horses? To a telga or to a tarantass? The telga is noth-
+ing but an open four-wheeled cart, made entirely of wood,
+the pieces fastened together by means of strong rope. Noth-
+ing could be more primitive, nothing could be less comfort-
+able; but, on the other hand, should any accident happen
+on the way, nothing could be more easily repaired. There
+is no want of firs on the Russian frontier, and axle-trees
+grow naturally in forests. The post extraordinary, known
+by the name of "perck-ladnoi," is carried by the telga, as
+any road is good enough for it. It must be confessed that
+sometimes the ropes which fasten the concern together
+break, and whilst the hinder part remains stuck in some bog,
+the fore-part arrives at the post-house on two wheels; but
+this result is considered quite satisfactory.
+
+Michael Strogoff would have been obliged to employ a
+telga, if he had not been lucky enough to discover a taran-
+tass. It is to be hoped that the invention of Russian coach-
+builders will devise some improvement in this last-named
+vehicle. Springs are wanting in it as well as in the telga;
+in the absence of iron, wood is not spared; but its four
+wheels, with eight or nine feet between them, assure a cer-
+tain equilibrium over the jolting rough roads. A splash-
+board protects the travelers from the mud, and a strong
+leathern hood, which may be pulled quite over the occupiers,
+shelters them from the great heat and violent storms of the
+summer. The tarantass is as solid and as easy to repair as
+the telga, and is, moreover, less addicted to leaving its hinder
+part in the middle of the road.
+
+It was not without careful search that Michael managed
+to discover this tarantass, and there was probably not a
+second to be found in all Perm. He haggled long about the
+price, for form's sake, to act up to his part as Nicholas
+Korpanoff, a plain merchant of Irkutsk.
+
+Nadia had followed her companion in his search after a
+suitable vehicle. Although the object of each was different,
+both were equally anxious to arrive at their goal. One
+would have said the same will animated them both.
+
+"Sister," said Michael, "I wish I could have found a
+more comfortable conveyance for you."
+
+"Do you say that to me, brother, when I would have
+gone on foot, if need were, to rejoin my father?"
+
+"I do not doubt your courage, Nadia, but there are
+physical fatigues a woman may be unable to endure."
+
+"I shall endure them, whatever they be," replied the
+girl. "If you ever hear a complaint from me you may
+leave me in the road, and continue your journey alone."
+
+Half an hour later, the podorojna being presented by
+Michael, three post-horses were harnessed to the tarantass.
+These animals, covered with long hair, were very like long-
+legged bears. They were small but spirited, being of
+Siberian breed. The way in which the iemschik harnessed
+them was thus: one, the largest, was secured between two
+long shafts, on whose farther end was a hoop carrying tas-
+sels and bells; the two others were simply fastened by ropes
+to the steps of the tarantass. This was the complete har-
+ness, with mere strings for reins.
+
+Neither Michael Strogoff nor the young Livonian girl
+had any baggage. The rapidity with which one wished to
+make the journey, and the more than modest resources of
+the other, prevented them from embarrassing themselves
+with packages. It was a fortunate thing, under the cir-
+cumstances, for the tarantass could not have carried both
+baggage and travelers. It was only made for two persons,
+without counting the iemschik, who kept his equilibrium on
+his narrow seat in a marvelous manner.
+
+The iemschik is changed at every relay. The man who
+drove the tarantass during the first stage was, like his horses,
+a Siberian, and no less shaggy than they; long hair, cut
+square on the forehead, hat with a turned-up brim, red belt,
+coat with crossed facings and buttons stamped with the
+imperial cipher. The iemschik, on coming up with his
+team, threw an inquisitive glance at the passengers of the
+tarantass. No luggage! -- and had there been, where in the
+world could he have stowed it? Rather shabby in appear-
+ance too. He looked contemptuous.
+
+"Crows," said he, without caring whether he was over-
+heard or not; "crows, at six copecks a verst!"
+
+"No, eagles!" said Michael, who understood the
+iemschik's slang perfectly; "eagles, do you hear, at nine
+copecks a verst, and a tip besides."
+
+He was answered by a merry crack of the whip.
+
+In the language of the Russian postillions the "crow"
+is the stingy or poor traveler, who at the post-houses only
+pays two or three copecks a verst for the horses. The
+"eagle" is the traveler who does not mind expense, to
+say nothing of liberal tips. Therefore the crow could not
+claim to fly as rapidly as the imperial bird.
+
+Nadia and Michael immediately took their places in the
+tarantass. A small store of provisions was put in the box,
+in case at any time they were delayed in reaching the post-
+houses, which are very comfortably provided under direction
+of the State. The hood was pulled up, as it was insupport-
+ably hot, and at twelve o'clock the tarantass left Perm in
+a cloud of dust.
+
+The way in which the iemschik kept up the pace of his
+team would have certainly astonished travelers who, being
+neither Russians nor Siberians, were not accustomed to
+this sort of thing. The leader, rather larger than the
+others, kept to a steady long trot, perfectly regular,
+whether up or down hill. The two other horses seemed
+to know no other pace than the gallop, though they per-
+formed many an eccentric curvette as they went along.
+The iemschik, however, never touched them, only urging
+them on by startling cracks of his whip. But what epithets
+he lavished on them, including the names of all the saints
+in the calendar, when they behaved like docile and con-
+scientious animals! The string which served as reins would
+have had no influence on the spirited beasts, but the words
+"na pravo," to the right, "na levo," to the left, pronounced
+in a guttural tone, were more effectual than either bridle or
+snaffle.
+
+And what amiable expressions! "Go on, my doves!"
+the iemschik would say. "Go on, pretty swallows! Fly,
+my little pigeons! Hold up, my cousin on the left! Gee
+up, my little father on the right!"
+
+But when the pace slackened, what insulting expressions,
+instantly understood by the sensitive animals! "Go on,
+you wretched snail! Confound you, you slug! I'll roast
+you alive, you tortoise, you!"
+
+Whether or not it was from this way of driving, which
+requires the iemschiks to possess strong throats more than
+muscular arms, the tarantass flew along at a rate of from
+twelve to fourteen miles an hour. Michael Strogoff was
+accustomed both to the sort of vehicle and the mode of trav-
+eling. Neither jerks nor jolts incommoded him. He knew
+that a Russian driver never even tries to avoid either stones,
+ruts, bogs, fallen trees, or trenches, which may happen to
+be in the road. He was used to all that. His companion
+ran a risk of being hurt by the violent jolts of the tarantass,
+but she would not complain.
+
+For a little while Nadia did not speak. Then possessed
+with the one thought, that of reaching her journey's end, "I
+have calculated that there are three hundred versts between
+Perm and Ekaterenburg, brother," said she. "Am I right?"
+
+"You are quite right, Nadia," answered Michael; "and
+when we have reached Ekaterenburg, we shall be at the foot
+of the Ural Mountains on the opposite side."
+
+"How long will it take to get across the mountains?"
+
+"Forty-eight hours, for we shall travel day and night.
+I say day and night, Nadia," added he, "for I cannot stop
+even for a moment; I go on without rest to Irkutsk."
+
+"I shall not delay you, brother; no, not even for an hour,
+and we will travel day and night."
+
+"Well then, Nadia, if the Tartar invasion has only left
+the road open, we shall arrive in twenty days."
+
+"You have made this journey before?" asked Nadia.
+
+"Many times."
+
+"During winter we should have gone more rapidly and
+surely, should we not?"
+
+"Yes, especially with more rapidity, but you would have
+suffered much from the frost and snow."
+
+"What matter! Winter is the friend of Russia."
+
+"Yes, Nadia, but what a constitution anyone must have
+to endure such friendship! I have often seen the tempera-
+ture in the Siberian steppes fall to more than forty de-
+grees below freezing point! I have felt, notwithstanding
+my reindeer coat, my heart growing chill, my limbs stiffen-
+ing, my feet freezing in triple woolen socks; I have seen
+my sleigh horses covered with a coating of ice, their breath
+congealed at their nostrils. I have seen the brandy in my
+flask change into hard stone, on which not even my knife
+could make an impression. But my sleigh flew like the
+wind. Not an obstacle on the plain, white and level farther
+than the eye could reach! No rivers to stop one! Hard
+ice everywhere, the route open, the road sure! But at the
+price of what suffering, Nadia, those alone could say, who
+have never returned, but whose bodies have been covered up
+by the snow storm."
+
+"However, you have returned, brother," said Nadia.
+
+"Yes, but I am a Siberian, and, when quite a child, I
+used to follow my father to the chase, and so became inured
+to these hardships. But when you said to me, Nadia, that
+winter would not have stopped you, that you would have
+gone alone, ready to struggle against the frightful Siberian
+climate, I seemed to see you lost in the snow and falling,
+never to rise again."
+
+"How many times have you crossed the steppe in win-
+ter?" asked the young Livonian.
+
+"Three times, Nadia, when I was going to Omsk."
+
+"And what were you going to do at Omsk?"
+
+"See my mother, who was expecting me."
+
+"And I am going to Irkutsk, where my father expects
+me. I am taking him my mother's last words. That is as
+much as to tell you, brother, that nothing would have pre-
+vented me from setting out."
+
+"You are a brave girl, Nadia," replied Michael. "God
+Himself would have led you."
+
+All day the tarantass was driven rapidly by the iemschiks,
+who succeeded each other at every stage. The eagles of the
+mountain would not have found their name dishonored by
+these "eagles" of the highway. The high price paid for
+each horse, and the tips dealt out so freely, recommended
+the travelers in a special way. Perhaps the postmasters
+thought it singular that, after the publication of the order,
+a young man and his sister, evidently both Russians, could
+travel freely across Siberia, which was closed to everyone
+else, but their papers were all en regle and they had the
+right to pass.
+
+However, Michael Strogoff and Nadia were not the only
+travelers on their way from Perm to Ekaterenburg. At the
+first stages, the courier of the Czar had learnt that a carriage
+preceded them, but, as there was no want of horses, he did
+not trouble himself about that.
+
+During the day, halts were made for food alone. At
+the post-houses could be found lodging and provision. Be-
+sides, if there was not an inn, the house of the Russian
+peasant would have been no less hospitable. In the villages,
+which are almost all alike, with their white-walled, green-
+roofed chapels, the traveler might knock at any door, and it
+would be opened to him. The moujik would come out,
+smiling and extending his hand to his guest. He would
+offer him bread and salt, the burning charcoal would be put
+into the "samovar," and he would be made quite at home.
+The family would turn out themselves rather than that he
+should not have room. The stranger is the relation of all.
+He is "one sent by God."
+
+On arriving that evening Michael instinctively asked the
+postmaster how many hours ago the carriage which pre-
+ceded them had passed that stage.
+
+"Two hours ago, little father," replied the postmaster.
+
+"Is it a berlin?"
+
+"No, a telga."
+
+"How many travelers?"
+
+"Two."
+
+"And they are going fast?"
+
+"Eagles!"
+
+"Let them put the horses to as soon as possible."
+
+Michael and Nadia, resolved not to stop even for an
+hour, traveled all night. The weather continued fine,
+though the atmosphere was heavy and becoming charged
+with electricity. It was to be hoped that a storm would
+not burst whilst they were among the mountains, for there
+it would be terrible. Being accustomed to read atmospheric
+signs, Michael Strogoff knew that a struggle of the elements
+was approaching.
+
+The night passed without incident. Notwithstanding the
+jolting of the tarantass, Nadia was able to sleep for some
+hours. The hood was partly raised so as to give as much
+air as there was in the stifling atmosphere.
+
+Michael kept awake all night, mistrusting the iemschiks,
+who are apt to sleep at their posts. Not an hour was lost at
+the relays, not an hour on the road.
+
+The next day, the 20th of July, at about eight o'clock
+in the morning, they caught the first glimpse of the Ural
+Mountains in the east. This important chain which sep-
+arates Russia from Siberia was still at a great distance, and
+they could not hope to reach it until the end of the day.
+The passage of the mountains must necessarily be performed
+during the next night. The sky was cloudy all day, and the
+temperature was therefore more bearable, but the weather
+was very threatening.
+
+It would perhaps have been more prudent not to have
+ascended the mountains during the night, and Michael would
+not have done so, had he been permitted to wait; but when,
+at the last stage, the iemschik drew his attention to a peal
+of thunder reverberating among the rocks, he merely said:
+
+"Is a telga still before us?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How long is it in advance?"
+
+"Nearly an hour."
+
+"Forward, and a triple tip if we are at Ekaterenburg
+to-morrow morning."
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+A STORM IN THE URAL MOUNTAINS
+
+THE Ural Mountains extend in a length of over two thou-
+sand miles between Europe and Asia. Whether they are
+called the Urals, which is the Tartar, or the Poyas, which
+is the Russian name, they are correctly so termed; for these
+names signify "belt" in both languages. Rising on the
+shores of the Arctic Sea, they reach the borders of the Cas-
+pian. This was the barrier to be crossed by Michael
+Strogoff before he could enter Siberian Russia. The moun-
+tains could be crossed in one night, if no accident happened.
+Unfortunately, thunder muttering in the distance announced
+that a storm was at hand. The electric tension was such
+that it could not be dispersed without a tremendous explo-
+sion, which in the peculiar state of the atmosphere would
+be very terrible.
+
+Michael took care that his young companion should be
+as well protected as possible. The hood, which might have
+been easily blown away, was fastened more securely with
+ropes, crossed above and at the back. The traces were
+doubled, and, as an additional precaution, the nave-boxes
+were stuffed with straw, as much to increase the strength of
+the wheels as to lessen the jolting, unavoidable on a dark
+night. Lastly, the fore and hinder parts, connected simply
+by the axles to the body of the tarantass, were joined one to
+the other by a crossbar, fixed by means of pins and screws.
+
+Nadia resumed her place in the cart, and Michael took
+his seat beside her. Before the lowered hood hung two
+leathern curtains, which would in some degree protect the
+travelers against the wind and rain. Two great lanterns,
+suspended from the iemschik's seat, threw a pale glimmer
+scarcely sufficient to light the way, but serving as warning
+lights to prevent any other carriage from running into them.
+
+It was well that all these precautions were taken, in ex-
+pectation of a rough night. The road led them up towards
+dense masses of clouds, and should the clouds not soon
+resolve into rain, the fog would be such that the tarantass
+would be unable to advance without danger of falling over
+some precipice.
+
+The Ural chain does not attain any very great height,
+the highest summit not being more than five thousand feet.
+Eternal snow is there unknown, and what is piled up by
+the Siberian winter is soon melted by the summer sun.
+Shrubs and trees grow to a considerable height. The iron
+and copper mines, as well as those of precious stones, draw
+a considerable number of workmen to that region. Also,
+those villages termed "gavody" are there met with pretty
+frequently, and the road through the great passes is easily
+practicable for post-carriages.
+
+But what is easy enough in fine weather and broad day-
+light, offers difficulties and perils when the elements are en-
+gaged in fierce warfare, and the traveler is in the midst of it.
+Michael Strogoff knew from former experience what a
+storm in the mountains was, and perhaps this would be as
+terrible as the snowstorms which burst forth with such
+vehemence in the winter.
+
+Rain was not yet falling, so Michael raised the leathern
+curtains which protected the interior of the tarantass and
+looked out, watching the sides of the road, peopled with
+fantastic shadows, caused by the wavering light of the
+lanterns. Nadia, motionless, her arms folded, gazed forth
+also, though without leaning forward, whilst her companion,
+his body half out of the carriage, examined both sky and
+earth.
+
+The calmness of the atmosphere was very threatening,
+the air being perfectly still. It was just as if Nature were
+half stifled, and could no longer breathe; her lungs, that
+is to say those gloomy, dense clouds, not being able to
+perform their functions. The silence would have been com-
+plete but for the grindings of the wheels of the tarantass
+over the road, the creaking of the axles, the snorting of the
+horses, and the clattering of their iron hoofs among the
+pebbles, sparks flying out on every side.
+
+The road was perfectly deserted. The tarantass en-
+countered neither pedestrians nor horsemen, nor a vehicle
+of any description, in the narrow defiles of the Ural, on
+this threatening night. Not even the fire of a charcoal-
+burner was visible in the woods, not an encampment of
+miners near the mines, not a hut among the brushwood.
+
+Under these peculiar circumstances it might have been
+allowable to postpone the journey till the morning. Michael
+Strogoff, however, had not hesitated, he had no right to
+stop, but then -- and it began to cause him some anxiety --
+what possible reason could those travelers in the telga ahead
+have for being so imprudent?
+
+Michael remained thus on the look-out for some time.
+About eleven o'clock lightning began to blaze continuously
+in the sky. The shadows of huge pines appeared and dis-
+appeared in the rapid light. Sometimes when the tarantass
+neared the side of the road, deep gulfs, lit up by the flashes,
+could be seen yawning beneath them. From time to time,
+on their vehicle giving a worse lurch than usual, they knew
+that they were crossing a bridge of roughly-hewn planks
+thrown over some chasm, thunder appearing actually to be
+rumbling below them. Besides this, a booming sound filled
+the air, which increased as they mounted higher. With
+these different noises rose the shouts of the iemschik, some-
+times scolding, sometimes coaxing his poor beasts, who were
+suffering more from the oppression of the air than the
+roughness of the roads. Even the bells on the shafts could
+no longer rouse them, and they stumbled every instant.
+
+"At what time shall we reach the top of the ridge?"
+asked Michael of the iemschik.
+
+"At one o'clock in the morning if we ever get there at
+all," replied he, with a shake of his head.
+
+"Why, my friend, this will not be your first storm in
+the mountains, will it?"
+
+"No, and pray God it may not be my last!"
+
+"Are you afraid?"
+
+"No, I'm not afraid, but I repeat that I think you were
+wrong in starting."
+
+"I should have been still more wrong had I stayed."
+
+"Hold up, my pigeons!" cried the iemschik; it was his
+business to obey, not to question.
+
+Just then a distant noise was heard, shrill whistling
+through the atmosphere, so calm a minute before. By the
+light of a dazzling flash, almost immediately followed by
+a tremendous clap of thunder, Michael could see huge pines
+on a high peak, bending before the blast. The wind was
+unchained, but as yet it was the upper air alone which was
+disturbed. Successive crashes showed that many of the
+trees had been unable to resist the burst of the hurricane.
+An avalanche of shattered trunks swept across the road and
+dashed over the precipice on the left, two hundred feet in
+front of the tarantass.
+
+The horses stopped short.
+
+"Get up, my pretty doves!" cried the iemschik, adding
+the cracking of his whip to the rumbling of the thunder.
+
+Michael took Nadia's hand. "Are you asleep, sister?"
+
+"No, brother."
+
+"Be ready for anything; here comes the storm!"
+
+"I am ready."
+
+Michael Strogoff had only just time to draw the leathern
+curtains, when the storm was upon them.
+
+The iemschik leapt from his seat and seized the horses'
+heads, for terrible danger threatened the whole party.
+
+The tarantass was at a standstill at a turning of the
+road, down which swept the hurricane; it was absolutely
+necessary to hold the animals' heads to the wind, for if the
+carriage was taken broadside it must infallibly capsize and
+be dashed over the precipice. The frightened horses reared,
+and their driver could not manage to quiet them. His
+friendly expressions had been succeeded by the most insult-
+ing epithets. Nothing was of any use. The unfortunate
+animals, blinded by the lightning, terrified by the incessant
+peals of thunder, threatened every instant to break their
+traces and flee. The iemschik had no longer any control
+over his team.
+
+At that moment Michael Strogoff threw himself from
+the tarantass and rushed to his assistance. Endowed with
+more than common strength, he managed, though not with-
+out difficulty, to master the horses.
+
+The storm now raged with redoubled fury. A perfect
+avalanche of stones and trunks of trees began to roll down
+the slope above them.
+
+"We cannot stop here," said Michael.
+
+"We cannot stop anywhere," returned the iemschik, all
+his energies apparently overcome by terror. "The storm
+will soon send us to the bottom of the mountain, and that
+by the shortest way."
+
+"Take you that horse, coward," returned Michael, "I'll
+look after this one."
+
+A fresh burst of the storm interrupted him. The driver
+and he were obliged to crouch upon the ground to avoid be-
+ing blown down. The carriage, notwithstanding their ef-
+forts and those of the horses, was gradually blown back,
+and had it not been stopped by the trunk of a tree, it would
+have gone over the edge of the precipice.
+
+"Do not be afraid, Nadia!" cried Michael Strogoff.
+
+"I'm not afraid," replied the young Livonian, her voice
+not betraying the slightest emotion.
+
+The rumbling of the thunder ceased for an instant, the
+terrible blast had swept past into the gorge below.
+
+"Will you go back?" said the iemschik.
+
+"No, we must go on! Once past this turning, we shall
+have the shelter of the slope."
+
+"But the horses won't move!"
+
+"Do as I do, and drag them on."
+
+"The storm will come back!"
+
+"Do you mean to obey?"
+
+"Do you order it?"
+
+"The Father orders it!" answered Michael, for the first
+time invoking the all-powerful name of the Emperor.
+
+"Forward, my swallows!" cried the iemschik, seizing one
+horse, while Michael did the same to the other.
+
+Thus urged, the horses began to struggle onward. They
+could no longer rear, and the middle horse not being ham-
+pered by the others, could keep in the center of the road. It
+was with the greatest difficulty that either man or beasts
+could stand against the wind, and for every three steps they
+took in advance, they lost one, and even two, by being forced
+backwards. They slipped, they fell, they got up again.
+The vehicle ran a great risk of being smashed. If the hood
+had not been securely fastened, it would have been blown
+away long before. Michael Strogoff and the iemschik took
+more than two hours in getting up this bit of road, only half
+a verst in length, so directly exposed was it to the lashing
+of the storm. The danger was not only from the wind
+which battered against the travelers, but from the avalanche
+of stones and broken trunks which were hurtling through
+the air.
+
+Suddenly, during a flash of lightning, one of these masses
+was seen crashing and rolling down the mountain towards
+the tarantass. The iemschik uttered a cry.
+
+Michael Strogoff in vain brought his whip down on the
+team, they refused to move.
+
+A few feet farther on, and the mass would pass behind
+them! Michael saw the tarantass struck, his companion
+crushed; he saw there was no time to drag her from the
+vehicle.
+
+Then, possessed in this hour of peril with superhuman
+strength, he threw himself behind it, and planting his feet
+on the ground, by main force placed it out of danger.
+
+The enormous mass as it passed grazed his chest, taking
+away his breath as though it had been a cannon-ball, then
+crushing to powder the flints on the road, it bounded into the
+abyss below.
+
+"Oh, brother!" cried Nadia, who had seen it all by the
+light of the flashes.
+
+"Nadia!" replied Michael, "fear nothing!"
+
+"It is not on my own account that I fear!"
+
+"God is with us, sister!"
+
+"With me truly, brother, since He has sent thee in my
+way!" murmured the young girl.
+
+The impetus the tarantass had received was not to be
+lost, and the tired horses once more moved forward.
+Dragged, so to speak, by Michael and the iemschik, they
+toiled on towards a narrow pass, lying north and south,
+where they would be protected from the direct sweep of
+the tempest. At one end a huge rock jutted out, round
+the summit of which whirled an eddy. Behind the shelter
+of the rock there was a comparative calm; yet once within
+the circumference of the cyclone, neither man nor beast
+could resist its power.
+
+Indeed, some firs which towered above this protection
+were in a trice shorn of their tops, as though a gigantic
+scythe had swept across them. The storm was now at its
+height. The lightning filled the defile, and the thunder-
+claps had become one continued peal. The ground, struck
+by the concussion, trembled as though the whole Ural chain
+was shaken to its foundations.
+
+Happily, the tarantass could be so placed that the storm
+might strike it obliquely. But the counter-currents, di-
+rected towards it by the slope, could not be so well avoided,
+and so violent were they that every instant it seemed as
+though it would be dashed to pieces.
+
+Nadia was obliged to leave her seat, and Michael, by the
+light of one of the lanterns, discovered an excavation bear-
+ing the marks of a miner's pick, where the young girl could
+rest in safety until they could once more start.
+
+Just then -- it was one o'clock in the morning -- the rain
+began to fall in torrents, and this in addition to the wind
+and lightning, made the storm truly frightful. To con-
+tinue the journey at present was utterly impossible. Be-
+sides, having reached this pass, they had only to descend the
+slopes of the Ural Mountains, and to descend now, with the
+road torn up by a thousand mountain torrents, in these
+eddies of wind and rain, was utter madness.
+
+"To wait is indeed serious," said Michael, "but it must
+certainly be done, to avoid still longer detentions. The
+very violence of the storm makes me hope that it will not
+last long. About three o'clock the day will begin to break,
+and the descent, which we cannot risk in the dark, we shall
+be able, if not with ease, at least without such danger, to
+attempt after sunrise."
+
+"Let us wait, brother," replied Nadia; "but if you delay,
+let it not be to spare me fatigue or danger."
+
+"Nadia, I know that you are ready to brave everything,
+but, in exposing both of us, I risk more than my life, more
+than yours, I am not fulfilling my task, that duty which
+before everything else I must accomplish."
+
+"A duty!" murmured Nadia.
+
+Just then a bright flash lit up the sky; a loud clap fol-
+lowed. The air was filled with sulphurous suffocating
+vapor, and a clump of huge pines, struck by the electric
+fluid, scarcely twenty feet from the tarantass, flared up like
+a gigantic torch.
+
+The iemschik was struck to the ground by a counter-
+shock, but, regaining his feet, found himself happily unhurt.
+
+Just as the last growlings of the thunder were lost in
+the recesses of the mountain, Michael felt Nadia's hand
+pressing his, and he heard her whisper these words in his
+ear: "Cries, brother! Listen!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+TRAVELERS IN DISTRESS
+
+DURING the momentary lull which followed, shouts could
+be distinctly heard from farther on, at no great distance
+from the tarantass. It was an earnest appeal, evidently
+from some traveler in distress.
+
+Michael listened attentively. The iemschik also listened,
+but shook his head, as though it was impossible to help.
+
+"They are travelers calling for aid," cried Nadia.
+
+"They can expect nothing," replied the iemschik.
+
+"Why not?" cried Michael. "Ought not we do for them
+what they would for us under similar circumstances?"
+
+"Surely you will not risk the carriage and horses!"
+
+"I will go on foot," replied Michael, interrupting the
+iemschik.
+
+"I will go, too, brother," said the young girl.
+
+"No, remain here, Nadia. The iemschik will stay with
+you. I do not wish to leave him alone."
+
+"I will stay," replied Nadia.
+
+"Whatever happens, do not leave this spot."
+
+"You will find me where I now am."
+
+Michael pressed her hand, and, turning the corner of
+the slope, disappeared in the darkness.
+
+"Your brother is wrong," said the iemschik.
+
+"He is right," replied Nadia simply.
+
+Meanwhile Strogoff strode rapidly on. If he was in a
+great hurry to aid the travelers, he was also very anxious
+to know who it was that had not been hindered from start-
+ing by the storm; for he had no doubt that the cries came
+from the telga, which had so long preceded him.
+
+The rain had stopped, but the storm was raging with re-
+doubled fury. The shouts, borne on the air, became more
+distinct. Nothing was to be seen of the pass in which
+Nadia remained. The road wound along, and the squalls,
+checked by the corners, formed eddies highly dangerous,
+to pass which, without being taken off his legs, Michael had
+to use his utmost strength.
+
+He soon perceived that the travelers whose shouts he
+had heard were at no great distance. Even then, on ac-
+count of the darkness, Michael could not see them, yet he
+heard distinctly their words.
+
+This is what he heard, and what caused him some sur-
+prise: "Are you coming back, blockhead?"
+
+"You shall have a taste of the knout at the next stage."
+
+"Do you hear, you devil's postillion! Hullo! Below!"
+
+"This is how a carriage takes you in this country!"
+
+"Yes, this is what you call a telga!"
+
+"Oh, that abominable driver! He goes on and does not
+appear to have discovered that he has left us behind!"
+
+"To deceive me, too! Me, an honorable Englishman!
+I will make a complaint at the chancellor's office and have
+the fellow hanged."
+
+This was said in a very angry tone, but was suddenly
+interrupted by a burst of laughter from his companion, who
+exclaimed, "Well! this is a good joke, I must say."
+
+"You venture to laugh!" said the Briton angrily.
+
+"Certainly, my dear confrere, and that most heartily.
+'Pon my word I never saw anything to come up to it."
+
+Just then a crashing clap of thunder re-echoed through
+the defile, and then died away among the distant peaks.
+When the sound of the last growl had ceased, the merry
+voice went on: "Yes, it undoubtedly is a good joke. This
+machine certainly never came from France."
+
+"Nor from England," replied the other.
+
+On the road, by the light of the flashes, Michael saw,
+twenty yards from him, two travelers, seated side by side
+in a most peculiar vehicle, the wheels of which were deeply
+imbedded in the ruts formed in the road.
+
+He approached them, the one grinning from ear to ear,
+and the other gloomily contemplating his situation, and rec-
+ognized them as the two reporters who had been his com-
+panions on board the Caucasus.
+
+"Good-morning to you, sir," cried the Frenchman.
+"Delighted to see you here. Let me introduce you to my
+intimate enemy, Mr. Blount."
+
+The English reporter bowed, and was about to introduce
+in his turn his companion, Alcide Jolivet, in accordance
+with the rules of society, when Michael interrupted him.
+
+"Perfectly unnecessary, sir; we already know each other,
+for we traveled together on the Volga."
+
+"Ah, yes! exactly so! Mr. --"
+
+"Nicholas Korpanoff, merchant, of Irkutsk. But may I
+know what has happened which, though a misfortune to your
+companion, amuses you so much?"
+
+"Certainly, Mr. Korpanoff," replied Alcide. "Fancy!
+our driver has gone off with the front part of this con-
+founded carriage, and left us quietly seated in the back part!
+So here we are in the worse half of a telga; no driver, no
+horses. Is it not a joke?"
+
+"No joke at all," said the Englishman.
+
+"Indeed it is, my dear fellow. You do not know how
+to look at the bright side of things."
+
+"How, pray, are we to go on?" asked Blount.
+
+"That is the easiest thing in the world," replied Alcide.
+"Go and harness yourself to what remains of our cart; I
+will take the reins, and call you my little pigeon, like a true
+iemschik, and you will trot off like a real post-horse."
+
+"Mr. Jolivet," replied the Englishman, "this joking is
+going too far, it passes all limits and --"
+
+"Now do be quiet, my dear sir. When you are done
+up, I will take your place; and call me a broken-winded
+snail and faint-hearted tortoise if I don't take you over the
+ground at a rattling pace."
+
+Alcide said all this with such perfect good-humor that
+Michael could not help smiling. "Gentlemen," said he,
+"here is a better plan. We have now reached the highest
+ridge of the Ural chain, and thus have merely to descend
+the slopes of the mountain. My carriage is close by, only
+two hundred yards behind. I will lend you one of my
+horses, harness it to the remains of the telga, and to-mor-
+how, if no accident befalls us, we will arrive together at
+Ekaterenburg."
+
+"That, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide, "is indeed a gen-
+erous proposal."
+
+"Indeed, sir," replied Michael, "I would willingly offer
+you places in my tarantass, but it will only hold two, and my
+sister and I already fill it."
+
+"Really, sir," answered Alcide, "with your horse and
+our demi-telga we will go to the world's end."
+
+"Sir," said Harry Blount, "we most willingly accept
+your kind offer. And, as to that iemschik --"
+
+"Oh! I assure you that you are not the first travelers
+who have met with a similar misfortune," replied Michael.
+
+"But why should not our driver come back? He knows
+perfectly well that he has left us behind, wretch that he is!"
+
+"He! He never suspected such a thing."
+
+"What! the fellow not know that he was leaving the
+better half of his telga behind?"
+
+"Not a bit, and in all good faith is driving the fore part
+into Ekaterenburg."
+
+"Did I not tell you that it was a good joke, confrere?"
+cried Alcide.
+
+"Then, gentlemen, if you will follow me," said Michael,
+"we will return to my carriage, and --"
+
+"But the telga," observed the Englishman.
+
+"There is not the slightest fear that it will fly away, my
+dear Blount!" exclaimed Alcide; "it has taken such good
+root in the ground, that if it were left here until next spring
+it would begin to bud."
+
+"Come then, gentlemen," said Michael Strogoff, "and
+we will bring up the tarantass."
+
+The Frenchman and the Englishman, descending from
+their seats, no longer the hinder one, since the front had
+taken its departure, followed Michael.
+
+Walking along, Alcide Jolivet chattered away as usual,
+with his invariable good-humor. "Faith, Mr. Korpanoff,"
+said he, "you have indeed got us out of a bad scrape."
+
+"I have only done, sir," replied Michael, "what anyone
+would have done in my place."
+
+"Well, sir, you have done us a good turn, and if you are
+going farther we may possibly meet again, and --"
+
+Alcide Jolivet did not put any direct question to Michael
+as to where he was going, but the latter, not wishing it to
+be suspected that he had anything to conceal, at once replied,
+"I am bound for Omsk, gentlemen."
+
+"Mr. Blount and I," replied Alcide, "go where danger
+is certainly to be found, and without doubt news also."
+
+"To the invaded provinces?" asked Michael with some
+earnestness.
+
+"Exactly so, Mr. Korpanoff; and we may possibly meet
+there."
+
+"Indeed, sir," replied Michael, "I have little love for
+cannon-balls or lance points, and am by nature too great
+a lover of peace to venture where fighting is going on."
+
+"I am sorry, sir, extremely sorry; we must only regret
+that we shall separate so soon! But on leaving Ekateren-
+burg it may be our fortunate fate to travel together, if only
+for a few days?"
+
+"Do you go on to Omsk?" asked Michael, after a mo-
+ment's reflection.
+
+"We know nothing as yet," replied Alcide; "but we
+shall certainly go as far as Ishim, and once there, our
+movements must depend on circumstances."
+
+"Well then, gentlemen," said Michael, "we will be fel-
+low-travelers as far as Ishim."
+
+Michael would certainly have preferred to travel alone,
+but he could not, without appearing at least singular, seek
+to separate himself from the two reporters, who were taking
+the same road that he was. Besides, since Alcide and his
+companion intended to make some stay at Ishim, he thought
+it rather convenient than otherwise to make that part of
+the journey in their company.
+
+Then in an indifferent tone he asked, "Do you know,
+with any certainty, where this Tartar invasion is?"
+
+"Indeed, sir," replied Alcide, "we only know what they
+said at Perm. Feofar-Khan's Tartars have invaded the
+whole province of Semipolatinsk, and for some days, by
+forced marches, have been descending the Irtish. You must
+hurry if you wish to get to Omsk before them."
+
+"Indeed I must," replied Michael.
+
+"It is reported also that Colonel Ogareff has succeeded
+in passing the frontier in disguise, and that he will not be
+slow in joining the Tartar chief in the revolted country."
+
+"But how do they know it?" asked Michael, whom this
+news, more or less true, so directly concerned.
+
+"Oh! as these things are always known," replied Alcide;
+"it is in the air."
+
+"Then have you really reason to think that Colonel
+Ogareff is in Siberia?"
+
+"I myself have heard it said that he was to take the
+road from Kasan to Ekaterenburg."
+
+"Ah! you know that, Mr. Jolivet?" said Harry Blount,
+roused from his silence.
+
+"I knew it," replied Alcide.
+
+"And do you know that he went disguised as a gypsy!"
+asked Blount.
+
+"As a gypsy!" exclaimed Michael, almost involuntarily,
+and he suddenly remembered the look of the old Bohemian
+at Nijni-Novgorod, his voyage on board the Caucasus, and
+his disembarking at Kasan.
+
+"Just well enough to make a few remarks on the subject
+in a letter to my cousin," replied Alcide, smiling.
+
+"You lost no time at Kasan," dryly observed the English-
+man.
+
+"No, my dear fellow! and while the Caucasus was laying
+in her supply of fuel, I was employed in obtaining a store of
+information."
+
+Michael no longer listened to the repartee which Harry
+Blount and Alcide exchanged. He was thinking of the
+gypsy troupe, of the old Tsigane, whose face he had not
+been able to see, and of the strange woman who accom-
+panied him, and then of the peculiar glance which she had
+cast at him. Suddenly, close by he heard a pistol-shot.
+
+"Ah! forward, sirs!" cried he.
+
+"Hullo!" said Alcide to himself, "this quiet merchant
+who always avoids bullets is in a great hurry to go where
+they are flying about just now!"
+
+Quickly followed by Harry Blount, who was not a man
+to be behind in danger, he dashed after Michael. In another
+instant the three were opposite the projecting rock which
+protected the tarantass at the turning of the road.
+
+The clump of pines struck by the lightning was still
+burning. There was no one to be seen. However, Michael
+was not mistaken. Suddenly a dreadful growling was
+heard, and then another report.
+
+"A bear;" cried Michael, who could not mistake the
+growling. "Nadia; Nadia!" And drawing his cutlass
+from his belt, Michael bounded round the buttress behind
+which the young girl had promised to wait.
+
+The pines, completely enveloped in flames, threw a wild
+glare on the scene. As Michael reached the tarantass, a
+huge animal retreated towards him.
+
+It was a monstrous bear. The tempest had driven it
+from the woods, and it had come to seek refuge in this cave,
+doubtless its habitual retreat, which Nadia then occupied.
+
+Two of the horses, terrified at the presence of the
+enormous creature, breaking their traces, had escaped, and
+the iemschik, thinking only of his beasts, leaving Nadia face
+to face with the bear, had gone in pursuit of them.
+
+But the brave girl had not lost her presence of mind.
+The animal, which had not at first seen her, was attacking
+the remaining horse. Nadia, leaving the shelter in which
+she had been crouching, had run to the carriage, taken one
+of Michael's revolvers, and, advancing resolutely towards
+the bear, had fired close to it.
+
+The animal, slightly wounded in the shoulder, turned
+on the girl, who rushed for protection behind the tarantass,
+but then, seeing that the horse was attempting to break its
+traces, and knowing that if it did so, and the others were
+not recovered, their journey could not be continued, with
+the most perfect coolness she again approached the bear,
+and, as it raised its paws to strike her down, gave it the
+contents of the second barrel.
+
+This was the report which Michael had just heard. In
+an instant he was on the spot. Another bound and he
+was between the bear and the girl. His arm made one
+movement upwards, and the enormous beast, ripped up by
+that terrible knife, fell to the ground a lifeless mass. He
+had executed in splendid style the famous blow of the
+Siberian hunters, who endeavor not to damage the precious
+fur of the bear, which fetches a high price.
+
+"You are not wounded, sister?" said Michael, springing
+to the side of the young girl.
+
+"No, brother," replied Nadia.
+
+At that moment the two journalists came up. Alcide
+seized the horse's head, and, in an instant, his strong wrist
+mastered it. His companion and he had seen Michael's
+rapid stroke. "Bravo!" cried Alcide; "for a simple mer-
+chant, Mr. Korpanoff, you handle the hunter's knife in a
+most masterly fashion."
+
+"Most masterly, indeed," added Blount.
+
+"In Siberia," replied Michael, "we are obliged to do a
+little of everything."
+
+Alcide regarded him attentively. Seen in the bright
+glare, his knife dripping with blood, his tall figure, his foot
+firm on the huge carcass, he was indeed worth looking at.
+
+"A formidable fellow," said Alcide to himself. Then
+advancing respectfully, he saluted the young girl.
+
+Nadia bowed slightly.
+
+Alcide turned towards his companion. "The sister
+worthy of the brother!" said he. "Now, were I a bear,
+I should not meddle with two so brave and so charming."
+
+Harry Blount, perfectly upright, stood, hat in hand, at
+some distance. His companion's easy manners only in-
+creased his usual stiffness.
+
+At that moment the iemschik, who had succeeded in re-
+capturing his two horses, reappeared. He cast a regretful
+glance at the magnificent animal lying on the ground, loth
+to leave it to the birds of prey, and then proceeded once
+more to harness his team.
+
+Michael acquainted him with the travelers' situation, and
+his intention of loaning one of the horses.
+
+"As you please," replied the iemschik. "Only, you
+know, two carriages instead of one."
+
+"All right, my friend," said Alcide, who understood the
+insinuation, "we will pay double."
+
+"Then gee up, my turtle-doves!" cried the iemschik.
+
+Nadia again took her place in the tarantass. Michael
+and his companions followed on foot. It was three o'clock.
+The storm still swept with terrific violence across the defile.
+When the first streaks of daybreak appeared the tarantass
+had reached the telga, which was still conscientiously im-
+bedded as far as the center of the wheel. Such being the
+case, it can be easily understood how a sudden jerk would
+separate the front from the hinder part. One of the horses
+was now harnessed by means of cords to the remains of the
+telga, the reporters took their place on the singular equipage,
+and the two carriages started off. They had now only to
+descend the Ural slopes, in doing which there was not the
+slightest difficulty.
+
+Six hours afterwards the two vehicles, the tarantass pre-
+ceding the telga, arrived at Ekaterenburg, nothing worthy of
+note having happened in the descent.
+
+The first person the reporters perceived at the door of the
+post-house was their iemschik, who appeared to be waiting
+for them. This worthy Russian had a fine open coun-
+tenance, and he smilingly approached the travelers, and,
+holding out his hand, in a quiet tone he demanded the usual
+"pour-boire."
+
+This very cool request roused Blount's ire to its highest
+pitch, and had not the iemschik prudently retreated, a
+straight-out blow of the fist, in true British boxing style,
+would have paid his claim of "na vodkou."
+
+Alcide Jolivet, at this burst of anger, laughed as he had
+never laughed before.
+
+"But the poor devil is quite right!" he cried. "He is
+perfectly right, my dear fellow. It is not his fault if we did
+not know how to follow him!"
+
+Then drawing several copecks from his pocket, "Here
+my friend," said he, handing them to the iemschik; "take
+them. If you have not earned them, that is not your fault."
+
+This redoubled Mr. Blount's irritation. He even began
+to speak of a lawsuit against the owner of the telga.
+
+"A lawsuit in Russia, my dear fellow!" cried Alcide.
+"Things must indeed change should it ever be brought to
+a conclusion! Did you never hear the story of the wet-
+nurse who claimed payment of twelve months' nursing of
+some poor little infant?"
+
+"I never heard it," replied Harry Blount.
+
+"Then you do not know what that suckling had become
+by the time judgment was given in favor of the nurse?"
+
+"What was he, pray?"
+
+"Colonel of the Imperial Guard!"
+
+At this reply all burst into a laugh.
+
+Alcide, enchanted with his own joke, drew out his note-
+book, and in it wrote the following memorandum, destined
+to figure in a forthcoming French and Russian dictionary:
+"Telga, a Russian carriage with four wheels, that is when
+it starts; with two wheels, when it arrives at its destination."
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+PROVOCATION
+
+EKATERENBURG, geographically, is an Asiatic city; for it
+is situated beyond the Ural Mountains, on the farthest
+eastern slopes of the chain. Nevertheless, it belongs to the
+government of Perm; and, consequently, is included in one
+of the great divisions of European Russia. It is as though
+a morsel of Siberia lay in Russian jaws.
+
+Neither Michael nor his companions were likely to ex-
+perience the slightest difficulty in obtaining means of con-
+tinuing their journey in so large a town as Ekaterenburg.
+It was founded in 1723, and has since become a place of
+considerable size, for in it is the chief mint of the empire.
+There also are the headquarters of the officials employed in
+the management of the mines. Thus the town is the center
+of an important district, abounding in manufactories prin-
+cipally for the working and refining of gold and platina.
+
+Just now the population of Ekaterenburg had greatly
+increased; many Russians and Siberians, menaced by the
+Tartar invasion, having collected there. Thus, though it
+had been so troublesome a matter to find horses and vehicles
+when going to Ekaterenburg, there was no difficulty in leav-
+ing it; for under present circumstances few travelers cared
+to venture on the Siberian roads.
+
+So it happened that Blount and Alcide had not the slight-
+est trouble in replacing, by a sound telga, the famous demi-
+carriage which had managed to take them to Ekaterenburg.
+As to Michael, he retained his tarantass, which was not
+much the worse for its journey across the Urals; and he had
+only to harness three good horses to it to take him swiftly
+over the road to Irkutsk.
+
+As far as Tioumen, and even up to Novo-Zaimskoe, this
+road has slight inclines, which gentle undulations are the
+first signs of the slopes of the Ural Mountains. But after
+Novo-Zaimskoe begins the immense steppe.
+
+At Ichim, as we have said, the reporters intended to stop,
+that is at about four hundred and twenty miles from Eka-
+terenburg. There they intended to be guided by circum-
+stances as to their route across the invaded country, either
+together or separately, according as their news-hunting in-
+stinct set them on one track or another.
+
+This road from Ekaterenburg to Ichim -- which passes
+through Irkutsk -- was the only one which Michael could
+take. But, as he did not run after news, and wished, on
+the contrary, to avoid the country devastated by the in-
+vaders, he determined to stop nowhere.
+
+"I am very happy to make part of my journey in your
+company," said he to his new companions, "but I must tell
+you that I am most anxious to reach Omsk; for my sister
+and I are going to rejoin our mother. Who can say whether
+we shall arrive before the Tartars reach the town! I must
+therefore stop at the post-houses only long enough to change
+horses, and must travel day and night."
+
+"That is exactly what we intend doing," replied Blount.
+
+"Good," replied Michael; "but do not lose an instant.
+Buy or hire a carriage whose --"
+
+"Whose hind wheels," added Alcide, "are warranted to
+arrive at the same time as its front wheels."
+
+Half an hour afterwards the energetic Frenchman had
+found a tarantass in which he and his companion at once
+seated themselves. Michael and Nadia once more entered
+their own carriage, and at twelve o'clock the two vehicles
+left the town of Ekaterenburg together.
+
+Nadia was at last in Siberia, on that long road which led
+to Irkutsk. What must then have been the thoughts of
+the young girl? Three strong swift horses were taking
+her across that land of exile where her parent was con-
+demned to live, for how long she knew not, and so far from
+his native land. But she scarcely noticed those long steppes
+over which the tarantass was rolling, and which at one time
+she had despaired of ever seeing, for her eyes were gazing
+at the horizon, beyond which she knew her banished father
+was. She saw nothing of the country across which she
+was traveling at the rate of fifteen versts an hour; nothing
+of these regions of Western Siberia, so different from those
+of the east. Here, indeed, were few cultivated fields; the
+soil was poor, at least at the surface, but in its bowels lay
+hid quantities of iron, copper, platina, and gold. How
+can hands be found to cultivate the land, when it pays better
+to burrow beneath the earth? The pickaxe is everywhere
+at work; the spade nowhere.
+
+However, Nadia's thoughts sometimes left the provinces
+of Lake Baikal, and returned to her present situation. Her
+father's image faded away, and was replaced by that of her
+generous companion as he first appeared on the Vladimir
+railroad. She recalled his attentions during that journey,
+his arrival at the police-station, the hearty simplicity with
+which he had called her sister, his kindness to her in the
+descent of the Volga, and then all that he did for her on
+that terrible night of the storm in the Urals, when he saved
+her life at the peril of his own.
+
+Thus Nadia thought of Michael. She thanked God for
+having given her such a gallant protector, a friend so gen-
+erous and wise. She knew that she was safe with him,
+under his protection. No brother could have done more
+than he. All obstacles seemed cleared away; the perform-
+ance of her journey was but a matter of time.
+
+Michael remained buried in thought. He also thanked
+God for having brought about this meeting with Nadia,
+which at the same time enabled him to do a good action,
+and afforded him additional means for concealing his true
+character. He delighted in the young girl's calm intre-
+pidity. Was she not indeed his sister? His feeling towards
+his beautiful and brave companion was rather respect than
+affection. He felt that hers was one of those pure and rare
+hearts which are held by all in high esteem.
+
+However, Michael's dangers were now beginning, since
+he had reached Siberian ground. If the reporters were
+not mistaken, if Ivan Ogareff had really passed the frontier,
+all his actions must be made with extreme caution. Things
+were now altered; Tartar spies swarmed in the Siberian
+provinces. His incognito once discovered, his character as
+courier of the Czar known, there was an end of his journey,
+and probably of his life. Michael felt now more than ever
+the weight of his responsibility.
+
+While such were the thoughts of those occupying the
+first carriage, what was happening in the second? Nothing
+out of the way. Alcide spoke in sentences; Blount replied
+by monosyllables. Each looked at everything in his own
+light, and made notes of such incidents as occurred on the
+journey -- few and but slightly varied -- while they crossed
+the provinces of Western Siberia.
+
+At each relay the reporters descended from their carriage
+and found themselves with Michael. Except when meals
+were to be taken at the post-houses, Nadia did not leave
+the tarantass. When obliged to breakfast or dine, she sat
+at table, but was always very reserved, and seldom joined in
+conversation.
+
+Alcide, without going beyond the limits of strict pro-
+priety, showed that he was greatly struck by the young
+girl. He admired the silent energy which she showed in
+bearing all the fatigues of so difficult a journey.
+
+The forced stoppages were anything but agreeable to
+Michael; so he hastened the departure at each relay, roused
+the innkeepers, urged on the iemschiks, and expedited the
+harnessing of the tarantass. Then the hurried meal over --
+always much too hurried to agree with Blount, who was a
+methodical eater -- they started, and were driven as eagles,
+for they paid like princes.
+
+It need scarcely be said that Blount did not trouble him-
+self about the girl at table. That gentleman was not in the
+habit of doing two things at once. She was also one of the
+few subjects of conversation which he did not care to dis-
+cuss with his companion.
+
+Alcide having asked him, on one occasion, how old he
+thought the girl, "What girl?" he replied, quite seriously.
+
+"Why, Nicholas Korpanoff's sister."
+
+"Is she his sister?"
+
+"No; his grandmother!" replied Alcide, angry at his in-
+difference. "What age should you consider her?"
+
+"Had I been present at her birth I might have known."
+
+Very few of the Siberian peasants were to be seen in the
+fields. These peasants are remarkable for their pale, grave
+faces, which a celebrated traveler has compared to those of
+the Castilians, without the haughtiness of the latter. Here
+and there some villages already deserted indicated the ap-
+proach of the Tartar hordes. The inhabitants, having
+driven off their flocks of sheep, their camels, and their
+horses, were taking refuge in the plains of the north. Some
+tribes of the wandering Kirghiz, who remained faithful, had
+transported their tents beyond the Irtych, to escape the dep-
+redations of the invaders.
+
+Happily, post traveling was as yet uninterrupted; and
+telegraphic communication could still be effected between
+places connected with the wire. At each relay horses were
+to be had on the usual conditions. At each telegraphic sta-
+tion the clerks transmitted messages delivered to them, de-
+laying for State dispatches alone.
+
+Thus far, then, Michael's journey had been accomplished
+satisfactorily. The courier of the Czar had in no way been
+impeded; and, if he could only get on to Krasnoiarsk, which
+seemed the farthest point attained by Feofar-Khan's Tar-
+tars, he knew that he could arrive at Irkutsk, before them.
+The day after the two carriages had left Ekaterenburg they
+reached the small town of Toulouguisk at seven o'clock in
+the morning, having covered two hundred and twenty versts,
+no event worthy of mention having occurred. The same
+evening, the 22d of July, they arrived at Tioumen.
+
+Tioumen, whose population is usually ten thousand in-
+habitants, then contained double that number. This, the
+first industrial town established by the Russians in Siberia,
+in which may be seen a fine metal-refining factory and a bell
+foundry, had never before presented such an animated ap-
+pearance. The correspondents immediately went off after
+news. That brought by Siberian fugitives from the seat
+of war was far from reassuring. They said, amongst other
+things, that Feofar-Khan's army was rapidly approaching
+the valley of the Ichim, and they confirmed the report that
+the Tartar chief was soon to be joined by Colonel Ogareff,
+if he had not been so already. Hence the conclusion was
+that operations would be pushed in Eastern Siberia with the
+greatest activity. However, the loyal Cossacks of the gov-
+ernment of Tobolsk were advancing by forced marches
+towards Tomsk, in the hope of cutting off the Tartar
+columns.
+
+At midnight the town of Novo-Saimsk was reached; and
+the travelers now left behind them the country broken by
+tree-covered hills, the last remains of the Urals.
+
+Here began the regular Siberian steppe which extends
+to the neighborhood of Krasnoiarsk. It is a boundless
+plain, a vast grassy desert; earth and sky here form a circle
+as distinct as that traced by a sweep of the compasses. The
+steppe presents nothing to attract notice but the long line of
+the telegraph posts, their wires vibrating in the breeze like
+the strings of a harp. The road could be distinguished
+from the rest of the plain only by the clouds of fine dust
+which rose under the wheels of the tarantass. Had it not
+been for this white riband, which stretched away as far as
+the eye could reach, the travelers might have thought them-
+selves in a desert.
+
+Michael and his companions again pressed rapidly for-
+ward. The horses, urged on by the iemschik, seemed to fly
+over the ground, for there was not the slightest obstacle to
+impede them. The tarantass was going straight for Ichim,
+where the two correspondents intended to stop, if nothing
+happened to make them alter their plans.
+
+A hundred and twenty miles separated Novo-Saimsk
+from the town of Ichim, and before eight o'clock the next
+evening the distance could and should be accomplished if
+no time was lost. In the opinion of the iemschiks, should
+the travelers not be great lords or high functionaries, they
+were worthy of being so, if it was only for their generosity
+in the matter of "na vodkou."
+
+On the afternoon of the next day, the 23rd of July, the
+two carriages were not more than thirty versts from Ichim.
+Suddenly Michael caught sight of a carriage -- scarcely
+visible among the clouds of dust -- preceding them along
+the road. As his horses were evidently less fatigued than
+those of the other traveler, he would not be long in over-
+taking it. This was neither a tarantass nor a telga, but a
+post-berlin, which looked as if it had made a long journey.
+The postillion was thrashing his horses with all his might,
+and only kept them at a gallop by dint of abuse and blows.
+The berlin had certainly not passed through Novo-Saimsk,
+and could only have struck the Irkutsk road by some less
+frequented route across the steppe.
+
+Our travelers' first thought, on seeing this berlin, was
+to get in front of it, and arrive first at the relay,
+so as to make sure of fresh horses. They said a word
+to their iemschiks, who soon brought them up with the
+berlin.
+
+Michael Strogoff came up first. As he passed, a head
+was thrust out of the window of the berlin.
+
+He had not time to see what it was like, but as he dashed
+by he distinctly heard this word, uttered in an imperious
+tone: "Stop!"
+
+But they did not stop; on the contrary, the berlin was
+soon distanced by the two tarantasses.
+
+It now became a regular race; for the horses of the ber-
+lin -- no doubt excited by the sight and pace of the others --
+recovered their strength and kept up for some minutes.
+The three carriages were hidden in a cloud of dust. From
+this cloud issued the cracking of whips mingled with ex-
+cited shouts and exclamations of anger.
+
+Nevertheless, the advantage remained with Michael and
+his companions, which might be very important to them
+if the relay was poorly provided with horses. Two car-
+riages were perhaps more than the postmaster could provide
+for, at least in a short space of time.
+
+Half an hour after the berlin was left far behind, look-
+ing only a speck on the horizon of the steppe.
+
+It was eight o'clock in the evening when the two car-
+riages reached Ichim. The news was worse and worse with
+regard to the invasion. The town itself was menaced by
+the Tartar vanguard; and two days before the authorities
+had been obliged to retreat to Tobolsk. There was not an
+officer nor a soldier left in Ichim.
+
+On arriving at the relay, Michael Strogoff immediately
+asked for horses. He had been fortunate in distancing the
+berlin. Only three horses were fit to be harnessed. The
+others had just come in worn out from a long stage.
+
+As the two correspondents intended to stop at Ichim,
+they had not to trouble themselves to find transport, and
+had their carriage put away. In ten minutes Michael was
+told that his tarantass was ready to start.
+
+"Good," said he.
+
+Then turning to the two reporters: "Well, gentlemen,
+the time is come for us to separate."
+
+"What, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide Jolivet, "shall you
+not stop even for an hour at Ichim?"
+
+"No, sir; and I also wish to leave the post-house before
+the arrival of the berlin which we distanced."
+
+"Are you afraid that the traveler will dispute the horses
+with you?"
+
+"I particularly wish to avoid any difficulty."
+
+"Then, Mr. Korpanoff," said Jolivet, "it only remains
+for us to thank you once more for the service you rendered
+us, and the pleasure we have had in traveling with you."
+
+"It is possible that we shall meet you again in a few
+days at Omsk," added Blount.
+
+"It is possible," answered Michael, "since I am going
+straight there."
+
+"Well, I wish you a safe journey, Mr. Korpanoff," said
+Alcide, "and Heaven preserve you from telgas."
+
+The two reporters held out their hands to Michael with
+the intention of cordially shaking his, when the sound of a
+carriage was heard outside. Almost immediately the door
+was flung open and a man appeared.
+
+It was the traveler of the berlin, a military-looking man,
+apparently about forty years of age, tall, robust in figure,
+broad-shouldered, with a strongly-set head, and thick mus-
+taches meeting red whiskers. He wore a plain uniform.
+A cavalry saber hung at his side, and in his hand he held a
+short-handled whip.
+
+"Horses," he demanded, with the air of a man accus-
+tomed to command.
+
+"I have no more disposable horses," answered the post-
+master, bowing.
+
+"I must have some this moment."
+
+"It is impossible."
+
+"What are those horses which have just been harnessed
+to the tarantass I saw at the door?"
+
+"They belong to this traveler," answered the postmaster,
+pointing to Michael Strogoff.
+
+"Take them out!" said the traveler in a tone which
+admitted of no reply.
+
+Michael then advanced.
+
+"These horses are engaged by me," he said.
+
+"What does that matter? I must have them. Come,
+be quick; I have no time to lose."
+
+"I have no time to lose either," replied Michael, re-
+straining himself with difficulty.
+
+Nadia was near him, calm also, but secretly uneasy at
+a scene which it would have been better to avoid.
+
+"Enough!" said the traveler. Then, going up to the
+postmaster, "Let the horses be put into my berlin," he ex-
+claimed with a threatening gesture.
+
+The postmaster, much embarrassed, did not know whom
+to obey, and looked at Michael, who evidently had the right
+to resist the unjust demands of the traveler.
+
+Michael hesitated an instant. He did not wish to make
+use of his podorojna, which would have drawn attention to
+him, and he was most unwilling also, by giving up his
+horses, to delay his journey, and yet he must not engage
+in a struggle which might compromise his mission.
+
+The two reporters looked at him ready to support him
+should he appeal to them.
+
+"My horses will remain in my carriage," said Michael,
+but without raising his tone more than would be suitable
+for a plain Irkutsk merchant.
+
+The traveler advanced towards Michael and laid his hand
+heavily on his shoulder. "Is it so?" he said roughly.
+"You will not give up your horses to me?"
+
+"No," answered Michael.
+
+"Very well, they shall belong to whichever of us is able
+to start. Defend yourself; I shall not spare you!"
+
+So saying, the traveler drew his saber from its sheath,
+and Nadia threw herself before Michael.
+
+Blount and Alcide Jolivet advanced towards him.
+
+"I shall not fight," said Michael quietly, folding his arms
+across his chest.
+
+"You will not fight?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Not even after this?" exclaimed the traveler. And
+before anyone could prevent him, he struck Michael's
+shoulder with the handle of the whip. At this insult
+Michael turned deadly pale. His hands moved convulsively
+as if he would have knocked the brute down. But by a
+tremendous effort he mastered himself. A duel! it was
+more than a delay; it was perhaps the failure of his mission.
+It would be better to lose some hours. Yes; but to swallow
+this affront!
+
+"Will you fight now, coward?" repeated the traveler,
+adding coarseness to brutality.
+
+"No," answered Michael, without moving, but looking
+the other straight in the face.
+
+"The horses this moment," said the man, and left the
+room.
+
+The postmaster followed him, after shrugging his
+shoulders and bestowing on Michael a glance of anything
+but approbation.
+
+The effect produced on the reporters by this incident was
+not to Michael's advantage. Their discomfiture was vis-
+ible. How could this strong young man allow himself to
+be struck like that and not demand satisfaction for such
+an insult? They contented themselves with bowing to him
+and retired, Jolivet remarking to Harry Blount
+
+"I could not have believed that of a man who is so skill-
+ful in finishing up Ural Mountain bears. Is it the case that
+a man can be courageous at one time and a coward at an-
+other? It is quite incomprehensible."
+
+A moment afterwards the noise of wheels and whip showed
+that the berlin, drawn by the tarantass' horses, was driving
+rapidly away from the post-house.
+
+Nadia, unmoved, and Michael, still quivering, remained
+alone in the room. The courier of the Czar, his arms
+crossed over his chest was seated motionless as a statue.
+A color, which could not have been the blush of shame, had
+replaced the paleness on his countenance.
+
+Nadia did not doubt that powerful reasons alone could have
+allowed him to suffer so great a humiliation from such a
+man. Going up to him as he had come to her in the police-
+station at Nijni-Novgorod:
+
+"Your hand, brother," said she.
+
+And at the same time her hand, with an almost maternal
+gesture, wiped away a tear which sprang to her compan-
+ion's eye.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+DUTY BEFORE EVERYTHING
+
+NADIA, with the clear perception of a right-minded
+woman, guessed that some secret motive directed all
+Michael Strogoff's actions; that he, for a reason unknown
+to her, did not belong to himself; and that in this instance
+especially he had heroically sacrificed to duty even his re-
+sentment at the gross injury he had received.
+
+Nadia, therefore, asked no explanation from Michael.
+Had not the hand which she had extended to him already
+replied to all that he might have been able to tell her?
+
+Michael remained silent all the evening. The postmas-
+ter not being able to supply them with fresh horses until
+the next morning, a whole night must be passed at the
+house. Nadia could profit by it to take some rest, and a
+room was therefore prepared for her.
+
+The young girl would no doubt have preferred not to
+leave her companion, but she felt that he would rather be
+alone, and she made ready to go to her room.
+
+Just as she was about to retire she could not refrain from
+going up to Michael to say good-night.
+
+"Brother," she whispered. But he checked her with a
+gesture. The girl sighed and left the room.
+
+Michael Strogoff did not lie down. He could not have
+slept even for an hour. The place on which he had been
+struck by the brutal traveler felt like a burn.
+
+"For my country and the Father," he muttered as he
+ended his evening prayer.
+
+He especially felt a great wish to know who was the
+man who had struck him, whence he came, and where he
+was going. As to his face, the features of it were so deeply
+engraven on his memory that he had no fear of ever forget-
+ting them.
+
+Michael Strogoff at last asked for the postmaster. The
+latter, a Siberian of the old type, came directly, and look-
+ing rather contemptuously at the young man, waited to be
+questioned.
+
+"You belong to the country?" asked Michael.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you know that man who took my horses?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Had you never seen him before?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Who do you think he was?"
+
+"A man who knows how to make himself obeyed."
+
+Michael fixed his piercing gaze upon the Siberian, but
+the other did not quail before it.
+
+"Do you dare to judge me?" exclaimed Michael.
+
+"Yes," answered the Siberian, "there are some things
+even a plain merchant cannot receive without returning."
+
+"Blows?"
+
+"Blows, young man. I am of an age and strength to
+tell you so."
+
+Michael went up to the postmaster and laid his two
+powerful hands on his shoulders.
+
+Then in a peculiarly calm tone, "Be off, my friend," said
+he: "be off! I could kill you."
+
+The postmaster understood. "I like him better for
+that," he muttered and retired without another word.
+
+At eight o'clock the next morning, the 24th of July,
+three strong horses were harnessed to the tarantass.
+Michael Strogoff and Nadia took their places, and Ichim,
+with its disagreeable remembrances, was soon left far be-
+hind.
+
+At the different relays at which they stopped during the
+day Strogoff ascertained that the berlin still preceded them
+on the road to Irkutsk, and that the traveler, as hurried as
+they were, never lost a minute in pursuing his way across
+the steppe.
+
+At four o'clock in the evening they reached Abatskaia,
+fifty miles farther on, where the Ichim, one of the principal
+affluents of the Irtych, had to be crossed. This passage
+was rather more difficult than that of the Tobol. Indeed
+the current of the Ichim was very rapid just at that place.
+During the Siberian winter, the rivers being all frozen to
+a thickness of several feet, they are easily practicable, and
+the traveler even crosses them without being aware of the
+fact, for their beds have disappeared under the snowy sheet
+spread uniformly over the steppe; but in summer the diffi-
+culties of crossing are sometimes great.
+
+In fact, two hours were taken up in making the passage
+of the Ichim, which much exasperated Michael, especially
+as the boatmen gave them alarming news of the Tartar in-
+vasion. Some of Feofar-Khan's scouts had already ap-
+peared on both banks of the lower Ichim, in the southern
+parts of the government of Tobolsk. Omsk was threatened.
+They spoke of an engagement which had taken place be-
+tween the Siberian and Tartar troops on the frontier of the
+great Kirghese horde -- an engagement not to the advantage
+of the Russians, who were weak in numbers. The troops
+had retreated thence, and in consequence there had been
+a general emigration of all the peasants of the province.
+The boatmen spoke of horrible atrocities committed by the
+invaders -- pillage, theft, incendiarism, murder. Such was
+the system of Tartar warfare.
+
+The people all fled before Feofar-Khan. Michael
+Strogoff's great fear was lest, in the depopulation of the
+towns, he should be unable to obtain the means of transport.
+He was therefore extremely anxious to reach Omsk. Per-
+haps there they would get the start of the Tartar scouts,
+who were coming down the valley of the Irtych, and would
+find the road open to Irkutsk.
+
+Just at the place where the tarantass crossed the river
+ended what is called, in military language, the "Ichim
+chain" -- a chain of towers, or little wooden forts, extending
+from the southern frontier of Siberia for a distance of
+nearly four hundred versts. Formerly these forts were
+occupied by detachments of Cossacks, and they protected
+the country against the Kirghese, as well as against the
+Tartars. But since the Muscovite Government had believed
+these hordes reduced to absolute submission, they had been
+abandoned, and now could not be used; just at the time
+when they were needed. Many of these forts had been re-
+duced to ashes; and the boatmen even pointed out the smoke
+to Michael, rising in the southern horizon, and showing the
+approach of the Tartar advance-guard.
+
+As soon as the ferryboat landed the tarantass on the
+right bank of the Ichim, the journey across the steppe was
+resumed with all speed. Michael Strogoff remained very
+silent. He was, however, always attentive to Nadia, help-
+ing her to bear the fatigue of this long journey without
+break or rest; but the girl never complained. She longed
+to give wings to the horses. Something told her that her
+companion was even more anxious than herself to reach
+Irkutsk; and how many versts were still between!
+
+It also occurred to her that if Omsk was entered by the
+Tartars, Michael's mother, who lived there, would be in
+danger, and that this was sufficient to explain her son's im-
+patience to get to her.
+
+Nadia at last spoke to him of old Marfa, and of how un-
+protected she would be in the midst of all these events.
+
+"Have you received any news of your mother since the
+beginning of the invasion?" she asked.
+
+"None, Nadia. The last letter my mother wrote to me
+contained good news. Marfa is a brave and energetic
+Siberian woman. Notwithstanding her age, she has pre-
+served all her moral strength. She knows how to suffer."
+
+"I shall see her, brother," said Nadia quickly. "Since
+you give me the name of sister, I am Marfa's daughter."
+
+And as Michael did not answer she added:
+
+"Perhaps your mother has been able to leave Omsk?"
+
+"It is possible, Nadia," replied Michael; "and I hope
+she may have reached Tobolsk. Marfa hates the Tartars.
+She knows the steppe, and would have no fear in just tak-
+ing her staff and going down the banks of the Irtych.
+There is not a spot in all the province unknown to her.
+Many times has she traveled all over the country with my
+father; and many times I myself, when a mere child, have
+accompanied them across the Siberian desert. Yes, Nadia,
+I trust that my mother has left Omsk."
+
+"And when shall you see her?"
+
+"I shall see her -- on my return."
+
+"If, however, your mother is still at Omsk, you will be
+able to spare an hour to go to her?"
+
+"I shall not go and see her."
+
+"You will not see her?"
+
+"No, Nadia," said Michael, his chest heaving as he felt
+he could not go on replying to the girl's questions.
+
+"You say no! Why, brother, if your mother is still at
+Omsk, for what reason could you refuse to see her?"
+
+"For what reason, Nadia? You ask me for what rea-
+son," exclaimed Michael, in so changed a voice that the
+young girl started. "For the same reason as that which
+made me patient even to cowardice with the villain who --"
+He could not finish his sentence.
+
+"Calm yourself, brother," said Nadia in a gentle voice.
+"I only know one thing, or rather I do not know it, I feel
+it. It is that all your conduct is now directed by the senti-
+ment of a duty more sacred -- if there can be one -- than
+that which unites the son to the mother."
+
+Nadia was silent, and from that moment avoided every
+subject which in any way touched on Michael's peculiar
+situation. He had a secret motive which she must respect.
+She respected it.
+
+The next day, July 25th, at three o'clock in the morning,
+the tarantass arrived at Tioukalmsk, having accomplished
+a distance of eighty miles since it had crossed the Ichim.
+They rapidly changed horses. Here, however, for the first
+time, the iemschik made difficulties about starting, declaring
+that detachments of Tartars were roving across the steppe,
+and that travelers, horses, and carriages would be a fine
+prize for them.
+
+Only by dint of a large bribe could Michael get over the
+unwillingness of the iemschik, for in this instance, as in
+many others, he did not wish to show his podorojna. The
+last ukase, having been transmitted by telegraph, was known
+in the Siberian provinces; and a Russian specially exempted
+from obeying these words would certainly have drawn pub-
+lic attention to himself -- a thing above all to be avoided by
+the Czar's courier. As to the iemschik's hesitation, either
+the rascal traded on the traveler's impatience or he really
+had good reason to fear.
+
+However, at last the tarantass started, and made such
+good way that by three in the afternoon it had reached
+Koulatsinskoe, fifty miles farther on. An hour after this
+it was on the banks of the Irtych. Omsk was now only
+fourteen miles distant.
+
+The Irtych is a large river, and one of the principal of
+those which flow towards the north of Asia. Rising in
+the Altai Mountains, it flows from the southeast to the
+northwest and empties itself into the Obi, after a course of
+four thousand miles.
+
+At this time of year, when all the rivers of the Siberian
+basin are much swollen, the waters of the Irtych were very
+high. In consequence the current was changed to a regular
+torrent, rendering the passage difficult enough. A swim-
+mer could not have crossed, however powerful; and even in
+a ferryboat there would be some danger.
+
+But Michael and Nadia, determined to brave all perils
+whatever they might be, did not dream of shrinking from
+this one. Michael proposed to his young companion that
+he should cross first, embarking in the ferryboat with the
+tarantass and horses, as he feared that the weight of this
+load would render it less safe. After landing the carriage
+he would return and fetch Nadia.
+
+The girl refused. It would be the delay of an hour, and
+she would not, for her safety alone, be the cause of it.
+
+The embarkation was made not without difficulty, for
+the banks were partly flooded and the boat could not get
+in near enough. However, after half an hour's exertion,
+the boatmen got the tarantass and the three horses on board.
+The passengers embarked also, and they shoved off.
+
+For a few minutes all went well. A little way up the
+river the current was broken by a long point projecting
+from the bank, and forming an eddy easily crossed by the
+boat. The two boatmen propelled their barge with long
+poles, which they handled cleverly; but as they gained the
+middle of the stream it grew deeper and deeper, until at
+last they could only just reach the bottom. The ends of
+the poles were only a foot above the water, which rendered
+their use difficult. Michael and Nadia, seated in the stern
+of the boat, and always in dread of a delay, watched the
+boatmen with some uneasiness.
+
+"Look out!" cried one of them to his comrade.
+
+The shout was occasioned by the new direction the boat
+was rapidly taking. It had got into the direct current and
+was being swept down the river. By diligent use of the
+poles, putting the ends in a series of notches cut below the
+gunwale, the boatmen managed to keep the craft against
+the stream, and slowly urged it in a slanting direction to-
+wards the right bank.
+
+They calculated on reaching it some five or six versts
+below the landing place; but, after all, that would not mat-
+ter so long as men and beasts could disembark without ac-
+cident. The two stout boatmen, stimulated moreover by
+the promise of double fare, did not doubt of succeeding in
+this difficult passage of the Irtych.
+
+But they reckoned without an accident which they were
+powerless to prevent, and neither their zeal nor their skill-
+fulness could, under the circumstances, have done more.
+
+The boat was in the middle of the current, at nearly equal
+distances from either shore, and being carried down at the
+rate of two versts an hour, when Michael, springing to his
+feet, bent his gaze up the river.
+
+Several boats, aided by oars as well as by the current,
+were coming swiftly down upon them.
+
+Michael's brow contracted, and a cry escaped him.
+
+"What is the matter?" asked the girl.
+
+But before Michael had time to reply one of the boatmen
+exclaimed in an accent of terror:
+
+"The Tartars! the Tartars!"
+
+There were indeed boats full of soldiers, and in a few
+minutes they must reach the ferryboat, it being too heavily
+laden to escape from them.
+
+The terrified boatmen uttered exclamations of despair and
+dropped their poles.
+
+"Courage, my friends!" cried Michael; "courage!
+Fifty roubles for you if we reach the right bank before the
+boats overtake us."
+
+Incited by these words, the boatmen again worked man-
+fully but it soon become evident that they could not escape
+the Tartars.
+
+It was scarcely probable that they would pass without
+attacking them. On the contrary, there was everything to
+be feared from robbers such as these.
+
+"Do not be afraid, Nadia," said Michael; "but be ready
+for anything."
+
+"I am ready," replied Nadia.
+
+"Even to leap into the water when I tell you?"
+
+"Whenever you tell me."
+
+"Have confidence in me, Nadia."
+
+"I have, indeed!"
+
+The Tartar boats were now only a hundred feet dis-
+tant. They carried a detachment of Bokharian soldiers,
+on their way to reconnoiter around Omsk.
+
+The ferryboat was still two lengths from the shore. The
+boatmen redoubled their efforts. Michael himself seized a
+pole and wielded it with superhuman strength. If he could
+land the tarantass and horses, and dash off with them, there
+was some chance of escaping the Tartars, who were not
+mounted.
+
+But all their efforts were in vain. "Saryn na kitchou!"
+shouted the soldiers from the first boat.
+
+Michael recognized the Tartar war-cry, which is usually
+answered by lying flat on the ground. As neither he nor
+the boatmen obeyed a volley was let fly, and two of the
+horses were mortally wounded.
+
+At the next moment a violent blow was felt. The boats
+had run into the ferryboat.
+
+"Come, Nadia!" cried Michael, ready to jump over-
+board.
+
+The girl was about to follow him, when a blow from a
+lance struck him, and he was thrown into the water. The
+current swept him away, his hand raised for an instant
+above the waves, and then he disappeared.
+
+Nadia uttered a cry, but before she had time to throw
+herself after him she was seized and dragged into one of
+the boats. The boatmen were killed, the ferryboat left to
+drift away, and the Tartars continued to descend the Irtych.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+MOTHER AND SON
+
+OMSK is the official capital of Western Siberia. It is not
+the most important city of the government of that name,
+for Tomsk has more inhabitants and is larger. But it is
+at Omsk that the Governor-General of this the first half of
+Asiatic Russia resides. Omsk, properly so called, is com-
+posed of two distinct towns: one which is exclusively in-
+habited by the authorities and officials; the other more
+especially devoted to the Siberian merchants, although, in-
+deed, the trade of the town is of small importance.
+
+This city has about 12,000 to 13,000 inhabitants. It is
+defended by walls, but these are merely of earth, and could
+afford only insufficient protection. The Tartars, who were
+well aware of this fact, consequently tried at this period to
+carry it by main force, and in this they succeeded, after an
+investment of a few days.
+
+The garrison of Omsk, reduced to two thousand men, re-
+sisted valiantly. But driven back, little by little, from the
+mercantile portion of the place, they were compelled to
+take refuge in the upper town.
+
+It was there that the Governor-General, his officers, and
+soldiers had entrenched themselves. They had made the
+upper quarter of Omsk a kind of citadel, and hitherto they
+held out well in this species of improvised "kreml," but
+without much hope of the promised succor. The Tartar
+troops, who were descending the Irtych, received every day
+fresh reinforcements, and, what was more serious, they
+were led by an officer, a traitor to his country, but a man
+of much note, and of an audacity equal to any emergency.
+This man was Colonel Ivan Ogareff.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, terrible as any of the most savage Tartar
+chieftains, was an educated soldier. Possessing on his
+mother's side some Mongolian blood, he delighted in de-
+ceptive strategy and ambuscades, stopping short of nothing
+when he desired to fathom some secret or to set some trap.
+Deceitful by nature, he willingly had recourse to the vilest
+trickery; lying when occasion demanded, excelling in the
+adoption of all disguises and in every species of deception.
+Further, he was cruel, and had even acted as an executioner.
+Feofar-Khan possessed in him a lieutenant well capable of
+seconding his designs in this savage war.
+
+When Michael Strogoff arrived on the banks of the
+Irtych, Ivan Ogareff was already master of Omsk, and was
+pressing the siege of the upper quarter of the town all the
+more eagerly because he must hasten to Tomsk, where the
+main body of the Tartar army was concentrated.
+
+Tomsk, in fact, had been taken by Feofar-Khan some
+days previously, and it was thence that the invaders, masters
+of Central Siberia, were to march upon Irkutsk.
+
+Irkutsk was the real object of Ivan Ogareff. The plan
+of the traitor was to reach the Grand Duke under a false
+name, to gain his confidence, and to deliver into Tartar
+hands the town and the Grand Duke himself. With such
+a town, and such a hostage, all Asiatic Siberia must neces-
+sarily fall into the hands of the invaders. Now it was
+known that the Czar was acquainted with this conspiracy,
+and that it was for the purpose of baffling it that a courier
+had been intrusted with the important warning. Hence,
+therefore, the very stringent instructions which had been
+given to the young courier to pass incognito through the
+invaded district.
+
+This mission he had so far faithfully performed, but now
+could he carry it to a successful completion?
+
+The blow which had struck Michael Strogoff was not
+mortal. By swimming in a manner by which he had
+effectually concealed himself, he had reached the right bank,
+where he fell exhausted among the bushes.
+
+When he recovered his senses, he found himself in the
+cabin of a mujik, who had picked him up and cared for him.
+For how long a time had he been the guest of this brave
+Siberian? He could not guess. But when he opened his
+eyes he saw the handsome bearded face bending over him,
+and regarding him with pitying eyes. "Do not speak,
+little father," said the mujik, "Do not speak! Thou art
+still too weak. I will tell thee where thou art and every-
+thing that has passed."
+
+And the mujik related to Michael Strogoff the different
+incidents of the struggle which he had witnessed -- the at-
+tack upon the ferry by the Tartar boats, the pillage of the
+tarantass, and the massacre of the boatmen.
+
+But Michael Strogoff listened no longer, and slipping his
+hand under his garment he felt the imperial letter still
+secured in his breast. He breathed a sigh of relief.
+
+But that was not all. "A young girl accompanied me,"
+said he.
+
+"They have not killed her," replied the mujik, anticipat-
+ing the anxiety which he read in the eyes of his guest.
+"They have carried her off in their boat, and have con-
+tinued the descent of Irtych. It is only one prisoner more
+to join the many they are taking to Tomsk!"
+
+Michael Strogoff was unable to reply. He pressed his
+hand upon his heart to restrain its beating. But, notwith-
+standing these many trials, the sentiment of duty mastered
+his whole soul. "Where am I?" asked he.
+
+"Upon the right bank of the Irtych, only five versts from
+Omsk," replied the mujik.
+
+"What wound can I have received which could have thus
+prostrated me? It was not a gunshot wound?"
+
+"No; a lance-thrust in the head, now healing," replied
+the mujik. "After a few days' rest, little father, thou wilt
+be able to proceed. Thou didst fall into the river; but the
+Tartars neither touched nor searched thee; and thy purse
+is still in thy pocket."
+
+Michael Strogoff gripped the mujik's hand. Then, re-
+covering himself with a sudden effort, "Friend," said he,
+"how long have I been in thy hut?"
+
+"Three days."
+
+"Three days lost!"
+
+"Three days hast thou lain unconscious."
+
+"Hast thou a horse to sell me?"
+
+"Thou wishest to go?"
+
+"At once."
+
+"I have neither horse nor carriage, little father. Where
+the Tartar has passed there remains nothing!"
+
+"Well, I will go on foot to Omsk to find a horse."
+
+"A few more hours of rest, and thou wilt be in a better
+condition to pursue thy journey."
+
+"Not an hour!"
+
+"Come now," replied the mujik, recognizing the fact
+that it was useless to struggle against the will of his guest,
+"I will guide thee myself. Besides," he added, "the
+Russians are still in great force at Omsk, and thou couldst,
+perhaps, pass unperceived."
+
+"Friend," replied Michael Strogoff, "Heaven reward thee
+for all thou hast done for me!"
+
+"Only fools expect reward on earth," replied the mujik.
+
+Michael Strogoff went out of the hut. When he tried
+to walk he was seized with such faintness that, without the
+assistance of the mujik, he would have fallen; but the fresh
+air quickly revived him. He then felt the wound in his
+head, the violence of which his fur cap had lessened. With
+the energy which he possessed, he was not a man to suc-
+cumb under such a trifle. Before his eyes lay a single goal
+ -- far-distant Irkutsk. He must reach it! But he must
+pass through Omsk without stopping there.
+
+"God protect my mother and Nadia!" he murmured.
+"I have no longer the right to think of them!"
+
+Michael Strogoff and the mujik soon arrived in the mer-
+cantile quarter of the lower town. The surrounding earth-
+work had been destroyed in many places, and there were
+the breaches through which the marauders who followed
+the armies of Feofar-Khan had penetrated. Within Omsk,
+in its streets and squares, the Tartar soldiers swarmed like
+ants; but it was easy to see that a hand of iron imposed
+upon them a discipline to which they were little accus-
+tomed. They walked nowhere alone, but in armed groups,
+to defend themselves against surprise.
+
+In the chief square, transformed into a camp, guarded
+by many sentries, 2,000 Tartars bivouacked. The horses,
+picketed but still saddled, were ready to start at the first
+order. Omsk could only be a temporary halting-place for
+this Tartar cavalry, which preferred the rich plains of East-
+ern Siberia, where the towns were more wealthy, and, con-
+sequently, pillage more profitable.
+
+Above the mercantile town rose the upper quarter, which
+Ivan Ogareff, notwithstanding several assaults vigorously
+made but bravely repelled, had not yet been able to reduce.
+Upon its embattled walls floated the national colors of
+Russia.
+
+It was not without a legitimate pride that Michael
+Strogoff and his guide, vowing fidelity, saluted them.
+
+Michael Strogoff was perfectly acquainted with the town
+of Omsk, and he took care to avoid those streets which were
+much frequented. This was not from any fear of being
+recognized. In the town his old mother only could have
+called him by name, but he had sworn not to see her, and he
+did not. Besides -- and he wished it with his whole heart --
+she might have fled into some quiet portion of the steppe.
+
+The mujik very fortunately knew a postmaster who, if
+well paid, would not refuse at his request either to let or
+to sell a carriage or horses. There remained the difficulty
+of leaving the town, but the breaches in the fortifications
+would, of course, facilitate his departure.
+
+The mujik was accordingly conducting his guest straight
+to the posting-house, when, in a narrow street, Michael
+Strogoff, coming to a sudden stop sprang behind a jutting
+wall.
+
+"What is the matter?" asked the astonished mujik.
+
+"Silence!" replied Michael, with his finger on his lips.
+At this moment a detachment debouched from the principal
+square into the street which Michael Strogoff and his com-
+panion had just been following.
+
+At the head of the detachment, composed of twenty
+horsemen, was an officer dressed in a very simple uniform.
+Although he glanced rapidly from one side to the other he
+could not have seen Michael Strogoff, owing to his precipi-
+tous retreat.
+
+The detachment went at full trot into the narrow street.
+Neither the officer nor his escort concerned themselves about
+the inhabitants. Several unlucky ones had scarcely time to
+make way for their passage. There were a few half-stifled
+cries, to which thrusts of the lance gave an instant reply,
+and the street was immediately cleared.
+
+When the escort had disappeared, "Who is that officer?"
+asked Michael Strogoff. And while putting the question
+his face was pale as that of a corpse.
+
+"It is Ivan Ogareff," replied the Siberian, in a deep voice
+which breathed hatred.
+
+"He!" cried Michael Strogoff, from whom the word
+escaped with a fury he could not conquer. He had just
+recognized in this officer the traveler who had struck him
+at the posting-house of Ichim. And, although he had only
+caught a glimpse of him, it burst upon his mind, at the
+same time, that this traveler was the old Zingari whose
+words he had overheard in the market place of Nijni-Nov-
+gorod.
+
+Michael Strogoff was not mistaken. The two men were
+one and the same. It was under the garb of a Zingari,
+mingling with the band of Sangarre, that Ivan Ogareff had
+been able to leave the town of Nijni-Novgorod, where he
+had gone to seek his confidants. Sangarre and her Zingari,
+well paid spies, were absolutely devoted to him. It was
+he who, during the night, on the fair-ground had uttered
+that singular sentence, which Michael Strogoff could not
+understand; it was he who was voyaging on board the
+Caucasus, with the whole of the Bohemian band; it was he
+who, by this other route, from Kasan to Ichim, across the
+Urals, had reached Omsk, where now he held supreme au-
+thority.
+
+Ivan Ogareff had been barely three days at Omsk, and
+had it not been for their fatal meeting at Ichim, and for
+the event which had detained him three days on the banks
+of the Irtych, Michael Strogoff would have evidently beaten
+him on the way to Irkutsk.
+
+And who knows how many misfortunes would have been
+avoided in the future! In any case -- and now more than
+ever -- Michael Strogoff must avoid Ivan Ogareff, and con-
+trive not to be seen. When the moment of encountering
+him face to face should arrive, he knew how to meet it,
+even should the traitor be master of the whole of Siberia.
+
+The mujik and Michael resumed their way and arrived at
+the posting-house. To leave Omsk by one of the breaches
+would not be difficult after nightfall. As for purchasing a
+carriage to replace the tarantass, that was impossible.
+There were none to be let or sold. But what want had
+Michael Strogoff now for a carriage? Was he not alone,
+alas? A horse would suffice him; and, very fortunately,
+a horse could be had. It was an animal of strength and
+mettle, and Michael Strogoff, accomplished horseman as he
+was, could make good use of it.
+
+It was four o'clock in the afternoon. Michael Strogoff,
+compelled to wait till nightfall, in order to pass the fortifica-
+tions, but not desiring to show himself, remained in the
+posting-house, and there partook of food.
+
+There was a great crowd in the public room. They
+were talking of the expected arrival of a corps of Musco-
+vite troops, not at Omsk, but at Tomsk -- a corps intended
+to recapture that town from the Tartars of Feofar-Khan.
+
+Michael Strogoff lent an attentive ear, but took no part
+in the conversation. Suddenly a cry made him tremble, a
+cry which penetrated to the depths of his soul, and these two
+words rushed into his ear: "My son!"
+
+His mother, the old woman Marfa, was before him!
+Trembling, she smiled upon him. She stretched forth her
+arms to him. Michael Strogoff arose. He was about to
+throw himself --
+
+The thought of duty, the serious danger for his mother
+and himself in this unfortunate meeting, suddenly stopped
+him, and such was his command over himself that not a
+muscle of his face moved. There were twenty people in the
+public room. Among them were, perhaps, spies, and was
+it not known in the town that the son of Marfa Strogoff
+belonged to the corps of the couriers of the Czar?
+
+Michael Strogoff did not move.
+
+"Michael!" cried his mother.
+
+"Who are you, my good lady?" Michael Strogoff
+stammered, unable to speak in his usual firm tone.
+
+"Who am I, thou askest! Dost thou no longer know
+thy mother?"
+
+"You are mistaken," coldly replied Michael Strogoff.
+"A resemblance deceives you."
+
+The old Marfa went up to him, and, looking straight into
+his eyes, said, "Thou art not the son of Peter and Marfa
+Strogoff?"
+
+Michael Strogoff would have given his life to have locked
+his mother in his arms; but if he yielded it was all over
+with him, with her, with his mission, with his oath! Com-
+pletely master of himself, he closed his eyes, in order not
+to see the inexpressible anguish which agitated the revered
+countenance of his mother. He drew back his hands, in or-
+der not to touch those trembling hands which sought him.
+"I do not know in truth what it is you say, my good
+woman," he replied, stepping back.
+
+"Michael!" again cried his aged mother.
+
+"My name is not Michael. I never was your son! I am
+Nicholas Korpanoff, a merchant at Irkutsk."
+
+And suddenly he left the public room, whilst for the last
+time the words re-echoed, "My son! my son!"
+
+Michael Strogoff, by a desperate effort, had gone. He
+did not see his old mother, who had fallen back almost
+inanimate upon a bench. But when the postmaster has-
+tened to assist her, the aged woman raised herself. Sud-
+denly a thought occurred to her. She denied by her son!
+It was not possible. As for being herself deceived, and
+taking another for him, equally impossible. It was cer-
+tainly her son whom she had just seen; and if he had not
+recognized her it was because he would not, it was because
+he ought not, it was because he had some cogent reasons
+for acting thus! And then, her mother's feelings arising
+within her, she had only one thought -- "Can I, unwittingly,
+have ruined him?"
+
+"I am mad," she said to her interrogators. "My eyes
+have deceived me! This young man is not my child. He
+had not his voice. Let us think no more of it; if we do I
+shall end by finding him everywhere."
+
+Less than ten minutes afterwards a Tartar officer ap-
+peared in the posting-house. "Marfa Strogoff?" he asked.
+
+"It is I," replied the old woman, in a tone so calm, and
+with a face so tranquil, that those who had witnessed the
+meeting with her son would not have known her.
+
+"Come," said the officer,
+
+Marfa Strogoff, with firm step, followed the Tartar.
+Some moments afterwards she found herself in the chief
+square in the presence of Ivan Ogareff, to whom all the
+details of this scene had been immediately reported.
+
+Ogareff, suspecting the truth, interrogated the old
+Siberian woman. "Thy name?" he asked in a rough voice.
+
+"Marfa Strogoff."
+
+"Thou hast a son?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He is a courier of the Czar?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"At Moscow."
+
+"Thou hast no news of him?"
+
+"No news."
+
+"Since how long?"
+
+"Since two months."
+
+"Who, then, was that young man whom thou didst call
+thy son a few moments ago at the posting-house?"
+
+"A young Siberian whom I took for him," replied Marfa
+Strogoff. "This is the tenth man in whom I have thought
+I recognized my son since the town has been so full of
+strangers. I think I see him everywhere."
+
+"So this young man was not Michael Strogoff?"
+
+"It was not Michael Strogoff."
+
+"Dost thou know, old woman, that I can torture thee
+until thou avowest the truth?"
+
+"I have spoken the truth, and torture will not cause me
+to alter my words in any way."
+
+"This Siberian was not Michael Strogoff?" asked a
+second time Ivan Ogareff.
+
+"No, it was not he," replied a second time Marfa
+Strogoff. "Do you think that for anything in the world
+I would deny a son whom God has given me?"
+
+Ivan Ogareff regarded with an evil eye the old woman
+who braved him to the face. He did not doubt but that
+she had recognized her son in this young Siberian. Now
+if this son had first renounced his mother, and if his mother
+renounced him in her turn, it could occur only from the
+most weighty motive. Ogareff had therefore no doubt that
+the pretended Nicholas Korpanoff was Michael Strogoff,
+courier of the Czar, seeking concealment under a false
+name, and charged with some mission which it would have
+been important for him to know. He therefore at once
+gave orders for his pursuit. Then "Let this woman be
+conducted to Tomsk," he said.
+
+While the soldiers brutally dragged her off, he added be-
+tween his teeth, "When the moment arrives I shall know
+how to make her speak, this old sorceress!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+THE MARSHES OF THE BARABA
+
+IT was fortunate that Michael Strogoff had left the post-
+ing-house so promptly. The orders of Ivan Ogareff had
+been immediately transmitted to all the approaches of the
+city, and a full description of Michael sent to all the various
+commandants, in order to prevent his departure from Omsk.
+But he had already passed through one of the breaches in
+the wall; his horse was galloping over the steppe, and the
+chances of escape were in his favor.
+
+It was on the 29th of July, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+that Michael Strogoff had left Omsk. This town is sit-
+uated about halfway between Moscow and Irkutsk, where
+it was necessary that he should arrive within ten days if he
+wished to get ahead of the Tartar columns. It was evident
+that the unlucky chance which had brought him into the
+presence of his mother had betrayed his incognito. Ivan
+Ogareff was no longer ignorant of the fact that a courier of
+the Czar had just passed Omsk, taking the direction of
+Irkutsk. The dispatches which this courier bore must have
+been of immense importance. Michael Strogoff knew,
+therefore, that every effort would be made to capture him.
+
+But what he did not know, and could not know, was
+that Marfa Strogoff was in the hands of Ivan Ogareff, and
+that she was about to atone, perhaps with her life, for that
+natural exhibition of her feelings which she had been unable
+to restrain when she suddenly found herself in the presence
+of her son. And it was fortunate that he was ignorant of
+it. Could he have withstood this fresh trial?
+
+Michael Strogoff urged on his horse, imbuing him with
+all his own feverish impatience, requiring of him one thing
+only, namely, to bear him rapidly to the next posting-house,
+where he could be exchanged for a quicker conveyance.
+
+At midnight he had cleared fifty miles, and halted at the
+station of Koulikovo. But there, as he had feared, he
+found neither horses nor carriages. Several Tartar de-
+tachments had passed along the highway of the steppe.
+Everything had been stolen or requisitioned both in the
+villages and in the posting-houses. It was with difficulty
+that Michael Strogoff was even able to obtain some refresh-
+ment for his horse and himself.
+
+It was of great importance, therefore, to spare his horse,
+for he could not tell when or how he might be able to re-
+place it. Desiring, however, to put the greatest possible
+distance between himself and the horsemen who had no
+doubt been dispatched in pursuit, he resolved to push on.
+After one hour's rest he resumed his course across the
+steppe.
+
+Hitherto the weather had been propitious for his journey.
+The temperature was endurable. The nights at this time
+of the year are very short, and as they are lighted by the
+moon, the route over the steppe is practicable. Michael
+Strogoff, moreover, was a man certain of his road and de-
+void of doubt or hesitation, and in spite of the melancholy
+thoughts which possessed him he had preserved his clear-
+ness of mind, and made for his destined point as though it
+were visible upon the horizon. When he did halt for a
+moment at some turn in the road it was to breathe his horse.
+Now he would dismount to ease his steed for a moment,
+and again he would place his ear to the ground to listen
+for the sound of galloping horses upon the steppe. Noth-
+ing arousing his suspicions, he resumed his way.
+
+On the 30th of July, at nine o'clock in the morning,
+Michael Strogoff passed through the station of Touroumoff
+and entered the swampy district of the Baraba.
+
+There, for a distance of three hundred versts, the nat-
+ural obstacles would be extremely great. He knew this,
+but he also knew that he would certainly surmount them.
+
+These vast marshes of the Baraba, form the reservoir to
+all the rain-water which finds no outlet either towards the
+Obi or towards the Irtych. The soil of this vast depression
+is entirely argillaceous, and therefore impermeable, so that
+the waters remain there and make of it a region very diffi-
+cult to cross during the hot season. There, however, lies
+the way to Irkutsk, and it is in the midst of ponds, pools,
+lakes, and swamps, from which the sun draws poisonous ex-
+halations, that the road winds, and entails upon the traveler
+the greatest fatigue and danger.
+
+Michael Strogoff spurred his horse into the midst of a
+grassy prairie, differing greatly from the close-cropped sod
+of the steppe, where feed the immense Siberian herds. The
+grass here was five or six feet in height, and had made
+room for swamp-plants, to which the dampness of the place,
+assisted by the heat of summer, had given giant proportions.
+These were principally canes and rushes, which formed a
+tangled network, an impenetrable undergrowth, sprinkled
+everywhere with a thousand flowers remarkable for the
+brightness of their color.
+
+Michael Strogoff, galloping amongst this undergrowth of
+cane, was no longer visible from the swamps which bordered
+the road. The tall grass rose above him, and his track was
+indicated only by the flight of innumerable aquatic birds,
+which rose from the side of the road and dispersed into the
+air in screaming flocks.
+
+The way, however, was clearly traceable. Now it would
+lie straight between the dense thicket of marsh-plants; again
+it would follow the winding shores of vast pools, some of
+which, several versts in length and breadth, deserve the
+name of lakes. In other localities the stagnant waters
+through which the road lay had been avoided, not by bridges,
+but by tottering platforms ballasted with thick layers of
+clay, whose joists shook like a too weak plank thrown across
+an abyss. Some of these platforms extended over three
+hundred feet, and travelers by tarantass, when crossing
+them have experienced a nausea like sea-sickness.
+
+Michael Strogoff, whether the soil beneath his feet was
+solid or whether it sank under him, galloped on without
+halt, leaping the space between the rotten joists; but how-
+ever fast they traveled the horse and the horseman were
+unable to escape from the sting of the two-winged insects
+which infest this marshy country.
+
+Travelers who are obliged to cross the Baraba during
+the summer take care to provide themselves with masks of
+horse-hair, to which is attached a coat of mail of very fine
+wire, which covers their shoulders. Notwithstanding these
+precautions, there are few who come out of these marshes
+without having their faces, necks, and hands covered with
+red spots. The atmosphere there seems to bristle with
+fine needles, and one would almost say that a knight's
+armor would not protect him against the darts of these
+dipterals. It is a dreary region, which man dearly disputes
+with tipulae, gnats, mosquitos, horse-flies, and millions of
+microscopic insects which are not visible to the naked eye;
+but, although they are not seen, they make themselves felt
+by their intolerable stinging, to which the most callous
+Siberian hunters have never been able to inure themselves.
+
+Michael Strogoff's horse, stung by these venomous in-
+sects, sprang forward as if the rowels of a thousand spurs
+had pierced his flanks. Mad with rage, he tore along over
+verst after verst with the speed of an express train, lashing
+his sides with his tail, seeking by the rapidity of his pace
+an alleviation of his torture.
+
+It required as good a horseman as Michael Strogoff not
+to be thrown by the plungings of his horse, and the sudden
+stops and bounds which he made to escape from the stings
+of his persecutors. Having become insensible, so to speak,
+to physical suffering, possessed only with the one desire to
+arrive at his destination at whatever cost, he saw during
+this mad race only one thing -- that the road flew rapidly be-
+hind him.
+
+Who would have thought that this district of the Baraba,
+so unhealthy during the summer, could have afforded an
+asylum for human beings? Yet it did so. Several Siber-
+ian hamlets appeared from time to time among the giant
+canes. Men, women, children, and old men, clad in the
+skins of beasts, their faces covered with hardened blisters
+of skin, pastured their poor herds of sheep. In order to
+preserve the animals from the attack of the insects, they
+drove them to the leeward of fires of green wood, which
+were kept burning night and day, and the pungent smoke of
+which floated over the vast swamp.
+
+When Michael Strogoff perceived that his horse, tired
+out, was on the point of succumbing, he halted at one of
+these wretched hamlets, and there, forgetting his own
+fatigue, he himself rubbed the wounds of the poor animal
+with hot grease according to the Siberian custom; then he
+gave him a good feed; and it was only after he had well
+groomed and provided for him that he thought of himself,
+and recruited his strength by a hasty meal of bread and
+meat and a glass of kwass. One hour afterwards, or at the
+most two, he resumed with all speed the interminable road
+to Irkutsk.
+
+On the 30th of July, at four o'clock in the afternoon,
+Michael Strogoff, insensible of every fatigue, arrived at
+Elamsk. There it became necessary to give a night's rest to
+his horse. The brave animal could no longer have con-
+tinued the journey. At Elamsk, as indeed elsewhere, there
+existed no means of transport, -- for the same reasons as
+at the previous villages, neither carriages nor horses were
+to be had.
+
+Michael Strogoff resigned himself therefore to pass the
+night at Elamsk, to give his horse twelve hours' rest. He
+recalled the instructions which had been given to him
+at Moscow -- to cross Siberia incognito, to arrive at
+Irkutsk, but not to sacrifice success to the rapidity of the
+journey; and consequently it was necessary that he should
+husband the sole means of transport which remained to
+him.
+
+On the morrow, Michael Strogoff left Elamsk at the
+moment when the first Tartar scouts were signaled ten
+versts behind upon the road to the Baraba, and he plunged
+again into the swampy region. The road was level, which
+made it easy, but very tortuous, and therefore long. It
+was impossible, moreover, to leave it, and to strike a
+straight line across that impassable network of pools and
+bogs.
+
+On the next day, the 1st of August, eighty miles farther,
+Michael Strogoff arrived at midday at the town of Spaskoe,
+and at two o'clock he halted at Pokrowskoe. His horse,
+jaded since his departure from Elamsk, could not have taken
+a single step more.
+
+There Michael Strogoff was again compelled to lose, for
+necessary rest, the end of that day and the entire night;
+but starting again on the following morning, and still
+traversing the semi-inundated soil, on the 2nd of August,
+at four o'clock in the afternoon, after a stage of fifty miles
+he reached Kamsk.
+
+The country had changed. This little village of Kamsk
+lies, like an island, habitable and healthy, in the midst of
+the uninhabitable district. It is situated in the very center
+of the Baraba. The emigration caused by the Tartar in-
+vasion had not yet depopulated this little town of Kamsk.
+Its inhabitants probably fancied themselves safe in the
+center of the Baraba, whence at least they thought they
+would have time to flee if they were directly menaced.
+
+Michael Strogoff, although exceedingly anxious for news,
+could ascertain nothing at this place. It would have been
+rather to him that the Governor would have addressed him-
+self had he known who the pretended merchant of Irkutsk
+really was. Kamsk, in fact, by its very situation seemed
+to be outside the Siberian world and the grave events which
+troubled it.
+
+Besides, Michael Strogoff showed himself little, if at all.
+To be unperceived was not now enough for him: he would
+have wished to be invisible. The experience of the past
+made him more and more circumspect in the present and
+the future. Therefore he secluded himself, and not caring
+to traverse the streets of the village, he would not even leave
+the inn at which he had halted.
+
+As for his horse, he did not even think of exchanging
+him for another animal. He had become accustomed to
+this brave creature. He knew to what extent he could
+rely upon him. In buying him at Omsk he had been lucky,
+and in taking him to the postmaster the generous mujik
+had rendered him a great service. Besides, if Michael
+Strogoff had already become attached to his horse, the horse
+himself seemed to become inured, by degrees, to the fatigue
+of such a journey, and provided that he got several hours
+of repose daily, his rider might hope that he would carry
+him beyond the invaded provinces.
+
+So, during the evening and night of the 2nd of August,
+Michael Strogoff remained confined to his inn, at the en-
+trance of the town; which was little frequented and out of
+the way of the importunate and curious.
+
+Exhausted with fatigue, he went to bed after having
+seen that his horse lacked nothing; but his sleep was broken.
+What he had seen since his departure from Moscow showed
+him the importance of his mission. The rising was an ex-
+tremely serious one, and the treachery of Ogareff made it
+still more formidable. And when his eyes fell upon the
+letter bearing upon it the authority of the imperial seal --
+the letter which, no doubt, contained the remedy for so
+many evils, the safety of all this war-ravaged country --
+Michael Strogoff felt within himself a fierce desire to dash
+on across the steppe, to accomplish the distance which sep-
+arated him from Irkutsk as the crow would fly it, to be an
+eagle that he might overtop all obstacles, to be a hurricane
+that he might sweep through the air at a hundred versts
+an hour, and to be at last face to face with the Grand Duke,
+and to exclaim: "Your highness, from his Majesty the
+Czar!"
+
+On the next morning at six o'clock, Michael Strogoff
+started off again. Thanks to his extreme prudence this
+part of the journey was signalized by no incident whatever.
+At Oubinsk he gave his horse a whole night's rest, for he
+wished on the next day to accomplish the hundred versts
+which lie between Oubinsk and Ikoulskoe without halting.
+He started therefore at dawn; but unfortunately the Baraba
+proved more detestable than ever.
+
+In fact, between Oubinsk and Kamakore the very heavy
+rains of some previous weeks were retained by this shallow
+depression as in a water-tight bowl. There was, for a long
+distance, no break in the succession of swamps, pools, and
+lakes. One of these lakes -- large enough to warrant its
+geographical nomenclature -- Tchang, Chinese in name, had
+to be coasted for more than twenty versts, and this with
+the greatest difficulty. Hence certain delays occurred,
+which all the impatience of Michael Strogoff could not
+avoid. He had been well advised in not taking a carriage
+at Kamsk, for his horse passed places which would have
+been impracticable for a conveyance on wheels.
+
+In the evening, at nine o'clock, Michael Strogoff arrived
+at Ikoulskoe, and halted there over night. In this remote
+village of the Baraba news of the war was utterly wanting.
+From its situation, this part of the province, lying in the
+fork formed by the two Tartar columns which had bifur-
+cated, one upon Omsk and the other upon Tomsk, had
+hitherto escaped the horrors of the invasion.
+
+But the natural obstacles were now about to disappear,
+for, if he experienced no delay, Michael Strogoff should on
+the morrow be free of the Baraba and arrive at Kolyvan.
+There he would be within eighty miles of Tomsk. He
+would then be guided by circumstances, and very probably
+he would decide to go around Tomsk, which, if the news
+were true, was occupied by Feofar-Khan.
+
+But if the small towns of Ikoulskoe and Karguinsk, which
+he passed on the next day, were comparatively quiet, owing
+to their position in the Baraba, was it not to be dreaded
+that, upon the right banks of the Obi, Michael Strogoff
+would have much more to fear from man? It was probable.
+However, should it become necessary, he would not hesi-
+tate to abandon the beaten path to Irkutsk. To journey
+then across the steppe he would, no doubt, run the risk
+of finding himself without supplies. There would be, in
+fact, no longer a well-marked road. Still, there must be
+no hesitation.
+
+Finally, towards half past three in the afternoon, Michael
+Strogoff left the last depressions of the Baraba, and the
+dry and hard soil of Siberia rang out once more beneath
+his horse's hoofs.
+
+He had left Moscow on the 15th of July. Therefore on
+this day, the 5th of August, including more than seventy
+hours lost on the banks of the Irtych, twenty days had
+gone by since his departure.
+
+One thousand miles still separated him from Irkutsk.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+A FINAL EFFORT
+
+MICHAEL'S fear of meeting the Tartars in the plains be-
+yond the Baraba was by no means ungrounded. The fields,
+trodden down by horses' hoofs, afforded but too clear evi-
+dence that their hordes had passed that way; the same, in-
+deed, might be said of these barbarians as of the Turks:
+"Where the Turk goes, no grass grows."
+
+Michael saw at once that in traversing this country the
+greatest caution was necessary. Wreaths of smoke curling
+upwards on the horizon showed that huts and hamlets were
+still burning. Had these been fired by the advance guard,
+or had the Emir's army already advanced beyond the boun-
+daries of the province? Was Feofar-Khan himself in the
+government of Yeniseisk? Michael could settle on no line
+of action until these questions were answered. Was the
+country so deserted that he could not discover a single Si-
+berian to enlighten him?
+
+Michael rode on for two versts without meeting a human
+being. He looked carefully for some house which had not
+been deserted. Every one was tenantless.
+
+One hut, however, which he could just see between the
+trees, was still smoking. As he approached he perceived,
+at some yards from the ruins of the building, an old man
+surrounded by weeping children. A woman still young,
+evidently his daughter and the mother of the poor children,
+kneeling on the ground, was gazing on the scene of desola-
+tion. She had at her breast a baby but a few months old;
+shortly she would have not even that nourishment to give
+it. Ruin and desolation were all around!
+
+Michael approached the old man.
+
+"Will you answer me a few questions?" he asked.
+
+"Speak," replied the old man.
+
+"Have the Tartars passed this way?"
+
+"Yes, for my house is in flames."
+
+"Was it an army or a detachment?"
+
+"An army, for, as far as eye can reach, our fields are
+laid waste."
+
+"Commanded by the Emir?"
+
+"By the Emir; for the Obi's waters are red."
+
+"Has Feofar-Khan entered Tomsk?"
+
+"He has."
+
+"Do you know if his men have entered Kolyvan?"
+
+"No; for Kolyvan does not yet burn."
+
+"Thanks, friend. Can I aid you and yours?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Good-by."
+
+"Farewell."
+
+And Michael, having presented five and twenty roubles
+to the unfortunate woman, who had not even strength to
+thank him, put spurs to his horse once more.
+
+One thing he knew; he must not pass through Tomsk.
+To go to Kolyvan, which the Tartars had not yet reached,
+was possible. Yes, that is what he must do; there he must
+prepare himself for another long stage. There was noth-
+ing for it but, having crossed the Obi, to take the Irkutsk
+road and avoid Tomsk.
+
+This new route decided on, Michael must not delay an
+instant. Nor did he, but, putting his horse into a steady
+gallop, he took the road towards the left bank of the Obi,
+which was still forty versts distant. Would there be a
+ferry boat there, or should he, finding that the Tartars had
+destroyed all the boats, be obliged to swim across?
+
+As to his horse, it was by this time pretty well worn
+out, and Michael intended to make it perform this stage
+only, and then to exchange it for a fresh one at Kolyvan.
+Kolyvan would be like a fresh starting point, for on leav-
+ing that town his journey would take a new form. So
+long as he traversed a devastated country the difficulties
+must be very great; but if, having avoided Tomsk, he could
+r‚sum‚ the road to Irkutsk across the province of Yeniseisk,
+which was not yet laid waste, he would finish his journey in
+a few days.
+
+Night came on, bringing with it refreshing coolness after
+the heat of the day. At midnight the steppe was pro-
+foundly dark. The sound of the horses's hoofs alone was
+heard on the road, except when, every now and then, its
+master spoke a few encouraging words. In such darkness
+as this great care was necessary lest he should leave the
+road, bordered by pools and streams, tributaries of the Obi.
+Michael therefore advanced as quickly as was consistent
+with safety. He trusted no less to the excellence of his
+eyes, which penetrated the gloom, than to the well-proved
+sagacity of his horse.
+
+Just as Michael dismounted to discover the exact direc-
+tion of the road, he heard a confused murmuring sound
+from the west. It was like the noise of horses' hoofs at
+some distance on the parched ground. Michael listened at-
+tentively, putting his ear to the ground.
+
+"It is a detachment of cavalry coming by the road from
+Omsk," he said to himself. "They are marching very
+quickly, for the noise is increasing. Are they Russians
+or Tartars?"
+
+Michael again listened. "Yes," said he, "they are at a
+sharp trot. My horse cannot outstrip them. If they are
+Russians I will join them; if Tartars I must avoid them.
+But how? Where can I hide in this steppe?"
+
+He gave a look around, and, through the darkness, dis-
+covered a confused mass at a hundred paces before him on
+the left of the road. "There is a copse!" he exclaimed.
+"To take refuge there is to run the risk of being caught,
+if they are in search of me; but I have no choice."
+
+In a few moments Michael, dragging his horse by the
+bridle, reached a little larch wood, through which the road
+lay. Beyond this it was destitute of trees, and wound
+among bogs and pools, separated by dwarfed bushes, whins,
+and heather. The ground on either side was quite imprac-
+ticable, and the detachment must necessarily pass through
+the wood. They were pursuing the high road to Irkutsk.
+Plunging in about forty feet, he was stopped by a stream
+running under the brushwood. But the shadow was so
+deep that Michael ran no risk of being seen, unless the wood
+should be carefully searched. He therefore led his horse
+to the stream and fastened him to a tree, returning to the
+edge of the road to listen and ascertain with what sort of
+people he had to do.
+
+Michael had scarcely taken up his position behind a
+group of larches when a confused light appeared, above
+which glared brighter lights waving about in the shadow.
+
+"Torches!" said he to himself. And he drew quickly
+back, gliding like a savage into the thickest underwood.
+
+As they approached the wood the horses' pace was slack-
+ened. The horsemen were probably lighting up the road
+with the intention of examining every turn.
+
+Michael feared this, and instinctively drew near to the
+bank of the stream, ready to plunge in if necessary.
+
+Arrived at the top of the wood, the detachment halted.
+The horsemen dismounted. There were about fifty. A
+dozen of them carried torches, lighting up the road.
+
+By watching their preparations Michael found to his
+joy that the detachment were not thinking of visiting the
+copse, but only bivouacking near, to rest their horses and
+allow the men to take some refreshment. The horses were
+soon unsaddled, and began to graze on the thick grass which
+carpeted the ground. The men meantime stretched them-
+selves by the side of the road, and partook of the provisions
+they produced from their knapsacks.
+
+Michael's self-possession had never deserted him, and
+creeping amongst the high grass he endeavored not only to
+examine the new-comers, but to hear what they said. It
+was a detachment from Omsk, composed of Usbeck horse-
+men, a race of the Mongolian type. These men, well built,
+above the medium height, rough, and wild-featured, wore
+on their heads the "talpak," or black sheep-skin cap, and
+on their feet yellow high-heeled boots with turned-up toes,
+like the shoes of the Middle Ages. Their tunics were close-
+fitting, and confined at the waist by a leathern belt braided
+with red. They were armed defensively with a shield, and
+offensively with a curved sword, and a flintlock musket
+slung at the saddle-bow. From their shoulders hung gay-
+colored cloaks.
+
+The horses, which were feeding at liberty at the edge of
+the wood, were, like their masters, of the Usbeck race.
+These animals are rather smaller than the Turcomanian
+horses, but are possessed of remarkable strength, and know
+no other pace than the gallop.
+
+This detachment was commanded by a "pendja-baschi";
+that is to say, a commander of fifty men, having under him
+a "deh-baschi," or simple commander of ten men. These
+two officers wore helmets and half coats-of-mail; little trum-
+pets fastened to their saddle-bows were the distinctive signs
+of their rank.
+
+The pendja-baschi had been obliged to let his men rest,
+fatigued with a long stage. He and the second officer, smok-
+ing "beng," the leaf which forms the base of the "has-
+chisch," strolled up and down the wood, so that Michael
+Strogoff without being seen, could catch and understand
+their conversation, which was spoken in the Tartar lan-
+guage.
+
+Michael's attention was singularly excited by their very
+first words. It was of him they were speaking.
+
+"This courier cannot be much in advance of us," said
+the pendja-baschi; "and, on the other hand, it is absolutely
+impossible that he can have followed any other route than
+that of the Baraba."
+
+"Who knows if he has left Omsk?" replied the deh-
+baschi. "Perhaps he is still hidden in the town."
+
+"That is to be wished, certainly. Colonel Ogareff would
+have no fear then that the dispatches he bears should ever
+reach their destination."
+
+"They say that he is a native, a Siberian," resumed the
+deh-baschi. "If so, he must be well acquainted with the
+country, and it is possible that he has left the Irkutsk road,
+depending on rejoining it later."
+
+"But then we should be in advance of him," answered
+the pendja-baschi; "for we left Omsk within an hour after
+his departure, and have since followed the shortest road
+with all the speed of our horses. He has either remained
+in Omsk, or we shall arrive at Tomsk before him, so as to
+cut him off; in either case he will not reach Irkutsk."
+
+"A rugged woman, that old Siberian, who is evidently
+his mother," said the deh-baschi.
+
+At this remark Michael's heart beat violently.
+
+"Yes," answered the pendja-baschi. "She stuck to it
+well that the pretended merchant was not her son, but it
+was too late. Colonel Ogareff was not to be taken in; and,
+as he said, he will know how to make the old witch speak
+when the time comes."
+
+These words were so many dagger-thrusts for Michael.
+He was known to be a courier of the Czar! A detach-
+ment of horsemen on his track could not fail to cut him
+off. And, worst of all, his mother was in the hands of the
+Tartars, and the cruel Ogareff had undertaken to make her
+speak when he wished!
+
+Michael well knew that the brave Siberian would sacrifice
+her life for him. He had fancied that he could not hate
+Ivan Ogareff more, yet a fresh tide of hate now rose in
+his heart. The wretch who had betrayed his country now
+threatened to torture his mother.
+
+The conversation between the two officers continued, and
+Michael understood that an engagement was imminent in
+the neighborhood of Kolyvan, between the Muscovite troops
+coming from the north and the Tartars. A small Russian
+force of two thousand men, reported to have reached the
+lower course of the Obi, were advancing by forced marches
+towards Tomsk. If such was the case, this force, which
+would soon find itself engaged with the main body of Feo-
+far-Khan's army, would be inevitably overwhelmed, and the
+Irkutsk road would be in the entire possession of the in-
+vaders.
+
+As to himself, Michael learnt, by some words from the
+pendja-baschi, that a price was set on his head, and that
+orders had been given to take him, dead or alive.
+
+It was necessary, therefore, to get the start of the Usbeck
+horsemen on the Irkutsk road, and put the Obi between
+himself and them. But to do that, he must escape before
+the camp was broken up.
+
+His determination taken, Michael prepared to execute it.
+
+Indeed, the halt would not be prolonged, and the pendja-
+baschi did not intend to give his men more than an hour's
+rest, although their horses could not have been changed
+for fresh ones since Omsk, and must be as much fatigued
+as that of Michael Strogoff.
+
+There was not a moment to lose. It was within an hour
+of morning. It was needful to profit by the darkness to
+leave the little wood and dash along the road; but although
+night favored it the success of such a flight appeared to be
+almost impossible.
+
+Not wishing to do anything at random, Michael took
+time for reflection, carefully weighing the chances so as to
+take the best. From the situation of the place the result
+was this -- that he could not escape through the back of the
+wood, the stream which bordered it being not only deep,
+but very wide and muddy. Beneath this thick water was
+a slimy bog, on which the foot could not rest. There was
+only one way open, the high-road. To endeavor to reach
+it by creeping round the edge of the wood, without attract-
+ing attention, and then to gallop at headlong speed, required
+all the remaining strength and energy of his noble steed.
+Too probably it would fall dead on reaching the banks of
+the Obi, when, either by boat or by swimming, he must cross
+this important river. This was what Michael had be-
+fore him.
+
+His energy and courage increased in sight of danger.
+
+His life, his mission, his country, perhaps the safety of
+his mother, were at stake. He could not hesitate.
+
+There was not a moment to be lost. Already there was
+a slight movement among the men of the detachment. A
+few horsemen were strolling up and down the road in front
+of the wood. The rest were still lying at the foot of the
+trees, but their horses were gradually penetrating towards
+the center of the wood.
+
+Michael had at first thought of seizing one of these horses,
+but he recollected that, of course, they would be as fatigued
+as his own. It was better to trust to his own brave steed,
+which had already rendered him such important service.
+The good animal, hidden behind a thicket, had escaped the
+sight of the Usbecks. They, besides, had not penetrated
+so far into the wood.
+
+Michael crawled up to his horse through the grass, and
+found him lying down. He patted and spoke gently to
+him, and managed to raise him without noise. Fortunately,
+the torches were entirely consumed, and now went out, the
+darkness being still profound under shelter of the larches.
+After replacing the bit, Michael looked to his girths and
+stirrups, and began to lead his horse quietly away. The
+intelligent animal followed his master without even making
+the least neigh.
+
+A few Usbeck horses raised their heads, and began to
+wander towards the edge of the wood. Michael held his
+revolver in his hand, ready to blow out the brains of the
+first Tartar who should approach him. But happily the
+alarm was not given, and he was able to gain the angle made
+by the wood where it joined the road.
+
+To avoid being seen, Michael's intention was not to
+mount until after turning a corner some two hundred feet
+from the wood. Unfortunately, just at the moment that
+he was issuing from the wood, an Usbeck's horse, scenting
+him, neighed and began to trot along the road. His master
+ran to catch him, and seeing a shadowy form moving in the
+dim light, "Look out!" he shouted.
+
+At the cry, all the men of the bivouac jumped up, and
+ran to seize their horses. Michael leaped on his steed, and
+galloped away. The two officers of the detachment urged
+on their men to follow.
+
+Michael heard a report, and felt a ball pass through his
+tunic. Without turning his head, without replying, he
+spurred on, and, clearing the brushwood with a tremendous
+bound, he galloped at full speed toward the Obi.
+
+The Usbecks' horses being unsaddled gave him a small
+start, but in less than two minutes he heard the tramp of
+several horses gradually gaining on him.
+
+Day was now beginning to break, and objects at some
+distance were becoming visible. Michael turned his head,
+and perceived a horseman rapidly approaching him. It
+was the deh-baschi. Being better mounted, this officer had
+distanced his detachment.
+
+Without drawing rein, Michael extended his revolver,
+and took a moment's aim. The Usbeck officer, hit in the
+breast, rolled on the ground.
+
+But the other horsemen followed him closely, and with-
+out waiting to assist the deh-baschi, exciting each other by
+their shouts, digging their spurs into their horses' sides,
+they gradually diminished the distance between themselves
+and Michael.
+
+For half an hour only was the latter able to keep out
+of range of the Tartars, but he well knew that his horse
+was becoming weaker, and dreaded every instant that he
+would stumble never to rise again.
+
+It was now light, although the sun had not yet risen
+above the horizon. Two versts distant could be seen a
+pale line bordered by a few trees.
+
+This was the Obi, which flows from the southwest to
+the northeast, the surface almost level with the ground, its
+bed being but the steppe itself.
+
+Several times shots were fired at Michael, but without
+hitting him, and several times too he discharged his revolver
+on those of the soldiers who pressed him too closely. Each
+time an Usbeck rolled on the ground, midst cries of rage
+from his companions. But this pursuit could only termin-
+ate to Michael's disadvantage. His horse was almost ex-
+hausted. He managed to reach the bank of the river. The
+Usbeck detachment was now not more than fifty paces be-
+hind him.
+
+The Obi was deserted -- not a boat of any description
+which could take him over the water!
+
+"Courage, my brave horse!" cried Michael. "Come!
+A last effort!" And he plunged into the river, which here
+was half a verst in width.
+
+It would have been difficult to stand against the current
+-- indeed, Michael's horse could get no footing. He must
+therefore swim across the river, although it was rapid as
+a torrent. Even to attempt it showed Michael's marvelous
+courage. The soldiers reached the bank, but hesitated to
+plunge in.
+
+The pendja-baschi seized his musket and took aim at
+Michael, whom he could see in the middle of the stream.
+The shot was fired, and Michael's horse, struck in the side,
+was borne away by the current.
+
+His master, speedily disentangling himself from his stir-
+rups, struck out boldly for the shore. In the midst of a
+hailstorm of balls he managed to reach the opposite side,
+and disappeared in the rushes.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+THE RIVALS
+
+MICHAEL was in comparative safety, though his situa-
+tion was still terrible. Now that the faithful animal who
+had so bravely borne him had met his death in the waters
+of the river, how was he to continue his journey?
+
+He was on foot, without provisions, in a country devas-
+tated by the invasion, overrun by the Emir's scouts, and
+still at a considerable distance from the place he was striv-
+ing to reach. "By Heaven, I will get there!" he ex-
+claimed, in reply to all the reasons for faltering. "God will
+protect our sacred Russia."
+
+Michael was out of reach of the Usbeck horsemen. They
+had not dared to pursue him through the river.
+
+Once more on solid ground Michael stopped to consider
+what he should do next. He wished to avoid Tomsk, now
+occupied by the Tartar troops. Nevertheless, he must
+reach some town, or at least a post-house, where he could
+procure a horse. A horse once found, he would throw him-
+self out of the beaten track, and not again take to the
+Irkutsk road until in the neighborhood of Krasnoiarsk.
+From that place, if he were quick, he hoped to find the way
+still open, and he intended to go through the Lake Baikal
+provinces in a southeasterly direction.
+
+Michael began by going eastward. By following the
+course of the Obi two versts further, he reached a pictur-
+esque little town lying on a small hill. A few churches,
+with Byzantine cupolas colored green and gold, stood up
+against the gray sky. This is Kolyvan, where the officers
+and people employed at Kamsk and other towns take refuge
+during the summer from the unhealthy climate of the
+Baraba. According to the latest news obtained by the
+Czar's courier, Kolyvan could not be yet in the hands of the
+invaders. The Tartar troops, divided into two columns,
+had marched to the left on Omsk, to the right on Tomsk,
+neglecting the intermediate country.
+
+Michael Strogoff's plan was simply this -- to reach Koly-
+van before the arrival of the Usbeck horsemen, who would
+ascend the other bank of the Obi to the ferry. There he
+would procure clothes and a horse, and r‚sum‚ the road to
+Irkutsk across the southern steppe.
+
+It was now three o'clock in the morning. The neighbor-
+hood of Kolyvan was very still, and appeared to have been
+totally abandoned. The country population had evidently
+fled to the northwards, to the province of Yeniseisk, dread-
+ing the invasion, which they could not resist.
+
+Michael was walking at a rapid pace towards Kolyvan
+when distant firing struck his ear. He stopped, and clearly
+distinguished the dull roar of artillery, and above it a crisp
+rattle which could not be mistaken.
+
+"It is cannon and musketry!" said he. "The little Rus-
+sian body is engaged with the Tartar army! Pray Heaven
+that I may arrive at Kolyvan before them!"
+
+The firing became gradually louder, and soon to the left
+of Kolyvan a mist collected -- not smoke, but those great
+white clouds produced by discharges of artillery.
+
+The Usbeck horsemen stopped on the left of the Obi, to
+await the result of the battle. From them Michael had
+nothing to fear as he hastened towards the town.
+
+In the meanwhile the firing increased, and became
+sensibly nearer. It was no longer a confused roar, but
+distinct reports. At the same time the smoke partially
+cleared, and it became evident that the combatants were
+rapidly moving southwards. It appeared that Kolyvan
+was to be attacked on the north side. But were the Rus-
+sians defending it or the Tartars? It being impossible to
+decide this, Michael became greatly perplexed.
+
+He was not more than half a verst from Kolyvan when
+he observed flames shooting up among the houses of the
+town, and the steeple of a church fell in the midst of clouds
+of smoke and fire. Was the struggle, then, in Kolyvan?
+Michael was compelled to think so. It was evident that
+Russians and Tartars were fighting in the streets of the
+town. Was this a time to seek refuge there? Would he
+not run a risk of being taken prisoner? Should he succeed
+in escaping from Kolyvan, as he had escaped from Omsk?
+He hesitated and stopped a moment. Would it not be bet-
+ter to try, even on foot, to reach some small town, and there
+procure a horse at any price? This was the only thing
+to be done; and Michael, leaving the Obi, went forward to
+the right of Kolyvan.
+
+The firing had now increased in violence. Flames soon
+sprang up on the left of the town. Fire was devouring one
+entire quarter of Kolyvan.
+
+Michael was running across the steppe endeavoring to
+gain the covert of some trees when a detachment of Tartar
+cavalry appeared on the right. He dared not continue in
+that direction. The horsemen advanced rapidly, and it
+would have been difficult to escape them.
+
+Suddenly, in a thick clump of trees, he saw an isolated
+house, which it would be possible to reach before he was
+perceived. Michael had no choice but to run there, hide
+himself and ask or take something to recruit his strength,
+for he was exhausted with hunger and fatigue.
+
+He accordingly ran on towards this house, still about half
+a verst distant. As he approached, he could see that it
+was a telegraph office. Two wires left it in westerly and
+easterly directions, and a third went towards Kolyvan.
+
+It was to be supposed that under the circumstances this
+station was abandoned; but even if it was, Michael could
+take refuge there, and wait till nightfall, if necessary, to
+again set out across the steppe covered with Tartar scouts.
+
+He ran up to the door and pushed it open.
+
+A single person was in the room whence the telegraphic
+messages were dispatched. This was a clerk, calm, phleg-
+matic, indifferent to all that was passing outside. Faithful
+to his post, he waited behind his little wicket until the public
+claimed his services.
+
+Michael ran up to him, and in a voice broken by fatigue,
+"What do you know?" he asked.
+
+"Nothing," answered the clerk, smiling.
+
+"Are the Russians and Tartars engaged?"
+
+"They say so."
+
+"But who are the victors?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+Such calmness, such indifference, in the midst of these
+terrible events, was scarcely credible.
+
+"And is not the wire cut?" said Michael.
+
+"It is cut between Kolyvan and Krasnoiarsk, but it is
+still working between Kolyvan and the Russian frontier."
+
+"For the government?"
+
+"For the government, when it thinks proper. For the
+public, when they pay. Ten copecks a word, whenever
+you like, sir!"
+
+Michael was about to reply to this strange clerk that he
+had no message to send, that he only implored a little bread
+and water, when the door of the house was again thrown
+open.
+
+Thinking that it was invaded by Tartars, Michael made
+ready to leap out of the window, when two men only en-
+tered the room who had nothing of the Tartar soldier about
+them. One of them held a dispatch, written in pencil, in
+his hand, and, passing the other, he hurried up to the wicket
+of the imperturbable clerk.
+
+In these two men Michael recognized with astonishment,
+which everyone will understand, two personages of whom
+he was not thinking at all, and whom he had never expected
+to see again. They were the two reporters, Harry Blount
+and Alcide Jolivet, no longer traveling companions, but
+rivals, enemies, now that they were working on the field of
+battle.
+
+They had left Ichim only a few hours after the depar-
+ture of Michael Strogoff, and they had arrived at Kolyvan
+before him, by following the same road, in consequence of
+his losing three days on the banks of the Irtych. And
+now, after being both present at the engagement between
+the Russians and Tartars before the town, they had left
+just as the struggle broke out in the streets, and ran to the
+telegraph office, so as to send off their rival dispatches to
+Europe, and forestall each other in their report of events.
+
+Michael stood aside in the shadow, and without being
+seen himself he could see and hear all that was going on.
+He would now hear interesting news, and would find out
+whether or not he could enter Kolyvan.
+
+Blount, having distanced his companion, took possession
+of the wicket, whilst Alcide Jolivet, contrary to his usual
+habit, stamped with impatience.
+
+"Ten copecks a word," said the clerk.
+
+Blount deposited a pile of roubles on the shelf, whilst
+his rival looked on with a sort of stupefaction.
+
+"Good," said the clerk. And with the greatest coolness
+in the world he began to telegraph the following dispatch:
+"Daily Telegraph, London.
+
+"From Kolyvan, Government of Omsk, Siberia, 6th
+August.
+
+"Engagement between Russian and Tartar troops."
+
+The reading was in a distinct voice, so that Michael heard
+all that the English correspondent was sending to his paper.
+
+"Russians repulsed with great loss. Tartars entered
+Kolyvan to-day." These words ended the dispatch.
+
+"My turn now," cried Alcide Jolivet, anxious to send
+off his dispatch, addressed to his cousin.
+
+But that was not Blount's idea, who did not intend to
+give up the wicket, but have it in his power to send off the
+news just as the events occurred. He would therefore not
+make way for his companion.
+
+"But you have finished!" exclaimed Jolivet.
+
+"I have not finished," returned Harry Blount quietly.
+
+And he proceeded to write some sentences, which he
+handed in to the clerk, who read out in his calm voice:
+"John Gilpin was a citizen of credit and renown; a train-
+band captain eke was he of famous London town."
+
+Harry Blount was telegraphing some verses learned in
+his childhood, in order to employ the time, and not give up
+his place to his rival. It would perhaps cost his paper some
+thousands of roubles, but it would be the first informed.
+France could wait.
+
+Jolivet's fury may be imagined, though under any other
+circumstances he would have thought it fair warfare. He
+even endeavored to force the clerk to take his dispatch in
+preference to that of his rival.
+
+"It is that gentleman's right," answered the clerk coolly,
+pointing to Blount, and smiling in the most amiable manner.
+And he continued faithfully to transmit to the Daily Tele-
+graph the well-known verses of Cowper.
+
+Whilst he was working Blount walked to the window
+and, his field glass to his eyes, watched all that was going
+on in the neighborhood of Kolyvan, so as to complete his
+information. In a few minutes he resumed his place at
+the wicket, and added to his telegram: "Two churches are
+in flames. The fire appears to gain on the right. 'John
+Gilpin's spouse said to her dear, Though wedded we have
+been these twice ten tedious years, yet we no holiday have
+seen.'"
+
+Alcide Jolivet would have liked to strangle the honorable
+correspondent of the Daily Telegraph.
+
+He again interrupted the clerk, who, quite unmoved,
+merely replied: "It is his right, sir, it is his right -- at ten
+copecks a word."
+
+And he telegraphed the following news, just brought
+him by Blount: "Russian fugitives are escaping from the
+town. 'Away went Gilpin -- who but he? His fame soon
+spread around: He carries weight! he rides a race! 'Tis
+for a thousand pound!'" And Blount turned round with
+a quizzical look at his rival.
+
+Alcide Jolivet fumed.
+
+In the meanwhile Harry Blount had returned to the win-
+dow, but this time his attention was diverted by the interest
+of the scene before him. Therefore, when the clerk had
+finished telegraphing the last lines dictated by Blount, Alcide
+Jolivet noiselessly took his place at the wicket, and, just
+as his rival had done, after quietly depositing a respectable
+pile of roubles on the shelf, he delivered his dispatch, which
+the clerk read aloud: "Madeleine Jolivet, 10, Faubourg
+Montmartre, Paris.
+
+"From Kolyvan, Government of Omsk, Siberia, 6th
+August.
+
+"Fugitives are escaping from the town. Russians de-
+feated. Fiercely pursued by the Tartar cavalry."
+
+And as Harry Blount returned he heard Jolivet complet-
+ing his telegram by singing in a mocking tone:
+
+"II est un petit homme,
+Tout habille de gris,
+Dans Paris!"
+
+Imitating his rival, Alcide Jolivet had used a merry re-
+frain of Beranger.
+
+"Hallo!" said Harry Blount.
+
+"Just so," answered Jolivet.
+
+In the meantime the situation at Kolyvan was alarming
+in the extreme. The battle was raging nearer, and the fir-
+ing was incessant.
+
+At that moment the telegraph office shook to its founda-
+tions. A shell had made a hole in the wall, and a cloud of
+dust filled the office.
+
+Alcide was just finishing writing his lines; but to stop,
+dart on the shell, seize it in both hands, throw it out of the
+window, and return to the wicket, was only the affair of
+a moment.
+
+Five seconds later the shell burst outside. Continuing
+with the greatest possible coolness, Alcide wrote: "A six-
+inch shell has just blown up the wall of the telegraph of-
+fice. Expecting a few more of the same size."
+
+Michael Strogoff had no doubt that the Russians were
+driven out of Kolyvan. His last resource was to set out
+across the southern steppe.
+
+Just then renewed firing broke out close to the telegraph
+house, and a perfect shower of bullets smashed all the glass
+in the windows. Harry Blount fell to the ground wounded
+in the shoulder.
+
+Jolivet even at such a moment, was about to add this
+postscript to his dispatch: "Harry Blount, correspondent
+of the Daily Telegraph, has fallen at my side struck by --"
+when the imperturbable clerk said calmly: "Sir, the wire
+has broken." And, leaving his wicket, he quietly took his
+hat, brushed it round with his sleeve, and, still smiling,
+disappeared through a little door which Michael had not
+before perceived.
+
+The house was surrounded by Tartar soldiers, and neither
+Michael nor the reporters could effect their retreat.
+
+Alcide Jolivet, his useless dispatch in his hand, had run
+to Blount, stretched on the ground, and had bravely lifted
+him on his shoulders, with the intention of flying with him.
+He was too late!
+
+Both were prisoners; and, at the same time, Michael,
+taken unawares as he was about to leap from the window,
+fell into the hands of the Tartars!
+
+END OF BOOK I
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+CHAPTER I
+A TARTAR CAMP
+
+AT a day's march from Kolyvan, several versts
+beyond the town of Diachinks, stretches a
+wide plain, planted here and there with great
+trees, principally pines and cedars. This part
+of the steppe is usually occupied during the
+warm season by Siberian shepherds, and their
+numerous flocks. But now it might have been searched
+in vain for one of its nomad inhabitants. Not that the
+plain was deserted. It presented a most animated ap-
+pearance.
+
+There stood the Tartar tents; there Feofar-Khan, the
+terrible Emir of Bokhara, was encamped; and there on the
+following day, the 7th of August, were brought the pris-
+oners taken at Kolyvan after the annihilation of the Russian
+force, which had vainly attempted to oppose the progress
+of the invaders. Of the two thousand men who had en-
+gaged with the two columns of the enemy, the bases of
+which rested on Tomsk and Omsk, only a few hundred re-
+mained. Thus events were going badly, and the imperial
+government appeared to have lost its power beyond the
+frontiers of the Ural -- for a time at least, for the Russians
+could not fail eventually to defeat the savage hordes of the
+invaders. But in the meantime the invasion had reached
+the center of Siberia, and it was spreading through the re-
+volted country both to the eastern, and the western provinces.
+If the troops of the Amoor and the province of Takutsk
+did not arrive in time to occupy it, Irkutsk, the capital of
+Asiatic Russia, being insufficiently garrisoned, would fall
+into the hands of the Tartars, and the Grand Duke, brother
+of the Emperor, would be sacrificed to the vengeance of
+Ivan Ogareff.
+
+What had become of Michael Strogoff? Had he broken
+down under the weight of so many trials? Did he con-
+sider himself conquered by the series of disasters which,
+since the adventure of Ichim, had increased in magnitude?
+Did he think his cause lost? that his mission had failed?
+that his orders could no longer be obeyed?
+
+Michael was one of those men who never give in while
+life exists. He was yet alive; he still had the imperial
+letter safe; his disguise had been undiscovered. He was
+included amongst the numerous prisoners whom the Tartars
+were dragging with them like cattle; but by approaching
+Tomsk he was at the same time drawing nearer to Irkutsk.
+Besides, he was still in front of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+"I will get there!" he repeated to himself.
+
+Since the affair of Kolyvan all the powers of his mind
+were concentrated on one object -- to become free! How
+should he escape from the Emir's soldiers?
+
+Feofar's camp presented a magnificent spectacle.
+
+Numberless tents, of skin, felt, or silk, glistened in the
+rays of the sun. The lofty plumes which surmounted their
+conical tops waved amidst banners, flags, and pennons of
+every color. The richest of these tents belonged to the
+Seides and Khodjas, who are the principal personages of
+the khanat. A special pavilion, ornamented with a horse's
+tail issuing from a sheaf of red and white sticks artistically
+interlaced, indicated the high rank of these Tartar chiefs.
+Then in the distance rose several thousand of the Turcoman
+tents, called "karaoy," which had been carried on the backs
+of camels.
+
+The camp contained at least a hundred and fifty thousand
+soldiers, as many foot as horse soldiers, collected under
+the name of Alamanes. Amongst them, and as the prin-
+cipal types of Turkestan, would have been directly remarked
+the Tadjiks, from their regular features, white skin, tall
+forms, and black eyes and hair; they formed the bulk of
+the Tartar army, and of them the khanats of Khokhand and
+Koundouge had furnished a contingent nearly equal to that
+of Bokhara. With the Tadjiks were mingled specimens of
+different races who either reside in Turkestan or whose
+native countries border on it. There were Usbecks, red-
+bearded, small in stature, similar to those who had pur-
+sued Michael. Here were Kirghiz, with flat faces like the
+Kalmucks, dressed in coats of mail: some carried the lance,
+bows, and arrows of Asiatic manufacture; some the saber,
+a matchlock gun, and the "tschakane," a little short-handled
+ax, the wounds from which invariably prove fatal. There
+were Mongols -- of middle height, with black hair plaited
+into pigtails, which hung down their back; round faces,
+swarthy complexions, lively deep-set eyes, scanty beards --
+dressed in blue nankeen trimmed with black plush, sword-
+belts of leather with silver buckles, coats gayly braided, and
+silk caps edged with fur and three ribbons fluttering behind.
+Brown-skinned Afghans, too, might have been seen. Arabs,
+having the primitive type of the beautiful Semitic races;
+and Turcomans, with eyes which looked as if they had lost
+the pupil, -- all enrolled under the Emir's flag, the flag of
+incendiaries and devastators.
+
+Among these free soldiers were a certain number of
+slave soldiers, principally Persians, commanded by officers
+of the same nation, and they were certainly not the least
+esteemed of Feofar-Khan's army.
+
+If to this list are added the Jews, who acted as servants,
+their robes confined with a cord, and wearing on their heads
+instead of the turban, which is forbidden them, little caps
+of dark cloth; if with these groups are mingled some hun-
+dreds of "kalenders," a sort of religious mendicants,
+clothed in rags, covered by a leopard skin, some idea may
+be formed of the enormous agglomerations of different
+tribes included under the general denomination of the Tar-
+tar army.
+
+Nothing could be more romantic than this picture, in
+delineating which the most skillful artist would have ex-
+hausted all the colors of his palette.
+
+Feofar's tent overlooked the others. Draped in large
+folds of a brilliant silk looped with golden cords and tas-
+sels, surmounted by tall plumes which waved in the wind
+like fans, it occupied the center of a wide clearing, sheltered
+by a grove of magnificent birch and pine trees. Before
+this tent, on a japanned table inlaid with precious stones,
+was placed the sacred book of the Koran, its pages being
+of thin gold-leaf delicately engraved. Above floated the
+Tartar flag, quartered with the Emir's arms.
+
+In a semicircle round the clearing stood the tents of the
+great functionaries of Bokhara. There resided the chief of
+the stables, who has the right to follow the Emir on horse-
+back even into the court of his palace; the grand falconer;
+the "housch-begui," bearer of the royal seal; the "toptschi-
+baschi," grand master of the artillery; the "khodja," chief
+of the council, who receives the prince's kiss, and may pre-
+sent himself before him with his girdle untied; the "scheikh-
+oul-islam," chief of the Ulemas, representing the priests;
+the "cazi-askev," who, in the Emir's absence settles all dis-
+putes raised among the soldiers; and lastly, the chief of the
+astrologers, whose great business is to consult the stars
+every time the Khan thinks of changing his quarters.
+
+When the prisoners were brought into the camp, the
+Emir was in his tent. He did not show himself. This
+was fortunate, no doubt. A sign, a word from him might
+have been the signal for some bloody execution. But he
+intrenched himself in that isolation which constitutes in
+part the majesty of Eastern kings. He who does not show
+himself is admired, and, above all, feared.
+
+As to the prisoners, they were to be penned up in some
+enclosure, where, ill-treated, poorly fed, and exposed to all
+the inclemencies of the weather, they would await Feofar's
+pleasure.
+
+The most docile and patient of them all was undoubtedly
+Michael Strogoff. He allowed himself to be led, for they
+were leading him where he wished to go, and under con-
+ditions of safety which free he could not have found on the
+road from Kolyvan to Tomsk. To escape before reaching
+that town was to risk again falling into the hands of the
+scouts, who were scouring the steppe. The most eastern
+line occupied by the Tartar columns was not situated be-
+yond the eighty-fifth meridian, which passes through
+Tomsk. This meridian once passed, Michael considered
+that he should be beyond the hostile zones, that he could
+traverse Genisci without danger, and gain Krasnoiarsk be-
+fore Feofar-Khan had invaded the province.
+
+"Once at Tomsk," he repeated to himself, to repress some
+feelings of impatience which he could not entirely master,
+"in a few minutes I should be beyond the outposts; and
+twelve hours gained on Feofar, twelve hours on Ogareff,
+that surely would be enough to give me a start of them to
+Irkutsk."
+
+The thing that Michael dreaded more than everything
+else was the presence of Ivan Ogareff in the Tartar camp.
+Besides the danger of being recognized, he felt, by a sort
+of instinct, that this was the traitor whom it was especially
+necessary to precede. He understood, too, that the union
+of Ogareff's troops with those of Feofar would complete
+the invading army, and that the junction once effected, the
+army would march en masse on the capital of Eastern Si-
+beria. All his apprehensions came from this quarter, and
+he dreaded every instant to hear some flourish of trumpets,
+announcing the arrival of the lieutenant of the Emir.
+
+To this was added the thought of his mother, of Nadia,
+-- the one a prisoner at Omsk; the other dragged on board
+the Irtych boats, and no doubt a captive, as Marfa Strogoff
+was. He could do nothing for them. Should he ever see
+them again? At this question, to which he dared not reply,
+his heart sank very low.
+
+At the same time with Michael Strogoff and so many
+other prisoners Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet had also
+been taken to the Tartar camp. Their former traveling
+companion, captured like them at the telegraph office, knew
+that they were penned up with him in the enclosure, guarded
+by numerous sentinels, but he did not wish to accost them.
+It mattered little to him, at this time especially, what they
+might think of him since the affair at Ichim. Besides, he
+desired to be alone, that he might act alone, if necessary.
+He therefore held himself aloof from his former ac-
+quaintances.
+
+From the moment that Harry Blount had fallen by his
+side, Jolivet had not ceased his attentions to him. During
+the journey from Kolyvan to the camp -- that is to say, for
+several hours -- Blount, by leaning on his companion's arm,
+had been enabled to follow the rest of the prisoners. He
+tried to make known that he was a British subject; but it
+had no effect on the barbarians, who only replied by prods
+with a lance or sword. The correspondent of the Daily
+Telegraph was, therefore, obliged to submit to the common
+lot, resolving to protest later, and obtain satisfaction for
+such treatment. But the journey was not the less disagree-
+able to him, for his wound caused him much pain, and
+without Alcide Jolivet's assistance he might never have
+reached the camp.
+
+Jolivet, whose practical philosophy never abandoned him,
+had physically and morally strengthened his companion by
+every means in his power. His first care, when they found
+themselves definitely established in the enclosure, was to
+examine Blount's wound. Having managed carefully to
+draw off his coat, he found that the shoulder had been only
+grazed by the shot.
+
+"This is nothing," he said. "A mere scratch! After
+two or three dressings you will be all to rights."
+
+"But these dressings?" asked Blount.
+
+"I will make them for you myself."
+
+"Then you are something of a doctor?"
+
+"All Frenchmen are something of doctors."
+
+And on this affirmation Alcide, tearing his handkerchief,
+made lint of one piece, bandages of the other, took some
+water from a well dug in the middle of the enclosure,
+bathed the wound, and skillfully placed the wet rag on
+Harry Blount's shoulder.
+
+"I treat you with water," he said. "This liquid is the
+most efficacious sedative known for the treatment of
+wounds, and is the most employed now. Doctors have
+taken six thousand years to discover that! Yes, six thou-
+sand years in round numbers!"
+
+"I thank you, M. Jolivet," answered Harry, stretching
+himself on a bed of dry leaves, which his companion had
+arranged for him in the shade of a birch tree.
+
+"Bah! it's nothing! You would do as much for me."
+
+"I am not quite so sure," said Blount candidly.
+
+"Nonsense, stupid! All English are generous."
+
+"Doubtless; but the French?"
+
+"Well, the French -- they are brutes, if you like! But
+what redeems them is that they are French. Say nothing
+more about that, or rather, say nothing more at all. Rest
+is absolutely necessary for you."
+
+But Harry Blount had no wish to be silent. If the
+wound, in prudence, required rest, the correspondent of the
+Daily Telegraph was not a man to indulge himself.
+
+"M. Jolivet," he asked, "do you think that our last
+dispatches have been able to pass the Russian frontier?"
+
+"Why not?" answered Alcide. "By this time you may
+be sure that my beloved cousin knows all about the affair
+at Kolyvan."
+
+"How many copies does your cousin work off of her
+dispatches?" asked Blount, for the first time putting his
+question direct to his companion.
+
+"Well," answered Alcide, laughing, "my cousin is a
+very discreet person, who does not like to be talked about,
+and who would be in despair if she troubled the sleep of
+which you are in need."
+
+"I don't wish to sleep," replied the Englishman. "What
+will your cousin think of the affairs of Russia?"
+
+"That they seem for the time in a bad way. But, bah!
+the Muscovite government is powerful; it cannot be really
+uneasy at an invasion of barbarians."
+
+"Too much ambition has lost the greatest empires," an-
+swered Blount, who was not exempt from a certain English
+jealousy with regard to Russian pretensions in Central Asia.
+
+"Oh, do not let us talk politics," cried Jolivet. "It is
+forbidden by the faculty. Nothing can be worse for wounds
+in the shoulder -- unless it was to put you to sleep."
+
+"Let us, then, talk of what we ought to do," replied
+Blount. "M. Jolivet, I have no intention at all of remain-
+ing a prisoner to these Tartars for an indefinite time."
+
+"Nor I, either, by Jove!"
+
+"We will escape on the first opportunity?"
+
+"Yes, if there is no other way of regaining our liberty."
+
+"Do you know of any other?" asked Blount, looking
+at his companion.
+
+"Certainly. We are not belligerents; we are neutral,
+and we will claim our freedom."
+
+"From that brute of a Feofar-Khan?"
+
+"No; he would not understand," answered Jolivet; "but
+from his lieutenant, Ivan Ogareff."
+
+"He is a villain."
+
+" No doubt; but the villain is a Russian. He knows that
+it does not do to trifle with the rights of men, and he has
+no interest to retain us; on the contrary. But to ask a favor
+of that gentleman does not quite suit my taste."
+
+"But that gentleman is not in the camp, or at least I
+have not seen him here," observed Blount.
+
+"He will come. He will not fail to do that. He must
+join the Emir. Siberia is cut in two now, and very cer-
+tainly Feofar's army is only waiting for him to advance on
+Irkutsk."
+
+"And once free, what shall we do?"
+
+"Once free, we will continue our campaign, and follow
+the Tartars, until the time comes when we can make our
+way into the Russian camp. We must not give up the
+game. No, indeed; we have only just begun. You, friend,
+have already had the honor of being wounded in the service
+of the Daily Telegraph, whilst I -- I have as yet suffered
+nothing in my cousin's service. Well, well! Good," mur-
+mured Alcide Jolivet; "there he is asleep. A few hours'
+sleep and a few cold water compresses are all that are re-
+quired to set an Englishman on his legs again. These fel-
+lows are made of cast iron."
+
+And whilst Harry Blount rested, Alcide watched near
+him, after having drawn out his note book, which he loaded
+with notes, determined besides to share them with his com-
+panion, for the greater satisfaction of the readers of the
+Daily Telegraph. Events had united them one with the
+other. They were no longer jealous of each other. So,
+then, the thing that Michael Strogoff dreaded above every-
+thing was the most lively desire of the two correspondents.
+Ivan Ogareff's arrival would evidently be of use to them.
+Blount and Jolivet's interest was, therefore, contrary to
+that of Michael. The latter well understood the situation,
+and it was one reason, added to many others, which pre-
+vented him from approaching his former traveling compan-
+ions. He therefore managed so as not to be seen by them.
+
+Four days passed thus without the state of things being
+in anywise altered. The prisoners heard no talk of the
+breaking up of the Tartar camp. They were strictly
+guarded. It would have been impossible for them to pass
+the cordon of foot and horse soldiers, which watched them
+night and day. As to the food which was given them it
+was barely sufficient. Twice in the twenty-four hours
+they were thrown a piece of the intestines of goats grilled
+on the coals, or a few bits of that cheese called "kroute,"
+made of sour ewe's milk, and which, soaked in mare's milk,
+forms the Kirghiz dish, commonly called "koumyss." And
+this was all. It may be added that the weather had become
+detestable. There were considerable atmospheric commo-
+tions, bringing squalls mingled with rain. The unfor-
+tunate prisoners, destitute of shelter, had to bear all the in-
+clemencies of the weather, nor was there the slightest
+alleviation to their misery. Several wounded women and
+children died, and the prisoners were themselves compelled
+to dig graves for the bodies of those whom their jailers
+would not even take the trouble to bury.
+
+During this trying period Alcide Jolivet and Michael
+Strogoff worked hard, each in the portions of the enclosure
+in which they found themselves. Healthy and vigorous,
+they suffered less than so many others, and could better
+endure the hardships to which they were exposed. By
+their advice, and the assistance they rendered, they were
+of the greatest possible use to their suffering and despairing
+fellow-captives.
+
+Was this state of things to last? Would Feofar-Khan,
+satisfied with his first success, wait some time before march-
+ing on Irkutsk? Such, it was to be feared, would be the
+case. But it was not so. The event so much wished for by
+Jolivet and Blount, so much dreaded by Michael, occurred
+on the morning of the 12th of August.
+
+On that day the trumpets sounded, the drums beat, the
+cannon roared. A huge cloud of dust swept along the
+road from Kolyvan. Ivan Ogareff, followed by several
+thousand men, made his entry into the Tartar camp.
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+CORRESPONDENTS IN TROUBLE
+
+IVAN OGAREFF was bringing up the main body of the
+army of the Emir. The cavalry and infantry now under
+him had formed part of the column which had taken Omsk.
+Ogareff, not having been able to reduce the high town, in
+which, it must be remembered, the governor and garrison
+had sought refuge, had decided to pass on, not wishing to
+delay operations which ought to lead to the conquest of
+Eastern Siberia. He therefore left a garrison in Omsk,
+and, reinforcing himself en route with the conquerors of
+Kolyvan, joined Feofar's army.
+
+Ivan Ogareff's soldiers halted at the outposts of the
+camp. They received no orders to bivouac. Their chief's
+plan, doubtless, was not to halt there, but to press on and
+reach Tomsk in the shortest possible time, it being an im-
+portant town, naturally intended to become the center of
+future operations.
+
+Besides his soldiers, Ogareff was bringing a convoy of
+Russian and Siberian prisoners, captured either at Omsk
+or Kolyvan. These unhappy creatures were not led to the
+enclosure -- already too crowded -- but were forced to re-
+main at the outposts without shelter, almost without nourish-
+ment. What fate was Feofar-Khan reserving for these
+unfortunates? Would he imprison them in Tomsk, or
+would some bloody execution, familiar to the Tartar chiefs,
+remove them when they were found too inconvenient?
+This was the secret of the capricious Emir.
+
+This army had not come from Omsk and Kolyvan with-
+out bringing in its train the usual crowd of beggars, free-
+booters, pedlars, and gypsies, which compose the rear-guard
+of an army on the march.
+
+All these people lived on the country traversed, and left
+little of anything behind them. There was, therefore, a
+necessity for pushing forward, if only to secure provisions
+for the troops. The whole region between Ichim and the
+Obi, now completely devastated, no longer offered any re-
+sources. The Tartars left a desert behind them.
+
+Conspicuous among the gypsies who had hastened from
+the western provinces was the Tsigane troop, which had
+accompanied Michael Strogoff as far as Perm. Sangarre
+was there. This fierce spy, the tool of Ivan Ogareff, had
+not deserted her master. Ogareff had traveled rapidly to
+Ichim, whilst Sangarre and her band had proceeded to
+Omsk by the southern part of the province.
+
+It may be easily understood how useful this woman was
+to Ogareff. With her gypsy-band she could penetrate any-
+where. Ivan Ogareff was kept acquainted with all that was
+going on in the very heart of the invaded provinces. There
+were a hundred eyes, a hundred ears, open in his service.
+Besides, he paid liberally for this espionage, from which he
+derived so much advantage.
+
+Once Sangarre, being implicated in a very serious affair,
+had been saved by the Russian officer. She never forgot
+what she owed him, and had devoted herself to his service
+body and soul.
+
+When Ivan Ogareff entered on the path of treason, he
+saw at once how he might turn this woman to account.
+Whatever order he might give her, Sangarre would exe-
+cute it. An inexplicable instinct, more powerful still than
+that of gratitude, had urged her to make herself the slave
+of the traitor to whom she had been attached since the very
+beginning of his exile in Siberia.
+
+Confidante and accomplice, Sangarre, without country,
+without family, had been delighted to put her vagabond
+life to the service of the invaders thrown by Ogareff on
+Siberia. To the wonderful cunning natural to her race she
+added a wild energy, which knew neither forgiveness nor
+pity. She was a savage worthy to share the wigwam of an
+Apache or the hut of an Andaman.
+
+Since her arrival at Omsk, where she had rejoined him
+with her Tsiganes, Sangarre had not again left Ogareff.
+The circumstance that Michael and Marfa Strogoff had
+met was known to her. She knew and shared Ogareff's
+fears concerning the journey of a courier of the Czar.
+Having Marfa Strogoff in her power, she would have been
+the woman to torture her with all the refinement of a Red-
+Skin in order to wrest her secret from her. But the hour
+had not yet come in which Ogareff wished the old Siberian
+to speak. Sangarre had to wait, and she waited, without
+losing sight of her whom she was watching, observing her
+slightest gestures, her slightest words, endeavoring to catch
+the word "son" escaping from her lips, but as yet always
+baffled by Marfa's taciturnity.
+
+At the first flourish of the trumpets several officers of
+high rank, followed by a brilliant escort of Usbeck horse-
+men, moved to the front of the camp to receive Ivan Ogareff.
+Arrived in his presence, they paid him the greatest re-
+spect, and invited him to accompany them to Feofar-Khan's
+tent.
+
+Imperturbable as usual, Ogareff replied coldly to the
+deference paid to him. He was plainly dressed; but, from
+a sort of impudent bravado, he still wore the uniform of a
+Russian officer.
+
+As he was about to enter the camp, Sangarre, passing
+among the officers approached and remained motionless be-
+fore him. "Nothing?" asked Ogareff.
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"Have patience."
+
+"Is the time approaching when you will force the old
+woman to speak?"
+
+"It is approaching, Sangarre."
+
+"When will the old woman speak?"
+
+"When we reach Tomsk."
+
+"And we shall be there --"
+
+"In three days."
+
+A strange gleam shot from Sangarre's great black eyes,
+and she retired with a calm step. Ogareff pressed his
+spurs into his horse's flanks, and, followed by his staff of
+Tartar officers, rode towards the Emir's tent.
+
+Feofar-Khan was expecting his lieutenant. The council,
+composed of the bearer of the royal seal, the khodja, and
+some high officers, had taken their places in the tent. Ivan
+Ogareff dismounted and entered.
+
+Feofar-Khan was a man of forty, tall, rather pale, of a
+fierce countenance, and evil eyes. A curly black beard
+flowed over his chest. With his war costume, coat of mail
+of gold and silver, cross-belt and scabbard glistening with
+precious stones, boots with golden spurs, helmet ornamented
+with an aigrette of brilliant diamonds, Feofar presented an
+aspect rather strange than imposing for a Tartar Sardana-
+palus, an undisputed sovereign, who directs at his pleasure
+the life and fortune of his subjects.
+
+When Ivan Ogareff appeared, the great dignitaries re-
+mained seated on their gold-embroidered cushions; but
+Feofar rose from a rich divan which occupied the back
+part of the tent, the ground being hidden under the thick
+velvet-pile of a Bokharian carpet.
+
+The Emir approached Ogareff and gave him a kiss, the
+meaning of which he could not mistake. This kiss made
+the lieutenant chief of the council, and placed him tempo-
+rarily above the khodja.
+
+Then Feofar spoke. "I have no need to question you,"
+said he; "speak, Ivan. You will find here ears very ready
+to listen to you."
+
+"Takhsir," answered Ogareff, "this is what I have to
+make known to you." He spoke in the Tartar language,
+giving to his phrases the emphatic turn which distinguishes
+the languages of the Orientals. "Takhsir, this is not the
+time for unnecessary words. What I have done at the head
+of your troops, you know. The lines of the Ichim and the
+Irtych are now in our power; and the Turcoman horsemen
+can bathe their horses in the now Tartar waters. The
+Kirghiz hordes rose at the voice of Feofar-Khan. You can
+now push your troops towards the east, and where the sun
+rises, or towards the west, where he sets."
+
+"And if I march with the sun?" asked the Emir, with-
+out his countenance betraying any of his thoughts.
+
+"To march with the sun," answered Ogareff, "is to
+throw yourself towards Europe; it is to conquer rapidly
+the Siberian provinces of Tobolsk as far as the Ural Moun-
+tains."
+
+"And if I go to meet this luminary of the heavens?"
+
+"It is to subdue to the Tartar dominion, with Irkutsk,
+the richest countries of Central Asia."
+
+"But the armies of the Sultan of St. Petersburg?" said
+Feofar-Khan, designating the Emperor of Russia by this
+strange title.
+
+"You have nothing to fear from them," replied Ivan
+Ogareff. "The invasion has been sudden; and before the
+Russian army can succor them, Irkutsk or Tobolsk will have
+fallen into your power. The Czar's troops have been over-
+whelmed at Kolyvan, as they will be everywhere where yours
+meet them."
+
+"And what advice does your devotion to the Tartar
+cause suggest?" asked the Emir, after a few moments'
+silence.
+
+"My advice," answered Ivan Ogareff quickly, "is to
+march to meet the sun. It is to give the grass of the
+eastern steppes to the Turcoman horses to consume. It
+is to take Irkutsk, the capital of the eastern provinces, and
+with it a hostage, the possession of whom is worth a whole
+country. In the place of the Czar, the Grand Duke his
+brother must fall into your hands."
+
+This was the great result aimed at by Ivan Ogareff.
+To listen to him, one would have taken him for one of the
+cruel descendants of Stephan Razine, the celebrated pirate
+who ravaged Southern Russia in the eighteenth century.
+To seize the Grand Duke, murder him pitilessly, would
+fully satisfy his hatred. Besides, with the capture of
+Irkutsk, all Eastern Siberia would pass to the Tartars.
+
+"It shall be thus, Ivan," replied Feofar.
+
+"What are your orders, Takhsir?"
+
+"To-day our headquarters shall be removed to Tomsk."
+
+Ogareff bowed, and, followed by the housch-begui, he re-
+tired to execute the Emir's orders.
+
+As he was about to mount his horse, to return to the
+outposts, a tumult broke out at some distance, in the part
+of the camp reserved for the prisoners. Shouts were
+heard, and two or three shots fired. Perhaps it was an
+attempt at revolt or escape, which must be summarily sup-
+pressed.
+
+Ivan Ogareff and the housch-begui walked forward and
+almost immediately two men, whom the soldiers had not
+been able to keep back appeared before them.
+
+The housch-begui, without more information, made a
+sign which was an order for death, and the heads of the
+two prisoners would have rolled on the ground had not
+Ogareff uttered a few words which arrested the sword al-
+ready raised aloft. The Russian had perceived that these
+prisoners were strangers, and he ordered them to be brought
+to him.
+
+They were Harry Blount and Alcide jolivet.
+
+On Ogareff's arrival in the camp, they had demanded
+to be conducted to his presence. The soldiers had refused.
+In consequence, a struggle, an attempt at flight, shots fired
+which happily missed the two correspondents, but their
+execution would not have been long delayed, if it had not
+been for the intervention of the Emir's lieutenant.
+
+The latter observed the prisoners for some moments,
+they being absolutely unknown to him. They had been
+present at that scene in the post-house at Ichim, in which
+Michael Strogoff had been struck by Ogareff; but the brutal
+traveler had paid no attention to the persons then collected
+in the common room.
+
+Blount and Jolivet, on the contrary, recognized him at
+once, and the latter said in a low voice, "Hullo! It seems
+that Colonel Ogareff and the rude personage of Ichim are
+one!" Then he added in his companion's ear, "Explain
+our affair, Blount. You will do me a service. This Rus-
+sian colonel in the midst of a Tartar camp disgusts me; and
+although, thanks to him, my head is still on my shoulders,
+my eyes would exhibit my feelings were I to attempt to look
+him in the face."
+
+So saying, Alcide Jolivet assumed a look of complete and
+haughty indifference.
+
+Whether or not Ivan Ogareff perceived that the prisoner's
+attitude was insulting towards him, he did not let it appear.
+"Who are you, gentlemen?" he asked in Russian, in a cold
+tone, but free from its usual rudeness.
+
+"Two correspondents of English and French news-
+papers," replied Blount laconically.
+
+"You have, doubtless, papers which will establish your
+identity?"
+
+"Here are letters which accredit us in Russia, from the
+English and French chancellor's office."
+
+Ivan Ogareff took the letters which Blount held out, and
+read them attentively. "You ask," said he, "authoriza-
+tion to follow our military operations in Siberia?"
+
+"We ask to be free, that is all," answered the English
+correspondent dryly.
+
+"You are so, gentlemen," answered Ogareff; "I am
+curious to read your articles in the Daily Telegraph."
+
+"Sir," replied Blount, with the most imperturbable cool-
+ness, "it is sixpence a number, including postage." And
+thereupon he returned to his companion, who appeared to
+approve completely of his replies.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, without frowning, mounted his horse, and
+going to the head of his escort, soon disappeared in a
+cloud of dust.
+
+"Well, Jolivet, what do you think of Colonel Ivan
+Ogareff, general-in-chief of the Tartar troops?" asked
+Blount.
+
+"I think, my dear friend," replied Alcide, smiling, "that
+the housch-begui made a very graceful gesture when he
+gave the order for our heads to be cut off."
+
+Whatever was the motive which led Ogareff to act thus
+in regard to the two correspondents, they were free and
+could rove at their pleasure over the scene of war. Their
+intention was not to leave it. The sort of antipathy which
+formerly they had entertained for each other had given
+place to a sincere friendship. Circumstances having brought
+them together, they no longer thought of separating. The
+petty questions of rivalry were forever extinguished.
+Harry Blount could never forget what he owed his com-
+panion, who, on the other hand, never tried to remind him
+of it. This friendship too assisted the reporting operations,
+and was thus to the advantage of their readers.
+
+"And now," asked Blount, "what shall we do with our
+liberty?"
+
+"Take advantage of it, of course," replied Alcide, "and
+go quietly to Tomsk to see what is going on there."
+
+"Until the time -- very near, I hope -- when we may re-
+join some Russian regiment?"
+
+"As you say, my dear Blount, it won't do to Tartarise
+ourselves too much. The best side is that of the most
+civilized army, and it is evident that the people of Central
+Asia will have everything to lose and absolutely nothing
+to gain from this invasion, while the Russians will soon
+repulse them. It is only a matter of time."
+
+The arrival of Ivan Ogareff, which had given Jolivet and
+Blount their liberty, was to Michael Strogoff, on the con-
+trary, a serious danger. Should chance bring the Czar's
+courier into Ogareff's presence, the latter could not fail to
+recognize in him the traveler whom he had so brutally
+treated at the Ichim post-house, and although Michael had
+not replied to the insult as he would have done under any
+other circumstances, attention would be drawn to him, and
+at once the accomplishment of his plans would be rendered
+more difficult.
+
+This was the unpleasant side of the business. A favor-
+able result of his arrival, however, was the order which was
+given to raise the camp that very day, and remove the head-
+quarters to Tomsk. This was the accomplishment of
+Michael's most fervent desire. His intention, as has been
+said, was to reach Tomsk concealed amongst the other pris-
+oners; that is to say, without any risk of falling into the
+hands of the scouts who swarmed about the approaches to
+this important town. However, in consequence of the ar-
+rival of Ivan Ogareff, he questioned whether it would not
+be better to give up his first plan and attempt to escape dur-
+ing the journey.
+
+Michael would, no doubt, have kept to the latter plan had
+he not learnt that Feofar-Khan and Ogareff had already set
+out for the town with some thousands of horsemen. "I
+will wait, then," said he to himself; "at least, unless some
+exceptional opportunity for escape occurs. The adverse
+chances are numerous on this side of Tomsk, while beyond
+I shall in a few hours have passed the most advanced Tartar
+posts to the east. Still three days of patience, and may God
+aid me!"
+
+It was indeed a journey of three days which the prison-
+ers, under the guard of a numerous detachment of Tartars,
+were to make across the steppe. A hundred and fifty versts
+lay between the camp and the town -- an easy march for the
+Emir's soldiers, who wanted for nothing, but a wretched
+journey for these people, enfeebled by privations. More than
+one corpse would show the road they had traversed.
+
+It was two o'clock in the afternoon, on the 12th of
+August, under a hot sun and cloudless sky, that the toptschi-
+baschi gave the order to start.
+
+Alcide and Blount, having bought horses, had already
+taken the road to Tomsk, where events were to reunite the
+principal personages of this story.
+
+Amongst the prisoners brought by Ivan Ogareff to the
+Tartar camp was an old woman, whose taciturnity seemed
+to keep her apart from all those who shared her fate. Not
+a murmur issued from her lips. She was like a statue of
+grief. This woman was more strictly guarded than any-
+one else, and, without her appearing to notice, was con-
+stantly watched by the Tsigane Sangarre. Notwithstanding
+her age she was compelled to follow the convoy of prisoners
+on foot, without any alleviation of her suffering.
+
+However, a kind Providence had placed near her a coura-
+geous, kind-hearted being to comfort and assist her.
+Amongst her companions in misfortune a young girl, re-
+markable for beauty and taciturnity, seemed to have given
+herself the task of watching over her. No words had been
+exchanged between the two captives, but the girl was always
+at the old woman's side when help was useful. At first
+the mute assistance of the stranger was accepted with some
+mistrust. Gradually, however, the young girl's clear glance,
+her reserve, and the mysterious sympathy which draws to-
+gether those who are in misfortune, thawed Marfa Strogoff's
+coldness.
+
+Nadia -- for it was she -- was thus able, without knowing
+it, to render to the mother those attentions which she had
+herself received from the son. Her instinctive kindness had
+doubly inspired her. In devoting herself to her service,
+Nadia secured to her youth and beauty the protection af-
+forded by the age of the old prisoner.
+
+On the crowd of unhappy people, embittered by suffer-
+ings, this silent pair -- one seeming to be the grandmother,
+the other the grand-daughter -- imposed a sort of respect.
+
+After being carried off by the Tartar scouts on the
+Irtych, Nadia had been taken to Omsk. Kept prisoner in
+the town, she shared the fate of all those captured by Ivan
+Ogareff, and consequently that of Marfa Strogoff.
+
+If Nadia had been less energetic, she would have suc-
+cumbed to this double blow. The interruption to her jour-
+ney, the death of Michael, made her both desperate and ex-
+cited. Divided, perhaps forever, from her father, after so
+many happy efforts had brought her near him, and, to crown
+her grief, separated from the intrepid companion whom God
+seemed to have placed in her way to lead her. The image
+of Michael Strogoff, struck before her eyes with a lance and
+disappearing beneath the waters of the Irtych, never left
+her thoughts.
+
+Could such a man have died thus? For whom was God
+reserving His miracles if this good man, whom a noble ob-
+ject was urging onwards, had been allowed to perish so
+miserably? Then anger would prevail over grief. The
+scene of the affront so strangely borne by her companion
+at the Ichim relay returned to her memory. Her blood
+boiled at the recollection.
+
+"Who will avenge him who can no longer avenge him-
+self?" she said.
+
+And in her heart, she cried, "May it be I!" If before
+his death Michael had confided his secret to her, woman, aye
+girl though she was, she might have been able to carry to a
+successful conclusion the interrupted task of that brother
+whom God had so soon taken from her.
+
+Absorbed in these thoughts, it can be understood how
+Nadia could remain insensible to the miseries even of her
+captivity. Thus chance had united her to Marfa Strogoff
+without her having the least suspicion of who she was. How
+could she imagine that this old woman, a prisoner like her-
+self, was the mother of him, whom she only knew as the
+merchant Nicholas Korpanoff? And on the other hand,
+how could Marfa guess that a bond of gratitude connected
+this young stranger with her son?
+
+The thing that first struck Nadia in Marfa Strogoff was
+the similarity in the way in which each bore her hard fate.
+This stoicism of the old woman under the daily hardships,
+this contempt of bodily suffering, could only be caused by a
+moral grief equal to her own. So Nadia thought; and she
+was not mistaken. It was an instinctive sympathy for that
+part of her misery which Marfa did not show which first
+drew Nadia towards her. This way of bearing her sorrow
+went to the proud heart of the young girl. She did not offer
+her services; she gave them. Marfa had neither to refuse
+nor accept them. In the difficult parts of the journey, the
+girl was there to support her. When the provisions were
+given out, the old woman would not have moved, but Nadia
+shared her small portion with her; and thus this painful
+journey was performed. Thanks to her companion, Marfa
+was able to follow the soldiers who guarded the prisoners
+without being fastened to a saddle-bow, as were many other
+unfortunate wretches, and thus dragged along this road of
+sorrow.
+
+"May God reward you, my daughter, for what you have
+done for my old age!" said Marfa Strogoff once, and for
+some time these were the only words exchanged between
+the two unfortunate beings.
+
+During these few days, which to them appeared like
+centuries, it would seem that the old woman and the girl
+would have been led to speak of their situation. But Marfa
+Strogoff, from a caution which may be easily understood,
+never spoke about herself except with the greatest brevity.
+She never made the smallest allusion to her son, nor to the
+unfortunate meeting.
+
+Nadia also, if not completely silent, spoke little. How-
+ever, one day her heart overflowed, and she told all the
+events which had occurred from her departure from Wladi-
+mir to the death of Nicholas Korpanoff.
+
+All that her young companion told intensely interested
+the old Siberian. "Nicholas Korpanoff!" said she. "Tell
+me again about this Nicholas. I know only one man, one
+alone, in whom such conduct would not have astonished
+me. Nicholas Korpanoff! Was that really his name?
+Are you sure of it, my daughter?"
+
+"Why should he have deceived me in this," replied
+Nadia, "when he deceived me in no other way?"
+
+Moved, however, by a kind of presentiment, Marfa
+Strogoff put questions upon questions to Nadia.
+
+"You told me he was fearless, my daughter. You have
+proved that he has been so?" asked she.
+
+"Yes, fearless indeed!" replied Nadia.
+
+"It was just what my son would have done," said Marfa
+to herself.
+
+Then she resumed, "Did you not say that nothing stopped
+him, nor astonished him; that he was so gentle in his
+strength that you had a sister as well as a brother in him,
+and he watched over you like a mother?"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Nadia. "Brother, sister, mother -- he
+has been all to me!"
+
+"And defended you like a lion?"
+
+"A lion indeed!" replied Nadia. "A lion, a hero!"
+
+"My son, my son!" thought the old Siberian. "But
+you said, however, that he bore a terrible insult at that
+post-house in Ichim?"
+
+"He did bear it," answered Nadia, looking down.
+
+"He bore it! " murmured Marfa, shuddering.
+
+"Mother, mother," cried Nadia, "do not blame him!
+He had a secret. A secret of which God alone is as yet the
+judge!"
+
+"And," said Marfa, raising her head and looking at
+Nadia as though she would read the depths of her heart,
+"in that hour of humiliation did you not despise this
+Nicholas Korpanoff?"
+
+"I admired without understanding him," replied the girl.
+"I never felt him more worthy of respect."
+
+The old woman was silent for a minute.
+
+"Was he tall?" she asked.
+
+"Very tall."
+
+"And very handsome? Come, speak, my daughter."
+
+"He was very handsome," replied Nadia, blushing.
+
+"It was my son! I tell you it was my son!" exclaimed
+the old woman, embracing Nadia.
+
+"Your son!" said Nadia amazed, "your son!"
+
+"Come," said Marfa; "let us get to the bottom of this,
+my child. Your companion, your friend, your protector
+had a mother. Did he never speak to you of his mother?"
+
+"Of his mother?" said Nadia. "He spoke to me of
+his mother as I spoke to him of my father -- often, always.
+He adored her."
+
+"Nadia, Nadia, you have just told me about my own
+son," said the old woman.
+
+And she added impetuously, "Was he not going to see
+this mother, whom you say he loved, in Omsk?"
+
+"No," answered Nadia, "no, he was not."
+
+"Not!" cried Marfa. "You dare to tell me not!"
+
+"I say so: but it remains to me to tell you that from
+motives which outweighed everything else, motives which
+I do not know, I understand that Nicholas Korpanoff had
+to traverse the country completely in secret. To him it
+was a question of life and death, and still more, a question
+of duty and honor."
+
+"Duty, indeed, imperious duty," said the old Siberian,
+"of those who sacrifice everything, even the joy of giving a
+kiss, perhaps the last, to his old mother. All that you do
+not know, Nadia -- all that I did not know myself -- I now
+know. You have made me understand everything. But
+the light which you have thrown on the mysteries of my
+heart, I cannot return on yours. Since my son has not told
+you his secret, I must keep it. Forgive me, Nadia; I can
+never repay what you have done for me."
+
+"Mother, I ask you nothing," replied Nadia.
+
+All was thus explained to the old Siberian, all, even the
+conduct of her son with regard to herself in the inn at
+Omsk. There was no doubt that the young girl's com-
+panion was Michael Strogoff, and that a secret mission in
+the invaded country obliged him to conceal his quality of
+the Czar's courier.
+
+"Ah, my brave boy!" thought Marfa. "No, I will not
+betray you, and tortures shall not wrest from me the avowal
+that it was you whom I saw at Omsk."
+
+Marfa could with a word have paid Nadia for all her
+devotion to her. She could have told her that her com-
+panion, Nicholas Korpanoff, or rather Michael Strogoff, had
+not perished in the waters of the Irtych, since it was some
+days after that incident that she had met him, that she had
+spoken to him.
+
+But she restrained herself, she was silent, and contented
+herself with saying, "Hope, my child! Misfortune will
+not overwhelm you. You will see your father again; I feel
+it; and perhaps he who gave you the name of sister is not
+dead. God cannot have allowed your brave companion to
+perish. Hope, my child, hope! Do as I do. The mourn-
+ing which I wear is not yet for my son."
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+BLOW FOR BLOW
+
+SUCH were now the relative situations of Marfa Strogoff
+and Nadia. All was understood by the old Siberian, and
+though the young girl was ignorant that her much-regretted
+companion still lived, she at least knew his relationship to
+her whom she had made her mother; and she thanked God
+for having given her the joy of taking the place of the son
+whom the prisoner had lost.
+
+But what neither of them could know was that Michael,
+having been captured at Kolyvan, was in the same convoy
+and was on his way to Tomsk with them.
+
+The prisoners brought by Ivan Ogareff had been added
+to those already kept by the Emir in the Tartar camp.
+These unfortunate people, consisting of Russians, Siberians,
+soldiers and civilians, numbered some thousands, and formed
+a column which extended over several versts. Some among
+them being considered dangerous were handcuffed and fast-
+ened to a long chain. There were, too, women and chil-
+dren, many of the latter suspended to the pommels of the
+saddles, while the former were dragged mercilessly along
+the road on foot, or driven forward as if they were ani-
+mals. The horsemen compelled them to maintain a certain
+order, and there were no laggards with the exception of
+those who fell never to rise again.
+
+In consequence of this arrangement, Michael Strogoff,
+marching in the first ranks of those who had left the Tartar
+camp -- that is to say, among the Kolyvan prisoners -- was
+unable to mingle with the prisoners who had arrived after
+him from Omsk. He had therefore no suspicion that his
+mother and Nadia were present in the convoy, nor did they
+suppose that he was among those in front. This journey
+from the camp to Tomsk, performed under the lashes and
+spear-points of the soldiers, proved fatal to many, and ter-
+rible to all. The prisoners traveled across the steppe, over a
+road made still more dusty by the passage of the Emir and
+his vanguard. Orders had been given to march rapidly.
+The short halts were rare. The hundred miles under a
+burning sky seemed interminable, though they were per-
+formed as rapidly as possible.
+
+The country, which extends from the right of the Obi
+to the base of the spur detached from the Sayanok Moun-
+tains, is very sterile. Only a few stunted and burnt-up
+shrubs here and there break the monotony of the immense
+plain. There was no cultivation, for there was no water;
+and it was water that the prisoners, parched by their painful
+march, most needed. To find a stream they must have
+diverged fifty versts eastward, to the very foot of the moun-
+tains.
+
+There flows the Tom, a little affluent of the Obi, which
+passes near Tomsk before losing itself in one of the great
+northern arteries. There water would have been abundant,
+the steppe less arid, the heat less severe. But the strictest
+orders had been given to the commanders of the convoy to
+reach Tomsk by the shortest way, for the Emir was much
+afraid of being taken in the flank and cut off by some Rus-
+sian column descending from the northern provinces.
+
+It is useless to dwell upon the sufferings of the unhappy
+prisoners. Many hundreds fell on the steppe, where their
+bodies would lie until winter, when the wolves would devour
+the remnants of their bones.
+
+As Nadia helped the old Siberian, so in the same way
+did Michael render to his more feeble companions in mis-
+fortune such services as his situation allowed. He encour-
+aged some, supported others, going to and fro, until a prick
+from a soldier's lance obliged him to r‚sum‚ the place which
+had been assigned him in the ranks.
+
+Why did he not endeavor to escape?
+
+The reason was that he had now quite determined not
+to venture until the steppe was safe for him. He was re-
+solved in his idea of going as far as Tomsk "at the Emir's
+expense," and indeed he was right. As he observed the
+numerous detachments which scoured the plain on the con-
+voy's flanks, now to the south, now to the north, it was
+evident that before he could have gone two versts he must
+have been recaptured. The Tartar horsemen swarmed -- it
+actually appeared as if they sprang from the earth -- like
+insects which a thunderstorm brings to the surface of the
+ground. Flight under these conditions would have been
+extremely difficult, if not impossible. The soldiers of the
+escort displayed excessive vigilance, for they would have
+paid for the slightest carelessness with their heads.
+
+At nightfall of the 15th of August, the convoy reached
+the little village of Zabediero, thirty versts from Tomsk.
+
+The prisoners' first movement would have been to rush
+into the river, but they were not allowed to leave the ranks
+until the halt had been organized. Although the current
+of the Tom was just now like a torrent, it might have fav-
+ored the flight of some bold or desperate man, and the strict-
+est measures of vigilance were taken. Boats, requisitioned
+at Zabediero, were brought up to the Tom and formed a
+line of obstacles impossible to pass. As to the encamp-
+ment on the outskirts of the village, it was guarded by a
+cordon of sentinels.
+
+Michael Strogoff, who now naturally thought of escape,
+saw, after carefully surveying the situation, that under these
+conditions it was perfectly impossible; so, not wishing to
+compromise himself, he waited.
+
+The prisoners were to encamp for the whole night on
+the banks of the Tom, for the Emir had put off the en-
+trance of his troops into Tomsk. It had been decided that
+a military fete should mark the inauguration of the Tartar
+headquarters in this important city. Feofar-Khan already
+occupied the fortress, but the bulk of his army bivouacked
+under its walls, waiting until the time came for them to make
+a solemn entry.
+
+Ivan Ogareff left the Emir at Tomsk, where both had
+arrived the evening before, and returned to the camp at
+Zabediero. From here he was to start the next day with
+the rear-guard of the Tartar army. A house had been ar-
+ranged for him in which to pass the night. At sunrise horse
+and foot soldiers were to proceed to Tomsk, where the Emir
+wished to receive them with the pomp usual to Asiatic sov-
+ereigns. As soon as the halt was organized, the prisoners,
+worn out with their three days' journey, and suffering from
+burning thirst, could drink and take a little rest. The sun
+had already set, when Nadia, supporting Marfa Strogoff,
+reached the banks of the Tom. They had not till then been
+able to get through those who crowded the banks, but at
+last they came to drink in their turn.
+
+The old woman bent over the clear stream, and Nadia,
+plunging in her hand, carried it to Marfa's lips. Then she
+refreshed herself. They found new life in these welcome
+waters. Suddenly Nadia started up; an involuntary cry
+escaped her.
+
+Michael Strogoff was there, a few steps from her. It
+was he. The dying rays of the sun fell upon him.
+
+At Nadia's cry Michael started. But he had sufficient
+command over himself not to utter a word by which he
+might have been compromised. And yet, when he saw
+Nadia, he also recognized his mother.
+
+Feeling he could not long keep master of himself at
+this unexpected meeting, he covered his eyes with his hands
+and walked quickly away.
+
+Nadia's impulse was to run after him, but the old Siberian
+murmured in her ear, "Stay, my daughter!"
+
+"It is he!" replied Nadia, choking with emotion. "He
+lives, mother! It is he!"
+
+"It is my son," answered Marfa, "it is Michael Strogoff,
+and you see that I do not make a step towards him! Imi-
+tate me, my daughter."
+
+Michael had just experienced the most violent emotion
+which a man can feel. His mother and Nadia were there!
+
+The two prisoners who were always together in his
+heart, God had brought them together in this common mis-
+fortune. Did Nadia know who he was? Yes, for he had
+seen Marfa's gesture, holding her back as she was about to
+rush towards him. Marfa, then, had understood all, and
+kept his secret.
+
+During that night, Michael was twenty times on the
+point of looking for and joining his mother; but he knew
+that he must resist the longing he felt to take her in his
+arms, and once more press the hand of his young com-
+panion. The least imprudence might be fatal. He had
+besides sworn not to see his mother. Once at Tomsk, since
+he could not escape this very night, he would set off without
+having even embraced the two beings in whom all the hap-
+piness of his life was centered, and whom he should leave
+exposed to so many perils.
+
+Michael hoped that this fresh meeting at the Zabediero
+camp would have no disastrous consequences either to his
+mother or to himself. But he did not know that part of
+this scene, although it passed so rapidly, had been observed
+by Sangarre, Ogareff's spy.
+
+The Tsigane was there, a few paces off, on the bank,
+as usual, watching the old Siberian woman. She had not
+caught sight of Michael, for he disappeared before she had
+time to look around; but the mother's gesture as she kept
+back Nadia had not escaped her, and the look in Marfa's
+eyes told her all.
+
+It was now beyond doubt that Marfa Strogoff's son, the
+Czar's courier, was at this moment in Zabediero, among
+Ivan Ogareff's prisoners. Sangarre did not know him, but
+she knew that he was there. She did not then attempt to
+discover him, for it would have been impossible in the dark
+and the immense crowd.
+
+As for again watching Nadia and Marfa Strogoff, that
+was equally useless. It was evident that the two women
+would keep on their guard, and it would be impossible to
+overhear anything of a nature to compromise the courier
+of the Czar. The Tsigane's first thought was to tell Ivan
+Ogareff. She therefore immediately left the encampment.
+A quarter of an hour after, she reached Zabediero, and was
+shown into the house occupied by the Emir's lieutenant.
+Ogareff received the Tsigane directly.
+
+"What have you to tell me, Sangarre?" he asked.
+
+"Marfa Strogoff's son is in the encampment."
+
+"A prisoner?"
+
+"A prisoner."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Ogareff, "I shall know --"
+
+"You will know nothing, Ivan," replied Tsigane; "for
+you do not even know him by sight."
+
+"But you know him; you have seen him, Sangarre?"
+
+"I have not seen him; but his mother betrayed herself
+by a gesture, which told me everything."
+
+"Are you not mistaken?"
+
+"I am not mistaken."
+
+"You know the importance which I attach to the appre-
+hension of this courier," said Ivan Ogareff. "If the letter
+which he has brought from Moscow reaches Irkutsk, if it is
+given to the Grand Duke, the Grand Duke will be on his
+guard, and I shall not be able to get at him. I must have
+that letter at any price. Now you come to tell me that the
+bearer of this letter is in my power. I repeat, Sangarre,
+are you not mistaken?"
+
+Ogareff spoke with great animation. His emotion
+showed the extreme importance he attached to the posses-
+sion of this letter. Sangarre was not at all put out by the
+urgency with which Ogareff repeated his question. "I am
+not mistaken, Ivan," she said.
+
+"But, Sangarre, there are thousands of prisoners; and
+you say that you do not know Michael Strogoff."
+
+"No," answered the Tsigane, with a look of savage joy,
+"I do not know him; but his mother knows him. Ivan,
+we must make his mother speak."
+
+"To-morrow she shall speak!" cried Ogareff. So say-
+ing, he extended his hand to the Tsigane, who kissed it; for
+there is nothing servile in this act of respect, it being usual
+among the Northern races.
+
+Sangarre returned to the camp. She found out Nadia
+and Marfa Strogoff, and passed the night in watching them.
+Although worn out with fatigue, the old woman and the
+girl did not sleep. Their great anxiety kept them awake.
+Michael was living, but a prisoner. Did Ogareff know him,
+or would he not soon find him out? Nadia was occupied by
+the one thought that he whom she had thought dead still
+lived. But Marfa saw further into the future: and, al-
+though she did not care what became of herself, she had
+every reason to fear for her son.
+
+Sangarre, under cover of the night, had crept near the
+two women, and remained there several hours listening.
+She heard nothing. From an instinctive feeling of pru-
+dence not a word was exchanged between Nadia and Marfa
+Strogoff. The next day, the 16th of August, about ten in
+the morning, trumpet-calls resounded throughout the en-
+campment. The Tartar soldiers were almost immediately
+under arms.
+
+Ivan Ogareff arrived, surrounded by a large staff of Tar-
+tar officers. His face was more clouded than usual, and
+his knitted brow gave signs of latent wrath which was wait-
+ing for an occasion to break forth.
+
+Michael Strogoff, hidden in a group of prisoners, saw
+this man pass. He had a presentiment that some catas-
+trophe was imminent: for Ivan Ogareff knew now that
+Marfa was the mother of Michael Strogoff.
+
+Ogareff dismounted, and his escort cleared a large circle
+round him. Just then Sangarre approached him, and said,
+"I have no news."
+
+Ivan Ogareff's only reply was to give an order to one
+of his officers. Then the ranks of prisoners were brutally
+hurried up by the soldiers. The unfortunate people, driven
+on with whips, or pushed on with lances, arranged them-
+selves round the camp. A strong guard of soldiers drawn
+up behind, rendered escape impossible.
+
+Silence then ensued, and, on a sign from Ivan Ogareff,
+Sangarre advanced towards the group, in the midst of
+which stood Marfa.
+
+The old Siberian saw her, and knew what was going to
+happen. A scornful smile passed over her face. Then
+leaning towards Nadia, she said in a low tone, "You know
+me no longer, my daughter. Whatever may happen, and
+however hard this trial may be, not a word, not a sign. It
+concerns him, and not me."
+
+At that moment Sangarre, having regarded her for an
+instant, put her hand on her shoulder.
+
+"What do you want with me?" said Marfa.
+
+"Come!" replied Sangarre, and pushing the old Siberian
+before her, she took her to Ivan Ogareff, in the middle of
+the cleared ground. Michael cast down his eyes that their
+angry flashings might not appear.
+
+Marfa, standing before Ivan Ogareff, drew herself up,
+crossed her arms on her breast, and waited.
+
+"You are Marfa Strogoff?" asked Ogareff.
+
+"Yes," replied the old Siberian calmly.
+
+"Do you retract what you said to me when, three days
+ago, I interrogated you at Omsk?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"Then you do not know that your son, Michael Strogoff,
+courier of the Czar, has passed through Omsk?"
+
+"I do not know it."
+
+"And the man in whom you thought you recognized
+your son, was not he your son?"
+
+"He was not my son."
+
+"And since then you have not seen him amongst the
+prisoners?"
+
+"No."
+
+"If he were pointed out, would you recognize him?"
+
+"No."
+
+On this reply, which showed such determined resolution, a
+murmur was heard amongst the crowd.
+
+Ogareff could not restrain a threatening gesture.
+
+"Listen," said he to Marfa, "your son is here, and you
+shall immediately point him out to me."
+
+"No."
+
+"All these men, taken at Omsk and Kolyvan, will defile
+before you; and if you do not show me Michael Strogoff,
+you shall receive as many blows of the knout as men shall
+have passed before you."
+
+Ivan Ogareff saw that, whatever might be his threats,
+whatever might be the tortures to which he submitted her,
+the indomitable Siberian would not speak. To discover the
+courier of the Czar, he counted, then, not on her, but on
+Michael himself. He did not believe it possible that, when
+mother and son were in each other's presence, some invol-
+untary movement would not betray him. Of course, had he
+wished to seize the imperial letter, he would simply have
+given orders to search all the prisoners; but Michael might
+have destroyed the letter, having learnt its contents; and if
+he were not recognized, if he were to reach Irkutsk, all
+Ivan Ogareff's plans would be baffled. It was thus not only
+the letter which the traitor must have, but the bearer him-
+self.
+
+Nadia had heard all, and she now knew who was Michael
+Strogoff, and why he had wished to cross, without being
+recognized, the invaded provinces of Siberia.
+
+On an order from Ivan Ogareff the prisoners defiled,
+one by one, past Marfa, who remained immovable as a
+statue, and whose face expressed only perfect indifference.
+
+Her son was among the last. When in his turn he passed
+before his mother, Nadia shut her eyes that she might not
+see him. Michael was to all appearance unmoved, but the
+palm of his hand bled under his nails, which were pressed
+into them.
+
+Ivan Ogareff was baffled by mother and son.
+
+Sangarre, close to him, said one word, "The knout!"
+
+"Yes," cried Ogareff, who could no longer restrain him-
+self; "the knout for this wretched old woman -- the knout
+to the death!"
+
+A Tartar soldier bearing this terrible instrument of tor-
+ture approached Marfa. The knout is composed of a cer-
+tain number of leathern thongs, at the end of which are at-
+tached pieces of twisted iron wire. It is reckoned that a
+sentence to one hundred and twenty blows of this whip is
+equivalent to a sentence of death.
+
+Marfa knew it, but she knew also that no torture would
+make her speak. She was sacrificing her life.
+
+Marfa, seized by two soldiers, was forced on her knees
+on the ground. Her dress torn off left her back bare. A
+saber was placed before her breast, at a few inches' distance
+only. Directly she bent beneath her suffering, her breast
+would be pierced by the sharp steel.
+
+The Tartar drew himself up. He waited. "Begin!"
+said Ogareff. The whip whistled in the air.
+
+But before it fell a powerful hand stopped the Tartar's
+arm. Michael was there. He had leapt forward at this
+horrible scene. If at the relay at Ichim he had restrained
+himself when Ogareff's whip had struck him, here before
+his mother, who was about to be struck, he could not do so.
+Ivan Ogareff had succeeded.
+
+"Michael Strogoff!" cried he. Then advancing, "Ah,
+the man of Ichim?"
+
+"Himself!" said Michael. And raising the knout he
+struck Ogareff a sharp blow across the face. "Blow for
+blow!" said he.
+
+"Well repaid!" cried a voice concealed by the tumult.
+
+Twenty soldiers threw themselves on Michael, and in an-
+other instant he would have been slain.
+
+But Ogareff, who on being struck had uttered a cry of
+rage and pain, stopped them. "This man is reserved for
+the Emir's judgment," said he. "Search him!"
+
+The letter with the imperial arms was found in Michael's
+bosom; he had not had time to destroy it; it was handed to
+Ogareff.
+
+The voice which had pronounced the words, "Well re-
+paid!" was that of no other than Alcide Jolivet. "Par-
+dieu!" said he to Blount, "they are rough, these people.
+Acknowledge that we owe our traveling companion a good
+turn. Korpanoff or Strogoff is worthy of it. Oh, that
+was fine retaliation for the little affair at Ichim."
+
+"Yes, retaliation truly," replied Blount; "but Strogoff
+is a dead man. I suspect that, for his own interest at all
+events, it would have been better had he not possessed quite
+so lively a recollection of the event."
+
+"And let his mother perish under the knout?"
+
+"Do you think that either she or his sister will be a bit
+better off from this outbreak of his?"
+
+"I do not know or think anything except that I should
+have done much the same in his position," replied Alcide.
+"What a scar the Colonel has received! Bah! one must
+boil over sometimes. We should have had water in our
+veins instead of blood had it been incumbent on us to be
+always and everywhere unmoved to wrath."
+
+"A neat little incident for our journals," observed
+Blount, "if only Ivan Ogareff would let us know the con-
+tents of that letter."
+
+Ivan Ogareff, when he had stanched the blood which
+was trickling down his face, had broken the seal. He read
+and re-read the letter deliberately, as if he was determined
+to discover everything it contained.
+
+Then having ordered that Michael, carefully bound and
+guarded, should be carried on to Tomsk with the other
+prisoners, he took command of the troops at Zabediero, and,
+amid the deafening noise of drums and trumpets, he marched
+towards the town where the Emir awaited him.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+THE TRIUMPHAL ENTRY
+
+TOMSK, founded in 1604, nearly in the heart of the
+Siberian provinces, is one of the most important towns in
+Asiatic Russia. Tobolsk, situated above the sixtieth
+parallel; Irkutsk, built beyond the hundredth meridian --
+have seen Tomsk increase at their expense.
+
+And yet Tomsk, as has been said, is not the capital of
+this important province. It is at Omsk that the Governor-
+General of the province and the official world reside. But
+Tomsk is the most considerable town of that territory. The
+country being rich, the town is so likewise, for it is in the
+center of fruitful mines. In the luxury of its houses, its
+arrangements, and its equipages, it might rival the greatest
+European capitals. It is a city of millionaires, enriched by
+the spade and pickax, and though it has not the honor of
+being the residence of the Czar's representative, it can boast
+of including in the first rank of its notables the chief of the
+merchants of the town, the principal grantees of the imperial
+government's mines.
+
+But the millionaires were fled now, and except for the
+crouching poor, the town stood empty to the hordes of Feo-
+far-Khan. At four o'clock the Emir made his entry into the
+square, greeted by a flourish of trumpets, the rolling sound
+of the big drums, salvoes of artillery and musketry.
+
+Feofar mounted his favorite horse, which carried on its
+head an aigrette of diamonds. The Emir still wore his
+uniform. He was accompanied by a numerous staff, and
+beside him walked the Khans of Khokhand and Koundouge
+and the grand dignitaries of the Khanats.
+
+At the same moment appeared on the terrace the chief of
+Feofar's wives, the queen, if this title may be given to the
+sultana of the states of Bokhara. But, queen or slave, this
+woman of Persian origin was wonderfully beautiful. Con-
+trary to the Mahometan custom, and no doubt by some
+caprice of the Emir, she had her face uncovered. Her hair,
+divided into four plaits, fell over her dazzling white shoul-
+ders, scarcely concealed by a veil of silk worked in gold,
+which fell from the back of a cap studded with gems of
+the highest value. Under her blue-silk petticoat, fell the
+"zirdjameh" of silken gauze, and above the sash lay the
+"pirahn." But from the head to the little feet, such was
+the profusion of jewels -- gold beads strung on silver threads,
+chaplets of turquoises, "firouzehs" from the celebrated
+mines of Elbourz, necklaces of cornelians, agates, emeralds,
+opals, and sapphires -- that her dress seemed to be literally
+made of precious stones. The thousands of diamonds
+which sparkled on her neck, arms, hands, at her waist, and at
+her feet might have been valued at almost countless millions
+of roubles.
+
+The Emir and the Khans dismounted, as did the dig-
+nitaries who escorted them. All entered a magnificent tent
+erected on the center of the first terrace. Before the tent,
+as usual, the Koran was laid.
+
+Feofar's lieutenant did not make them wait, and before
+five o'clock the trumpets announced his arrival. Ivan
+Ogareff -- the Scarred Cheek, as he was already nick-named
+-- wearing the uniform of a Tartar officer, dismounted be-
+fore the Emir's tent. He was accompanied by a party of
+soldiers from the camp at Zabediero, who ranged up at the
+sides of the square, in the middle of which a place for the
+sports was reserved. A large scar could be distinctly seen
+cut obliquely across the traitor's face.
+
+Ogareff presented his principal officers to the Emir, who,
+without departing from the coldness which composed the
+main part of his dignity, received them in a way which
+satisfied them that they stood well in the good graces of their
+chief.
+
+At least so thought Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet, the
+two inseparables, now associated together in the chase after
+news. After leaving Zabediero, they had proceeded rapidly
+to Tomsk. The plan they had agreed upon was to leave the
+Tartars as soon as possible, and to join a Russian regiment,
+and, if they could, to go with them to Irkutsk. All that they
+had seen of the invasion, its burnings, its pillages, its
+murders, had perfectly sickened them, and they longed to be
+among the ranks of the Siberian army. Jolivet had told his
+companion that he could not leave Tomsk without making
+a sketch of the triumphal entry of the Tartar troops, if it
+was only to satisfy his cousin's curiosity; but the same even-
+ing they both intended to take the road to Irkutsk, and be-
+ing well mounted hoped to distance the Emir's scouts.
+
+Alcide and Blount mingled therefore in the crowd, so as
+to lose no detail of a festival which ought to supply them
+with a hundred good lines for an article. They admired the
+magnificence of Feofar-Khan, his wives, his officers, his
+guards, and all the Eastern pomp, of which the ceremonies
+of Europe can give not the least idea. But they turned
+away with disgust when Ivan Ogareff presented himself
+before the Emir, and waited with some impatience for the
+amusements to begin.
+
+"You see, my dear Blount," said Alcide, "we have come
+too soon, like honest citizens who like to get their money's
+worth. All this is before the curtain rises, it would have
+been better to arrive only for the ballet."
+
+"What ballet?" asked Blount.
+
+"The compulsory ballet, to be sure. But see, the curtain
+is going to rise." Alcide Jolivet spoke as if he had been at
+the Opera, and taking his glass from its case, he prepared,
+with the air of a connoisseur, "to examine the first act of
+Feofar's company."
+
+A painful ceremony was to precede the sports. In fact,
+the triumph of the vanquisher could not be complete without
+the public humiliation of the vanquished. This was why
+several hundreds of prisoners were brought under the
+soldiers' whips. They were destined to march past Feofar-
+Khan and his allies before being crammed with their com-
+panions into the prisons in the town.
+
+In the first ranks of these prisoners figured Michael
+Strogoff. As Ogareff had ordered, he was specially
+guarded by a file of soldiers. His mother and Nadia were
+there also.
+
+The old Siberian, although energetic enough when her
+own safety was in question, was frightfully pale. She ex-
+pected some terrible scene. It was not without reason that
+her son had been brought before the Emir. She therefore
+trembled for him. Ivan Ogareff was not a man to forgive
+having been struck in public by the knout, and his vengeance
+would be merciless. Some frightful punishment familiar
+to the barbarians of Central Asia would, no doubt, be in-
+flicted on Michael. Ogareff had protected him against the
+soldiers because he well knew what would happen by reserv-
+ing him for the justice of the Emir.
+
+The mother and son had not been able to speak to-
+gether since the terrible scene in the camp at Zabediero.
+They had been pitilessly kept apart -- a bitter aggravation
+of their misery, for it would have been some consolation
+to have been together during these days of captivity. Marfa
+longed to ask her son's pardon for the harm she had unin-
+tentionally done him, for she reproached herself with not
+having commanded her maternal feelings. If she had
+restrained herself in that post-house at Omsk, when she
+found herself face to face with him, Michael would have
+passed unrecognized, and all these misfortunes would have
+been avoided.
+
+Michael, on his side, thought that if his mother was there,
+if Ogareff had brought her with him, it was to make her
+suffer with the sight of his own punishment, or perhaps some
+frightful death was reserved for her also.
+
+As to Nadia, she only asked herself how she could save
+them both, how come to the aid of son and mother. As
+yet she could only wonder, but she felt instinctively that
+she must above everything avoid drawing attention upon her-
+self, that she must conceal herself, make herself insignificant.
+Perhaps she might at least gnaw through the meshes
+which imprisoned the lion. At any rate if any opportunity
+was given her she would seize upon it, and sacrifice herself,
+if need be, for the son of Marfa Strogoff.
+
+In the meantime the greater part of the prisoners were
+passing before the Emir, and as they passed each was obliged
+to prostrate himself, with his forehead in the dust, in token
+of servitude. Slavery begins by humiliation. When the
+unfortunate people were too slow in bending, the rough
+guards threw them violently to the ground.
+
+Alcide Jolivet and his companion could not witness such
+a sight without feeling indignant.
+
+"It is cowardly -- let us go," said Alcide.
+
+"No," answered Blount; "we must see it all."
+
+"See it all! -- ah!" cried Alcide, suddenly, grasping his
+companion's arm.
+
+"What is the matter with you?" asked the latter.
+
+"Look, Blount; it is she!"
+
+"What she?"
+
+"The sister of our traveling companion -- alone, and a
+prisoner! We must save her."
+
+"Calm yourself," replied Blount coolly. "Any interfer-
+ence on our part in behalf of the young girl would be worse
+than useless."
+
+Alcide Jolivet, who had been about to rush forward,
+stopped, and Nadia -- who had not perceived them, her fea-
+tures being half hidden by her hair -- passed in her turn be-
+fore the Emir without attracting his attention.
+
+However, after Nadia came Marfa Strogoff; and as she
+did not throw herself quickly in the dust, the guards brutally
+pushed her. She fell.
+
+Her son struggled so violently that the soldiers who were
+guarding him could scarcely hold him back. But the old
+woman rose, and they were about to drag her on, when
+Ogareff interposed, saying, "Let that woman stay!"
+
+As to Nadia, she happily regained the crowd of prisoners.
+Ivan Ogareff had taken no notice of her.
+
+Michael was then led before the Emir, and there he re-
+mained standing, without casting down his eyes.
+
+"Your forehead to the ground!" cried Ogareff.
+
+"No!" answered Michael.
+
+Two soldiers endeavored to make him bend, but they
+were themselves laid on the ground by a buffet from the
+young man's fist.
+
+Ogareff approached Michael. "You shall die!" he said.
+
+"I can die," answered Michael fiercely; "but your
+traitor's face, Ivan, will not the less carry forever the in-
+famous brand of the knout."
+
+At this reply Ivan Ogareff became perfectly livid.
+
+"Who is this prisoner?" asked the Emir, in a tone of
+voice terrible from its very calmness.
+
+"A Russian spy," answered Ogareff. In asserting that
+Michael was a spy he knew that the sentence pronounced
+against him would be terrible.
+
+The Emir made a sign at which all the crowd bent low
+their heads. Then he pointed with his hand to the Koran,
+which was brought him. He opened the sacred book and
+placed his finger on one of its pages.
+
+It was chance, or rather, according to the ideas of these
+Orientals, God Himself who was about to decide the fate of
+Michael Strogoff. The people of Central Asia give the
+name of "fal" to this practice. After having interpreted
+the sense of the verse touched by the judge's finger, they
+apply the sentence whatever it may be.
+
+The Emir had let his finger rest on the page of the Koran.
+The chief of the Ulemas then approached, and read in a
+loud voice a verse which ended with these words, "And he
+will no more see the things of this earth."
+
+"Russian spy!" exclaimed Feofar-Kahn in a voice
+trembling with fury, "you have come to see what is going
+on in the Tartar camp. Then look while you may."
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+"LOOK WHILE YOU MAY!"
+
+MICHAEL was held before the Emir's throne, at the foot
+of the terrace, his hands bound behind his back. His
+mother overcome at last by mental and physical torture, had
+sunk to the ground, daring neither to look nor listen.
+
+"Look while you may," exclaimed Feofar-Kahn, stretch-
+ing his arm towards Michael in a threatening manner.
+Doubtless Ivan Ogareff, being well acquainted with Tartar
+customs, had taken in the full meaning of these words, for
+his lips curled for an instant in a cruel smile; he then took
+his place by Feofar-Khan.
+
+A trumpet call was heard. This was the signal for the
+amusements to begin. "Here comes the ballet," said
+Alcide to Blount; "but, contrary to our customs, these bar-
+barians give it before the drama."
+
+Michael had been commanded to look at everything. He
+looked. A troop of dancers poured into the open space be-
+fore the Emir's tent. Different Tartar instruments, the
+"doutare," a long-handled guitar, the "kobize," a kind of
+violoncello, the "tschibyzga," a long reed flute; wind instru-
+ments, tom-toms, tambourines, united with the deep voices of
+the singers, formed a strange harmony. Added to this were
+the strains of an aerial orchestra, composed of a dozen kites,
+which, fastened by strings to their centers, resounded in the
+breeze like AEolian harps.
+
+Then the dancers began. The performers were all of
+Persian origin; they were no longer slaves, but exercised
+their profession at liberty. Formerly they figured officially
+in the ceremonies at the court of Teheran, but since the
+accession of the reigning family, banished or treated with
+contempt, they had been compelled to seek their fortune else-
+where. They wore the national costume, and were adorned
+with a profusion of jewels. Little triangles of gold,
+studded with jewels, glittered in their ears. Circles of
+silver, marked with black, surrounded their necks and legs.
+
+These performers gracefully executed various dances,
+sometimes alone, sometimes in groups. Their faces were
+uncovered, but from time to time they threw a light veil
+over their heads, and a gauze cloud passed over their bright
+eyes as smoke over a starry sky. Some of these Persians
+wore leathern belts embroidered with pearls, from which
+hung little triangular bags. From these bags, embroidered
+with golden filigree, they drew long narrow bands of scarlet
+silk, on which were braided verses of the Koran. These
+bands, which they held between them, formed a belt under
+which the other dancers darted; and, as they passed each
+verse, following the precept it contained, they either pros-
+trated themselves on the earth or lightly bounded upwards,
+as though to take a place among the houris of Mohammed's
+heaven.
+
+But what was remarkable, and what struck Alcide, was
+that the Persians appeared rather indolent than fiery.
+Their passion had deserted them, and, by the kind of dances
+as well as by their execution, they recalled rather the calm
+and self-possessed nauch girls of India than the impassioned
+dancers of Egypt.
+
+When this was over, a stern voice was heard saying:
+
+"Look while you may!"
+
+The man who repeated the Emir's words -- a tall spare
+Tartar -- was he who carried out the sentences of Feofar-
+Khan against offenders. He had taken his place behind
+Michael, holding in his hand a broad curved saber, one of
+those Damascene blades which are forged by the celebrated
+armorers of Karschi or Hissar.
+
+Behind him guards were carrying a tripod supporting a
+chafing-dish filled with live coals. No smoke arose from
+this, but a light vapor surrounded it, due to the incineration
+of a certain aromatic and resinous substance which he had
+thrown on the surface.
+
+The Persians were succeeded by another party of dancers,
+whom Michael recognized. The journalists also appeared
+to recognize them, for Blount said to his companion, "These
+are the Tsiganes of Nijni-Novgorod."
+
+"No doubt of it," cried Alcide. "Their eyes, I imagine,
+bring more money to these spies than their legs."
+
+In putting them down as agents in the Emir's service,
+Alcide Jolivet was, by all accounts, not mistaken.
+
+In the first rank of the Tsiganes, Sangarre appeared,
+superb in her strange and picturesque costume, which set
+off still further her remarkable beauty.
+
+Sangarre did not dance, but she stood as a statue in the
+midst of the performers, whose style of dancing was a com-
+bination of that of all those countries through which their
+race had passed -- Turkey, Bohemia, Egypt, Italy, and
+Spain. They were enlivened by the sound of cymbals,
+which clashed on their arms, and by the hollow sounds of
+the "daires" -- a sort of tambourine played with the fingers.
+
+Sangarre, holding one of those daires, which she played
+between her hands, encouraged this troupe of veritable
+corybantes. A young Tsigane, of about fifteen years of
+age, then advanced. He held in his hand a "doutare,"
+strings of which he made to vibrate by a simple movement
+of the nails. He sung. During the singing of each coup-
+let, of very peculiar rhythm, a dancer took her position by
+him and remained there immovable, listening to him, but
+each time that the burden came from the lips of the young
+singer, she resumed her dance, dinning in his ears with her
+daire, and deafening him with the clashing of her cymbals.
+Then, after the last chorus, the remainder surrounded the
+Tsigane in the windings of their dance.
+
+At that moment a shower of gold fell from the hands
+of the Emir and his train, and from the hands of his officers
+of all ranks; to the noise which the pieces made as they
+struck the cymbals of the dancers, being added the last
+murmurs of the doutares and tambourines.
+
+"Lavish as robbers," said Alcide in the ear of his com-
+panion. And in fact it was the result of plunder which
+was falling; for, with the Tartar tomans and sequins,
+rained also Russian ducats and roubles.
+
+Then silence followed for an instant, and the voice of
+the executioner, who laid his hand on Michael's shoulder,
+once more pronounced the words, which this repetition
+rendered more and more sinister:
+
+"Look while you may "
+
+But this time Alcide observed that the executioner no
+longer held the saber bare in his hand.
+
+Meanwhile the sun had sunk behind the horizon. A
+semi-obscurity began to envelop the plain. The mass of
+cedars and pines became blacker and blacker, and the waters
+of the Tom, totally obscured in the distance, mingled with
+the approaching shadows.
+
+But at that instant several hundreds of slaves, bearing
+lighted torches, entered the square. Led by Sangarre,
+Tsiganes and Persians reappeared before the Emir's throne,
+and showed off, by the contrast, their dances of styles so
+different. The instruments of the Tartar orchestra
+sounded forth in harmony still more savage, accompanied
+by the guttural cries of the singers. The kites, which had
+fallen to the ground, once more winged their way into the
+sky, each bearing a parti-colored lantern, and under a
+fresher breeze their harps vibrated with intenser sound in
+the midst of the aerial illumination.
+
+Then a squadron of Tartars, in their brilliant uniforms,
+mingled in the dances, whose wild fury was increasing
+rapidly, and then began a performance which produced a
+very strange effect. Soldiers came on the ground, armed
+with bare sabers and long pistols, and, as they executed
+dances, they made the air re-echo with the sudden detona-
+tions of their firearms, which immediately set going the
+rumbling of the tambourines, and grumblings of the daires,
+and the gnashing of doutares.
+
+Their arms, covered with a colored powder of some
+metallic ingredient, after the Chinese fashion, threw long
+jets -- red, green, and blue -- so that the groups of dancers
+seemed to be in the midst of fireworks. In some respects,
+this performance recalled the military dance of the ancients,
+in the midst of naked swords; but this Tartar dance was
+rendered yet more fantastic by the colored fire, which wound,
+serpent-like, above the dancers, whose dresses seemed to be
+embroidered with fiery hems. It was like a kaleidoscope of
+sparks, whose infinite combinations varied at each movement
+of the dancers.
+
+Though it may be thought that a Parisian reporter would
+be perfectly hardened to any scenic effect, which our modern
+ideas have carried so far, yet Alcide Jolivet could not re-
+strain a slight movement of the head, which at home, be-
+tween the Boulevard Montmartre and La Madeleine would
+have said --" Very fair, very fair."
+
+Then, suddenly, at a signal, all the lights of the fantasia
+were extinguished, the dances ceased, and the performers
+disappeared. The ceremony was over, and the torches
+alone lighted up the plateau, which a few instants before
+had been so brilliantly illuminated.
+
+On a sign from the Emir, Michael was led into the middle
+of the square.
+
+"Blount," said Alcide to his companion, "are you going
+to see the end of all this?"
+
+"No, that I am not," replied Blount.
+
+"The readers of the Daily Telegraph are, I hope, not
+very eager for the details of an execution a la mode
+Tartare?"
+
+"No more than your cousin!"
+
+"Poor fellow!" added Alcide, as he watched Michael.
+"That valiant soldier should have fallen on the field of
+battle!"
+
+"Can we do nothing to save him?" said Blount.
+
+"Nothing!"
+
+The reporters recalled Michael's generous conduct to-
+wards them; they knew now through what trials he must
+have passed, ever obedient to his duty; and in the midst of
+these Tartars, to whom pity is unknown, they could do
+nothing for him. Having little desire to be present at the
+torture reserved for the unfortunate man, they returned to
+the town. An hour later, they were on the road to Irkutsk,
+for it was among the Russians that they intended to follow
+what Alcide called, by anticipation, "the campaign of
+revenge."
+
+Meantime, Michael was standing ready, his eyes return-
+ing the Emir's haughty glance, while his countenance as-
+sumed an expression of intense scorn whenever he cast his
+looks on Ivan Ogareff. He was prepared to die, yet not
+a single sign of weakness escaped him.
+
+The spectators, waiting around the square, as well as
+Feofar-Khan's body-guard, to whom this execution was
+only one of the attractions, were eagerly expecting it.
+Then, their curiosity satisfied, they would rush off to enjoy
+the pleasures of intoxication.
+
+The Emir made a sign. Michael was thrust forward by
+his guards to the foot of the terrace, and Feofar said to
+him, "You came to see our goings out and comings in,
+Russian spy. You have seen for the last time. In an in-
+stant your eyes will be forever shut to the day."
+
+Michael's fate was to be not death, but blindness; loss of
+sight, more terrible perhaps than loss of life. The un-
+happy man was condemned to be blinded.
+
+However, on hearing the Emir's sentence Michael's heart
+did not grow faint. He remained unmoved, his eyes wide
+open, as though he wished to concentrate his whole life into
+one last look. To entreat pity from these savage men
+would be useless, besides, it would be unworthy of him.
+He did not even think of it. His thoughts were condensed
+on his mission, which had apparently so completely failed;
+on his mother, on Nadia, whom he should never more see!
+But he let no sign appear of the emotion he felt. Then,
+a feeling of vengeance to be accomplished came over him.
+"Ivan," said he, in a stern voice, "Ivan the Traitor, the
+last menace of my eyes shall be for you!"
+
+Ivan Ogareff shrugged his shoulders.
+
+But Michael was not to be looking at Ivan when his eyes
+were put out. Marfa Strogoff stood before him.
+
+"My mother!" cried he. "Yes! yes! my last glance
+shall be for you, and not for this wretch! Stay there, be-
+fore me! Now I see once more your well-beloved face!
+Now shall my eyes close as they rest upon it . . . !"
+
+The old woman, without uttering a word, advanced.
+
+"Take that woman away!" said Ivan.
+
+Two soldiers were about to seize her, but she stepped
+back and remained standing a few paces from Michael.
+
+The executioner appeared. This time, he held his saber
+bare in his hand, and this saber he had just drawn from
+the chafing-dish, where he had brought it to a white heat.
+Michael was going to be blinded in the Tartar fashion, with
+a hot blade passed before his eyes!
+
+Michael did not attempt to resist. Nothing existed be-
+fore his eyes but his mother, whom his eyes seemed to devour.
+All his life was in that last look.
+
+Marfa Strogoff, her eyes open wide, her arms extended
+towards where he stood, was gazing at him. The incan-
+descent blade passed before Michael's eyes.
+
+A despairing cry was heard. His aged mother fell sense-
+less to the ground. Michael Strogoff was blind.
+
+His orders executed, the Emir retired with his train.
+There remained in the square only Ivan Ogareff and the
+torch bearers. Did the wretch intend to insult his victim
+yet further, and yet to give him a parting blow?
+
+Ivan Ogareff slowly approached Michael, who, feeling
+him coming, drew himself up. Ivan drew from his pocket
+the Imperial letter, he opened it, and with supreme irony
+he held it up before the sightless eyes of the Czar's courier,
+saying, "Read, now, Michael Strogoff, read, and go and re-
+peat at Irkutsk what you have read. The true Courier of
+the Czar is Ivan Ogareff."
+
+This said, the traitor thrust the letter into his breast.
+Then, without looking round he left the square, followed by
+the torch-bearers.
+
+Michael was left alone, at a few paces from his mother,
+lying lifeless, perhaps dead. He heard in the distance cries
+and songs, the varied noises of a wild debauch. Tomsk,
+illuminated, glittered and gleamed.
+
+Michael listened. The square was silent and deserted.
+He went, groping his way, towards the place where his
+mother had fallen. He found her with his hand, he bent
+over her, he put his face close to hers, he listened for the
+beating of her heart. Then he murmured a few words.
+
+Did Marfa still live, and did she hear her son's words?
+Whether she did so or not, she made not the slightest move-
+ment. Michael kissed her forehead and her white locks.
+He then raised himself, and, groping with his foot, trying
+to stretch out his hand to guide himself, he walked by de-
+grees to the edge of the square.
+
+Suddenly Nadia appeared. She walked straight to her
+companion. A knife in her hand cut the cords which bound
+Michael's arms. The blind man knew not who had freed
+him, for Nadia had not spoken a word.
+
+But this done: "Brother!" said she.
+
+"Nadia!" murmured Michael, "Nadia!"
+
+"Come, brother," replied Nadia, "use my eyes whilst
+yours sleep. I will lead you to Irkutsk."
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+A FRIEND ON THE HIGHWAY
+
+HALF an hour afterwards, Michael and Nadia had left
+Tomsk.
+
+Many others of the prisoners were that night able to
+escape from the Tartars, for officers and soldiers, all more
+or less intoxicated, had unconsciously relaxed the vigilant
+guard which they had hitherto maintained. Nadia, after
+having been carried off with the other prisoners, had been
+able to escape and return to the square, at the moment when
+Michael was led before the Emir. There, mingling with
+the crowd, she had witnessed the terrible scene. Not a
+cry escaped her when the scorching blade passed before her
+companion's eyes. She kept, by her strength of will, mute
+and motionless. A providential inspiration bade her re-
+strain herself and retain her liberty that she might lead
+Marfa's son to that goal which he had sworn to reach.
+Her heart for an instant ceased to beat when the aged
+Siberian woman fell senseless to the ground, but one
+thought restored her to her former energy. "I will be the
+blind man's dog," said she.
+
+On Ogareff's departure, Nadia had concealed herself in
+the shade. She had waited till the crowd left the square.
+Michael, abandoned as a wretched being from whom noth-
+ing was to be feared, was alone. She saw him draw him-
+self towards his mother, bend over her, kiss her forehead,
+then rise and grope his way in flight.
+
+A few instants later, she and he, hand in hand, had de-
+scended the steep slope, when, after having followed the
+high banks of the Tom to the furthest extremity of the
+town, they happily found a breach in the inclosure.
+
+The road to Irkutsk was the only one which penetrated
+towards the east. It could not be mistaken. It was pos-
+sible that on the morrow, after some hours of carousal, the
+scouts of the Emir, once more scattering over the steppes,
+might cut off all communication. It was of the greatest
+importance therefore to get in advance of them. How
+could Nadia bear the fatigues of that night, from the l6th
+to the 17th of August? How could she have found
+strength for so long a stage? How could her feet, bleed-
+ing under that forced march, have carried her thither? It
+is almost incomprehensible. But it is none the less true that
+on the next morning, twelve hours after their departure
+from Tomsk, Michael and she reached the town of
+Semilowskoe, after a journey of thirty-five miles.
+
+Michael had not uttered a single word. It was not
+Nadia who held his hand, it was he who held that of his
+companion during the whole of that night; but, thanks to
+that trembling little hand which guided him, he had walked
+at his ordinary pace.
+
+Semilowskoe was almost entirely abandoned. The in-
+habitants had fled. Not more than two or three houses
+were still occupied. All that the town contained, useful or
+precious, had been carried off in wagons. However, Nadia
+was obliged to make a halt of a few hours. They both re-
+quired food and rest.
+
+The young girl led her companion to the extremity of
+the town. There they found an empty house, the door
+wide open. An old rickety wooden bench stood in the
+middle of the room, near the high stove which is to be
+found in all Siberian houses. They silently seated them-
+selves.
+
+Nadia gazed in her companion's face as she had never
+before gazed. There was more than gratitude, more than
+pity, in that look. Could Michael have seen her, he would
+have read in that sweet desolate gaze a world of devotion
+and tenderness.
+
+The eyelids of the blind man, made red by the heated
+blade, fell half over his eyes. The pupils seemed to be
+singularly enlarged. The rich blue of the iris was darker
+than formerly. The eyelashes and eyebrows were partly
+burnt, but in appearance, at least, the old penetrating look
+appeared to have undergone no change. If he could no
+longer see, if his blindness was complete, it was because
+the sensibility of the retina and optic nerve was radically
+destroyed by the fierce heat of the steel.
+
+Then Michael stretched out his hands.
+
+"Are you there, Nadia?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," replied the young girl; "I am close to you, and
+I will not go away from you, Michael."
+
+At his name, pronounced by Nadia for the first time, a
+thrill passed through Michael's frame. He perceived that
+his companion knew all, who he was.
+
+"Nadia," replied he, "we must separate!"
+
+"We separate? How so, Michael?"
+
+"I must not be an obstacle to your journey! Your
+father is waiting for you at Irkutsk! You must rejoin
+your father!"
+
+"My father would curse me, Michael, were I to abandon
+you now, after all you have done for me!"
+
+"Nadia, Nadia," replied Michael, "you should think
+only of your father!"
+
+"Michael," replied Nadia, "you have more need of me
+than my father. Do you mean to give up going to
+Irkutsk?"
+
+"Never!" cried Michael, in a tone which plainly showed
+that none of his energy was gone.
+
+"But you have not the letter!"
+
+"That letter of which Ivan Ogareff robbed me! Well!
+I shall manage without it, Nadia! They have treated me as
+a spy! I will act as a spy! I will go and repeat at Irkutsk
+all I have seen, all I have heard; I swear it by Heaven above!
+The traitor shall meet me one day face to face! But I must
+arrive at Irkutsk before him."
+
+"And yet you speak of our separating, Michael?"
+
+"Nadia, they have taken everything from me!"
+
+"I have some roubles still, and my eyes! I can see for
+you, Michael; and I will lead you thither, where you could
+not go alone!"
+
+"And how shall we go?"
+
+"On foot."
+
+"And how shall we live?"
+
+"By begging."
+
+"Let us start, Nadia."
+
+"Come, Michael."
+
+The two young people no longer kept the names
+"brother" and "sister." In their common misfortune,
+they felt still closer united. They left the house after an
+hour's repose. Nadia had procured in the town some mor-
+sels of "tchornekhleb," a sort of barley bread, and a little
+mead, called "meod" in Russia. This had cost her noth-
+ing, for she had already begun her plan of begging. The
+bread and mead had in some degree appeased Michael's
+hunger and thirst. Nadia gave him the lion's share of this
+scanty meal. He ate the pieces of bread his companion
+gave him, drank from the gourd she held to his lips.
+
+"Are you eating, Nadia?" he asked several times.
+
+"Yes, Michael," invariably replied the young girl, who
+contented herself with what her companion left.
+
+Michael and Nadia quitted Semilowskoe, and once more
+set out on the laborious road to Irkutsk. The girl bore up
+in a marvelous way against fatigue. Had Michael seen
+her, perhaps he would not have had the courage to go on.
+But Nadia never complained, and Michael, hearing no sigh,
+walked at a speed he was unable to repress. And why?
+Did he still expect to keep before the Tartars? He was
+on foot, without money; he was blind, and if Nadia, his
+only guide, were to be separated from him, he could only
+lie down by the side of the road and there perish miserably.
+But if, on the other hand, by energetic perseverance he could
+reach Krasnoiarsk, all was perhaps not lost, since the gover-
+nor, to whom he would make himself known, would not
+hesitate to give him the means of reaching Irkutsk.
+
+Michael walked on, speaking little, absorbed in his own
+thoughts. He held Nadia's hand. The two were in in-
+cessant communication. It seemed to them that they had
+no need of words to exchange their thoughts. From time
+to time Michael said, "Speak to me, Nadia."
+
+"Why should I, Michael? We are thinking together!"
+the young girl would reply, and contrived that her voice
+should not betray her extreme fatigue.
+
+But sometimes, as if her heart had ceased to beat for an
+instant, her limbs tottered, her steps flagged, her arms fell
+to her sides, she dropped behind. Michael then stopped, he
+fixed his eyes on the poor girl, as though he would try to
+pierce the gloom which surrounded him; his breast heaved;
+then, supporting his companion more than before, he started
+on afresh.
+
+However, amidst these continual miseries, a fortunate cir-
+cumstance on that day occurred which it appeared likely
+would considerably ease their fatigue. They had been
+walking from Semilowskoe for two hours when Michael
+stopped.
+
+"Is there no one on the road?"
+
+"Not a single soul," replied Nadia.
+
+"Do you not hear some noise behind us? If they are
+Tartars we must hide. Keep a good look-out!"
+
+"Wait, Michael!" replied Nadia, going back a few steps
+to where the road turned to the right.
+
+Michael Strogoff waited alone for a minute, listening
+attentively.
+
+Nadia returned almost immediately and said, "It is a
+cart. A young man is leading it."
+
+"Is he alone?"
+
+"Alone."
+
+Michael hesitated an instant. Should he hide? or should
+he, on the contrary, try to find a place in the vehicle, if not
+for himself, at least for her? For himself, he would be
+quite content to lay one hand on the cart, to push it if neces-
+sary, for his legs showed no sign of failing him; but he
+felt sure that Nadia, compelled to walk ever since they
+crossed the Obi, that is, for eight days, must be almost ex-
+hausted. He waited.
+
+The cart was soon at the corner of the road. It was a
+very dilapidated vehicle, known in the country as a kibitka,
+just capable of holding three persons. Usually the kibitka
+is drawn by three horses, but this had but one, a beast with
+long hair and a very long tail. It was of the Mongol breed,
+known for strength and courage.
+
+A young man was leading it, with a dog beside him.
+Nadia saw at once that the young man was Russian; his
+face was phlegmatic, but pleasant, and at once inspired con-
+fidence. He did not appear to be in the slightest hurry;
+he was not walking fast that he might spare his horse, and,
+to look at him, it would not have been believed that he was
+following a road which might at any instant be swarming
+with Tartars.
+
+Nadia, holding Michael by the hand, made way for the
+vehicle. The kibitka stopped, and the driver smilingly
+looked at the young girl.
+
+"And where are you going to in this fashion?" he asked,
+opening wide his great honest eyes.
+
+At the sound of his voice, Michael said to himself that
+he had heard it before. And it was satisfactory to him to
+recognize the man for his brow at once cleared.
+
+"Well, where are you going?" repeated the young man,
+addressing himself more directly to Michael.
+
+"We are going to Irkutsk," he replied.
+
+"Oh! little father, you do not know that there are still
+versts and versts between you and Irkutsk?"
+
+"I know it."
+
+"And you are going on foot?"
+
+"On foot."
+
+"You, well! but the young lady?"
+
+"She is my sister," said Michael, who judged it prudent
+to give again this name to Nadia.
+
+"Yes, your sister, little father! But, believe me, she
+will never be able to get to Irkutsk!"
+
+"Friend," returned Michael, approaching him, "the Tar-
+tars have robbed us of everything, and I have not a copeck
+to offer you; but if you will take my sister with you, I will
+follow your cart on foot; I will run when necessary, I will
+not delay you an hour!"
+
+"Brother," exclaimed Nadia, "I will not! I will not!
+Sir, my brother is blind!"
+
+"Blind!" repeated the young man, much moved.
+
+"The Tartars have burnt out his eyes!" replied Nadia,
+extending her hands, as if imploring pity.
+
+"Burnt out his eyes! Oh! poor little father! I am
+going to Krasnoiarsk. Well, why should not you and your
+sister mount in the kibitka? By sitting a little close, it will
+hold us all three. Besides, my dog will not refuse to go on
+foot; only I don't go fast, I spare my horse."
+
+"Friend, what is your name?" asked Michael.
+
+"My name is Nicholas Pigassof."
+
+"It is a name that I will never forget," said Michael.
+
+"Well, jump up, little blind father. Your sister will be
+beside you, in the bottom of the cart; I sit in front to drive.
+There is plenty of good birch bark and straw in the bot-
+tom; it's like a nest. Serko, make room!"
+
+The dog jumped down without more telling. He was
+an animal of the Siberian race, gray hair, of medium size,
+with an honest big head, just made to pat, and he, more-
+over, appeared to be much attached to his master.
+
+In a moment more, Michael and Nadia were seated in
+the kibitka. Michael held out his hands as if to feel for
+those of Pigassof. "You wish to shake my hands!" said
+Nicholas. "There they are, little father! shake them as
+long as it will give you any pleasure."
+
+The kibitka moved on; the horse, which Nicholas never
+touched with the whip, ambled along. Though Michael did
+not gain any in speed, at least some fatigue was spared to
+Nadia.
+
+Such was the exhaustion of the young girl, that, rocked
+by the monotonous movement of the kibitka, she soon fell
+into a sleep, its soundness proving her complete prostra-
+tion. Michael and Nicholas laid her on the straw as com-
+fortably as possible. The compassionate young man was
+greatly moved, and if a tear did not escape from Michael's
+eyes, it was because the red-hot iron had dried up the last!
+
+"She is very pretty," said Nicholas.
+
+"Yes," replied Michael.
+
+"They try to be strong, little father, they are brave, but
+they are weak after all, these dear little things! Have you
+come from far."
+
+"Very far."
+
+"Poor young people! It must have hurt you very much
+when they burnt your eyes!"
+
+"Very much," answered Michael, turning towards
+Nicholas as if he could see him.
+
+"Did you not weep?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I should have wept too. To think that one could never
+again see those one loves. But they can see you, however;
+that's perhaps some consolation!"
+
+"Yes, perhaps. Tell me, my friend," continued Michael,
+"have you never seen me anywhere before?"
+
+"You, little father? No, never."
+
+"The sound of your voice is not unknown to me."
+
+"Why!" returned Nicholas, smiling, "he knows the
+sound of my voice! Perhaps you ask me that to find out
+where I come from. I come from Kolyvan."
+
+"From Kolyvan?" repeated Michael. "Then it was
+there I met you; you were in the telegraph office?"
+
+"That may be," replied Nicholas. "I was stationed
+there. I was the clerk in charge of the messages."
+
+"And you stayed at your post up to the last moment?"
+
+"Why, it's at that moment one ought to be there!"
+
+"It was the day when an Englishman and a Frenchman
+were disputing, roubles in hand, for the place at your wicket,
+and the Englishman telegraphed some poetry."
+
+"That is possible, but I do not remember it."
+
+"What! you do not remember it?"
+
+"I never read the dispatches I send. My duty being to
+forget them, the shortest way is not to know them."
+
+This reply showed Nicholas Pigassof's character. In
+the meanwhile the kibitka pursued its way, at a pace which
+Michael longed to render more rapid. But Nicholas and
+his horse were accustomed to a pace which neither of them
+would like to alter. The horse went for two hours and
+rested one -- so on, day and night. During the halts the
+horse grazed, the travelers ate in company with the faithful
+Serko. The kibitka was provisioned for at least twenty
+persons, and Nicholas generously placed his supplies at the
+disposal of his two guests, whom he believed to be brother
+and sister.
+
+After a day's rest, Nadia recovered some strength.
+Nicholas took the best possible care of her. The journey
+was being made under tolerable circumstances, slowly cer-
+tainly, but surely. It sometimes happened that during the
+night, Nicholas, although driving, fell asleep, and snored
+with a clearness which showed the calmness of his con-
+science. Perhaps then, by looking close, Michael's hand
+might have been seen feeling for the reins, and giving the
+horse a more rapid pace, to the great astonishment of Serko,
+who, however, said nothing. The trot was exchanged for
+the amble as soon as Nicholas awoke, but the kibitka had
+not the less gained some versts.
+
+Thus they passed the river Ichirnsk, the villages of
+Ichisnokoe, Berikylokoe, Kuskoe, the river Marunsk, the
+village of the same name, Bogostowskoe, and, lastly, the
+Ichoula, a little stream which divides Western from Eastern
+Siberia. The road now lay sometimes across wide moors,
+which extended as far as the eye could reach, sometimes
+through thick forests of firs, of which they thought they
+should never get to the end. Everywhere was a desert; the
+villages were almost entirely abandoned. The peasants had
+fled beyond the Yenisei, hoping that this wide river would
+perhaps stop the Tartars.
+
+On the 22d of August, the kibitka entered the town of
+Atchinsk, two hundred and fifty miles from Tomsk. Eighty
+miles still lay between them and Krasnoiarsk.
+
+No incident had marked the journey. For the six days
+during which they had been together, Nicholas, Michael,
+and Nadia had remained the same, the one in his unchange-
+able calm, the other two, uneasy, and thinking of the time
+when their companion would leave them.
+
+Michael saw the country through which they traveled
+with the eyes of Nicholas and the young girl. In turns,
+they each described to him the scenes they passed. He
+knew whether he was in a forest or on a plain, whether a
+hut was on the steppe, or whether any Siberian was in sight.
+Nicholas was never silent, he loved to talk, and, from his
+peculiar way of viewing things, his friends were amused
+by his conversation. One day, Michael asked him what
+sort of weather it was.
+
+"Fine enough, little father," he answered, "but soon we
+shall feel the first winter frosts. Perhaps the Tartars will
+go into winter quarters during the bad season."
+
+Michael Strogoff shook his head with a doubtful air.
+
+"You do not think so, little father?" resumed Nicholas.
+"You think that they will march on to Irkutsk?"
+
+"I fear so," replied Michael.
+
+"Yes . . . you are right; they have with them a bad
+man, who will not let them loiter on the way. You have
+heard speak of Ivan Ogareff?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You know that it is not right to betray one's country!"
+
+"No . . . it is not right . . ." answered Michael, who
+wished to remain unmoved.
+
+"Little father," continued Nicholas, "it seems to me that
+you are not half indignant enough when Ivan Ogareff is
+spoken of. Your Russian heart ought to leap when his
+name is uttered."
+
+"Believe me, my friend, I hate him more than you can
+ever hate him," said Michael.
+
+"It is not possible," replied Nicholas; "no, it is not pos-
+sible! When I think of Ivan Ogareff, of the harm which
+he is doing to our sacred Russia, I get into such a rage
+that if I could get hold of him --"
+
+"If you could get hold of him, friend?"
+
+"I think I should kill him."
+
+"And I, I am sure of it," returned Michael quietly.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+THE PASSAGE OF THE YENISEI
+
+AT nightfall, on the 25th of August, the kibitka came in
+sight of Krasnoiarsk. The journey from Tomsk had taken
+eight days. If it had not been accomplished as rapidly as it
+might, it was because Nicholas had slept little. Con-
+sequently, it was impossible to increase his horse's pace,
+though in other hands, the journey would not have taken
+sixty hours.
+
+Happily, there was no longer any fear of Tartars. Not
+a scout had appeared on the road over which the kibitka
+had just traveled. This was strange enough, and evidently
+some serious cause had prevented the Emir's troops from
+marching without delay upon Irkutsk. Something had oc-
+curred. A new Russian corps, hastily raised in the govern-
+ment of Yeniseisk, had marched to Tomsk to endeavor to
+retake the town. But, being too weak to withstand the
+Emir's troops, now concentrated there, they had been forced
+to effect a retreat. Feofar-Khan, including his own sol-
+diers, and those of the Khanats of Khokhand and Koun-
+douze, had now under his command two hundred and fifty
+thousand men, to which the Russian government could not
+as yet oppose a sufficient force. The invasion could not,
+therefore, be immediately stopped, and the whole Tartar
+army might at once march upon Irkutsk. The battle of
+Tomsk was on the 22nd of August, though this Michael
+did not know, but it explained why the vanguard of the
+Emir's army had not appeared at Krasnoiarsk by the 25th.
+
+However, though Michael Strogoff could not know the
+events which had occurred since his departure, he at least
+knew that he was several days in advance of the Tartars,
+and that he need not despair of reaching before them the
+town of Irkutsk, still six hundred miles distant.
+
+Besides, at Krasnoiarsk, of which the population is about
+twelve thousand souls, he depended upon obtaining some
+means of transport. Since Nicholas Pigassof was to stop
+in that town, it would be necessary to replace him by a
+guide, and to change the kibitka for another more rapid
+vehicle. Michael, after having addressed himself to the
+governor of the town, and established his identity and qual-
+ity as Courier of the Czar -- which would be easy -- doubted
+not that he would be enabled to get to Irkutsk in the short-
+est possible time. He would thank the good Nicholas
+Pigassof, and set out immediately with Nadia, for he did
+not wish to leave her until he had placed her in her father's
+arms. Though Nicholas had resolved to stop at Kras-
+noiarsk, it was only as he said, "on condition of finding
+employment there." In fact, this model clerk, after having
+stayed to the last minute at his post in Kolyvan, was en-
+deavoring to place himself again at the disposal of the gov-
+ernment. "Why should I receive a salary which I have
+not earned?" he would say.
+
+In the event of his services not being required at Kras-
+noiarsk, which it was expected would be still in telegraphic
+communication with Irkutsk, he proposed to go to Oudinsk,
+or even to the capital of Siberia itself. In the latter case,
+he would continue to travel with the brother and sister;
+and where would they find a surer guide, or a more devoted
+friend?
+
+The kibitka was now only half a verst from Krasnoiarsk.
+The numerous wooden crosses which are erected at the ap-
+proaches to the town, could be seen to the right and left
+of the road. It was seven in the evening; the outline of
+the churches and of the houses built on the high bank of
+the Yenisei were clearly defined against the evening sky,
+and the waters of the river reflected them in the twilight.
+
+"Where are we, sister?" asked Michael.
+
+"Half a verst from the first houses," replied Nadia.
+
+"Can the town be asleep?" observed Michael. "Not a
+sound strikes my ear."
+
+"And I cannot see the slightest light, nor even smoke
+mounting into the air," added Nadia.
+
+"What a queer town!" said Nicholas. "They make no
+noise in it, and go to bed uncommonly early!"
+
+A presentiment of impending misfortune passed across
+Michael's heart. He had not said to Nadia that he had
+placed all his hopes on Krasnoiarsk, where he expected to
+find the means of safely finishing his journey. He much
+feared that his anticipations would again be disappointed.
+
+But Nadia had guessed his thoughts, although she could
+not understand why her companion should be so anxious
+to reach Irkutsk, now that the Imperial letter was gone.
+She one day said something of the sort to him. "I have
+sworn to go to Irkutsk," he replied.
+
+But to accomplish his mission, it was necessary that at
+Krasnoiarsk he should find some more rapid mode of loco-
+motion. "Well, friend," said he to Nicholas, "why are
+we not going on?"
+
+"Because I am afraid of waking up the inhabitants of
+the town with the noise of my carriage!" And with a
+light fleck of the whip, Nicholas put his horse in motion.
+
+Ten minutes after they entered the High Street. Kras-
+noiarsk was deserted; there was no longer an Athenian in
+this "Northern Athens," as Madame de Bourboulon has
+called it. Not one of their dashing equipages swept
+through the wide, clean streets. Not a pedestrian enlivened
+the footpaths raised at the bases of the magnificent wooden
+houses, of monumental aspect! Not a Siberian belle,
+dressed in the last French fashion, promenaded the beauti-
+ful park, cleared in a forest of birch trees, which stretches
+away to the banks of the Yenisei! The great bell of the
+cathedral was dumb; the chimes of the churches were silent.
+Here was complete desolation. There was no longer a liv-
+ing being in this town, lately so lively!
+
+The last telegram sent from the Czar's cabinet, before
+the rupture of the wire, had ordered the governor, the
+garrison, the inhabitants, whoever they might be, to leave
+Krasnoiarsk, to carry with them any articles of value, or
+which might be of use to the Tartars, and to take refuge at
+Irkutsk. The same injunction was given to all the villages
+of the province. It was the intention of the Muscovite gov-
+ernment to lay the country desert before the invaders. No
+one thought for an instant of disputing these orders. They
+were executed, and this was the reason why not a single
+human being remained in Krasnoiarsk.
+
+Michael Strogoff, Nadia, and Nicholas passed silently
+through the streets of the town. They felt half-stupefied.
+They themselves made the only sound to be heard in this
+dead city. Michael allowed nothing of what he felt to ap-
+pear, but he inwardly raged against the bad luck which
+pursued him, his hopes being again disappointed.
+
+"Alack, alack!" cried Nicholas, "I shall never get any
+employment in this desert!"
+
+"Friend," said Nadia, "you must go on with us."
+
+"I must indeed!" replied Nicholas. "The wire is no
+doubt still working between Oudinsk and Irkutsk, and
+there -- Shall we start, little father?"
+
+"Let us wait till to-morrow," answered Michael.
+
+"You are right," said Nicholas. "We have the Yenisei
+to cross, and need light to see our way there!"
+
+"To see!" murmured Nadia, thinking of her blind com-
+panion.
+
+Nicholas heard her, and turning to Michael, "Forgive
+me, little father," said he. "Alas! night and day, it is true,
+are all the same to you!"
+
+"Do not reproach yourself, friend," replied Michael,
+pressing his hand over his eyes. "With you for a guide I
+can still act. Take a few hours' repose. Nadia must rest
+too. To-morrow we will recommence our journey!"
+
+Michael and his friends had not to search long for a place
+of rest. The first house, the door of which they pushed
+open, was empty, as well as all the others. Nothing could
+be found within but a few heaps of leaves. For want of
+better fodder the horse had to content himself with this
+scanty nourishment. The provisions of the kibitka were
+not yet exhausted, so each had a share. Then, after having
+knelt before a small picture of the Panaghia, hung on the
+wall, and still lighted up by a flickering lamp, Nicholas and
+the young girl slept, whilst Michael, over whom sleep had
+no influence, watched.
+
+Before daybreak the next morning, the 26th of August,
+the horse was drawing the kibitka through the forests of
+birch trees towards the banks of the Yenisei. Michael was
+in much anxiety. How was he to cross the river, if, as
+was probable, all boats had been destroyed to retard the
+Tartars' march? He knew the Yenisei, its width was con-
+siderable, its currents strong. Ordinarily by means of
+boats specially built for the conveyance of travelers, car-
+riages, and horses, the passage of the Yenisei takes about
+three hours, and then it is with extreme difficulty that the
+boats reach the opposite bank. Now, in the absence of any
+ferry, how was the kibitka to get from one bank to the
+other?
+
+Day was breaking when the kibitka reached the left bank,
+where one of the wide alleys of the park ended. They were
+about a hundred feet above the Yenisei, and could therefore
+survey the whole of its wide course.
+
+"Do you see a boat?" asked Michael, casting his eyes
+eagerly about from one side to the other, mechanically, no
+doubt, as if he could really see.
+
+"It is scarcely light yet, brother," replied Nadia. "The
+fog is still thick, and we cannot see the water."
+
+"But I hear it roaring," said Michael.
+
+Indeed, from the fog issued a dull roaring sound. The
+waters being high rushed down with tumultuous violence.
+All three waited until the misty curtain should rise. The
+sun would not be long in dispersing the vapors.
+
+"Well?" asked Michael.
+
+"The fog is beginning to roll away, brother," replied
+Nadia, "and it will soon be clear."
+
+"Then you do not see the surface of the water yet?"
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"Have patience, little father," said Nicholas. "All this
+will soon disappear. Look! here comes the breeze! It is
+driving away the fog. The trees on the opposite hills are
+already appearing. It is sweeping, flying away. The
+kindly rays of the sun have condensed all that mass of mist.
+Ah! how beautiful it is, my poor fellow, and how unfor-
+tunate that you cannot see such a lovely sight!"
+
+"Do you see a boat?" asked Michael.
+
+"I see nothing of the sort," answered Nicholas.
+
+"Look well, friend, on this and the opposite bank, as far
+as your eye can reach. A raft, even a canoe?"
+
+Nicholas and Nadia, grasping the bushes on the edge of
+the cliff, bent over the water. The view they thus obtained
+was extensive. At this place the Yenisei is not less than a
+mile in width, and forms two arms, of unequal size, through
+which the waters flow swiftly. Between these arms lie sev-
+eral islands, covered with alders, willows, and poplars, look-
+ing like verdant ships, anchored in the river. Beyond rise
+the high hills of the Eastern shore, crowned with forests,
+whose tops were then empurpled with light. The Yenisei
+stretched on either side as far as the eye could reach. The
+beautiful panorama lay before them for a distance of fifty
+versts.
+
+But not a boat was to be seen. All had been taken away
+or destroyed, according to order. Unless the Tartars
+should bring with them materials for building a bridge of
+boats, their march towards Irkutsk would certainly be
+stopped for some time by this barrier, the Yenisei.
+
+"I remember," said Michael, "that higher up, on the out-
+skirts of Krasnoiarsk, there is a little quay. There the boats
+touch. Friend, let us go up the river, and see if some boat
+has not been forgotten on the bank."
+
+Nadia seized Michael's hand and started off at a rapid
+pace in the direction indicated. If only a boat or a barge
+large enough to hold the kibitka could be found, or even
+one that would carry just themselves, Michael would not
+hesitate to attempt the passage! Twenty minutes after, all
+three had reached the little quay, with houses on each side
+quite down to the water's edge. It was like a village stand-
+ing beyond the town of Krasnoiarsk.
+
+But not a boat was on the shore, not a barge at the little
+wharf, nothing even of which a raft could be made large
+enough to carry three people. Michael questioned Nicholas,
+who made the discouraging reply that the crossing appeared
+to him absolutely impracticable.
+
+"We shall cross!" answered Michael.
+
+The search was continued. They examined the houses
+on the shore, abandoned like all the rest of Krasnoiarsk.
+They had merely to push open the doors and enter. The
+cottages were evidently those of poor people, and quite
+empty. Nicholas visited one, Nadia entered another, and
+even Michael went here and there and felt about, hoping
+to light upon some article that might be useful.
+
+Nicholas and the girl had each fruitlessly rummaged these
+cottages and were about to give up the search, when they
+heard themselves called. Both ran to the bank and saw
+Michael standing on the threshold of a door.
+
+"Come!" he exclaimed. Nicholas and Nadia went
+towards him and followed him into the cottage.
+
+"What are these?" asked Michael, touching several ob-
+jects piled up in a corner.
+
+"They are leathern bottles," answered Nicholas.
+
+"Are they full?"
+
+"Yes, full of koumyss. We have found them very op-
+portunely to renew our provisions!"
+
+"Koumyss" is a drink made of mare's or camel's milk,
+and is very sustaining, and even intoxicating; so that
+Nicholas and his companions could not but congratulate
+themselves on the discovery.
+
+"Save one," said Michael, "but empty the others."
+
+"Directly, little father."
+
+"These will help us to cross the Yenisei."
+
+"And the raft?"
+
+"Will be the kibitka itself, which is light enough to float.
+Besides, we will sustain it, as well as the horse, with these
+bottles."
+
+"Well thought of, little father," exclaimed Nicholas,
+"and by God's help we will get safely over . . . though
+perhaps not in a straight line, for the current is very
+rapid!"
+
+"What does that matter?" replied Michael. "Let us
+get across first, and we shall soon find out the road to Ir-
+kutsk on the other side of the river."
+
+"To work, then," said Nicholas, beginning to empty the
+bottles.
+
+One full of koumyss was reserved, and the rest, with
+the air carefully fastened in, were used to form a float-
+ing apparatus. Two bottles were fastened to the horse's
+sides to support it in the water. Two others were attached
+to the shafts to keep them on a level with the body of the
+machine, thus transformed into a raft. This work was
+soon finished.
+
+"You will not be afraid, Nadia?" asked Michael.
+
+"No, brother," answered the girl.
+
+"And you, friend?"
+
+"I?" cried Nicholas. "I am now going to have one of
+my dreams realized -- that of sailing in a cart."
+
+At the spot where they were now standing, the bank
+sloped, and was suitable for the launching of the kibitka.
+The horse drew it into the water, and they were soon both
+floating. As to Serko, he was swimming bravely.
+
+The three passengers, seated in the vehicle, had with due
+precaution taken off their shoes and stockings; but, thanks
+to the bottles, the water did not even come over their ankles.
+Michael held the reins, and, according to Nicholas's direc-
+tions, guided the animal obliquely, but cautiously, so as not
+to exhaust him by struggling against the current. So long
+as the kibitka went with the current all was easy, and in
+a few minutes it had passed the quays of Krasnoiarsk. It
+drifted northwards, and it was soon evident that it would
+only reach the opposite bank far below the town. But that
+mattered little. The crossing would have been made with-
+out great difficulty, even on this imperfect apparatus, had
+the current been regular; but, unfortunately, there were
+whirlpools in numbers, and soon the kibitka, notwithstand-
+ing all Michael's efforts, was irresistibly drawn into one of
+these.
+
+There the danger was great. The kibitka no longer
+drifted, but spun rapidly round, inclining towards the center
+of the eddy, like a rider in a circus. The horse could
+scarcely keep his head above water, and ran a great risk of
+being suffocated. Serko had been obliged to take refuge
+in the carriage.
+
+Michael knew what was happening. He felt himself
+drawn round in a gradually narrowing line, from which
+they could not get free. How he longed to see, to be bet-
+ter able to avoid this peril, but that was no longer possible.
+Nadia was silent, her hands clinging to the sides of the cart,
+which was inclining more and more towards the center of
+depression.
+
+And Nicholas, did he not understand the gravity of the
+situation? Was it with him phlegm or contempt of dan-
+ger, courage or indifference? Was his life valueless in his
+eyes, and, according to the Eastern expression, "an hotel
+for five days," which, whether one is willing or not, must
+be left the sixth? At any rate, the smile on his rosy face
+never faded for an instant.
+
+The kibitka was thus in the whirlpool, and the horse was
+nearly exhausted, when, all at once, Michael, throwing off
+such of his garments as might impede him, jumped into the
+water; then, seizing with a strong hand the bridle of the
+terrified horse, he gave him such an impulse that he managed
+to struggle out of the circle, and getting again into the cur-
+rent, the kibitka drifted along anew.
+
+"Hurrah!" exclaimed Nicholas.
+
+Two hours after leaving the wharf, the kibitka had
+crossed the widest arm of the river, and had landed on an
+island more than six versts below the starting point.
+
+There the horse drew the cart onto the bank, and an
+hour's rest was given to the courageous animal; then the
+island having been crossed under the shade of its mag-
+nificent birches, the kibitka found itself on the shore of the
+smaller arm of the Yenisei.
+
+This passage was much easier; no whirlpools broke the
+course of the river in this second bed; but the current was so
+rapid that the kibitka only reached the opposite side five
+versts below. They had drifted eleven versts in all.
+
+These great Siberian rivers across which no bridges have
+as yet been thrown, are serious obstacles to the facility of
+communication. All had been more or less unfortunate to
+Michael Strogoff. On the Irtych, the boat which carried
+him and Nadia had been attacked by Tartars. On the Obi,
+after his horse had been struck by a bullet, he had only by a
+miracle escaped from the horsemen who were pursuing him.
+In fact, this passage of the Yenisei had been performed the
+least disastrously.
+
+"That would not have been so amusing," exclaimed
+Nicholas, rubbing his hands, as they disembarked on the
+right bank of the river, "if it had not been so difficult."
+
+"That which has only been difficult to us, friend," an-
+swered Michael Strogoff, "will, perhaps, be impossible to the
+Tartars."
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+A HARE CROSSES THE ROAD
+
+MICHAEL STROGOFF might at last hope that the road to
+Irkutsk was clear. He had distanced the Tartars, now de-
+tained at Tomsk, and when the Emir's soldiers should arrive
+at Krasnoiarsk they would find only a deserted town.
+There being no communication between the two banks of
+the Yenisei, a delay of some days would be caused until a
+bridge of boats could be established, and to accomplish this
+would be a difficult undertaking. For the first time since
+the encounter with Ivan Ogareff at Omsk, the courier of the
+Czar felt less uneasy, and began to hope that no fresh
+obstacle would delay his progress.
+
+The road was good, for that part of it which extends
+between Krasnoiarsk and Irkutsk is considered the best in
+the whole journey; fewer jolts for travelers, large trees to
+shade them from the heat of the sun, sometimes forests of
+pines or cedars covering an extent of a hundred versts. It
+was no longer the wide steppe with limitless horizon; but
+the rich country was empty. Everywhere they came upon
+deserted villages. The Siberian peasantry had vanished.
+It was a desert, but a desert by order of the Czar.
+
+The weather was fine, but the air, which cooled during
+the night, took some time to get warm again. Indeed it
+was now near September, and in this high region the days
+were sensibly shortening. Autumn here lasts but a very
+little while, although this part of Siberian territory is not
+situated above the fifty-fifth parallel, that of Edinburgh
+and Copenhagen. However, winter succeeds summer al-
+most unexpectedly. These winters of Asiatic Russia may
+be said to be precocious, considering that during them the
+thermometer falls until the mercury is frozen nearly 42
+degrees below zero, and that 20 degrees below zero is con-
+sidered an unsupportable temperature.
+
+The weather favored our travelers. It was neither
+stormy nor rainy. The health of Nadia and Michael was
+good, and since leaving Tomsk they had gradually recovered
+from their past fatigues.
+
+As to Nicholas Pigassof, he had never been better in his
+life. To him this journey was a trip, an agreeable excur-
+sion in which he employed his enforced holiday.
+
+"Decidedly," said he, "this is pleasanter than sitting
+twelve hours a day, perched on a stool, working the manip-
+ulator!"
+
+Michael had managed to get Nicholas to make his horse
+quicken his pace. To obtain this result, he had confided
+to Nicholas that Nadia and he were on their way to join
+their father, exiled at Irkutsk, and that they were very
+anxious to get there. Certainly, it would not do to over-
+work the horse, for very probably they would not be able
+to exchange him for another; but by giving him frequent
+rests -- every ten miles, for instance -- forty miles in twenty-
+four hours could easily be accomplished. Besides, the ani-
+mal was strong, and of a race calculated to endure great
+fatigue. He was in no want of rich pasturage along the
+road, the grass being thick and abundant. Therefore, it
+was possible to demand an increase of work from him.
+
+Nicholas gave in to all these reasons. He was much
+moved at the situation of these two young people, going to
+share their father's exile. Nothing had ever appeared so
+touching to him. With what a smile he said to Nadia:
+"Divine goodness! what joy will Mr. Korpanoff feel, when
+his eyes behold you, when his arms open to receive you! If
+I go to Irkutsk -- and that appears very probable now -- will
+you permit me to be present at that interview! You will,
+will you not?" Then, striking his forehead: "But, I for-
+got, what grief too when he sees that his poor son is blind!
+Ah! everything is mingled in this world!"
+
+However, the result of all this was the kibitka went
+faster, and, according to Michael's calculations, now made
+almost eight miles an hour.
+
+After crossing the little river Biriousa, the kibitka reached
+Biriousensk on the morning of the 4th of September.
+There, very fortunately, for Nicholas saw that his provisions
+were becoming exhausted, he found in an oven a dozen
+"pogatchas," a kind of cake prepared with sheep's fat and
+a large supply of plain boiled rice. This increase was very
+opportune, for something would soon have been needed to
+replace the koumyss with which the kibitka had been stored
+at Krasnoiarsk.
+
+After a halt, the journey was continued in the afternoon.
+The distance to Irkutsk was not now much over three hun-
+dred miles. There was not a sign of the Tartar vanguard.
+Michael Strogoff had some grounds for hoping that his
+journey would not be again delayed, and that in eight days,
+or at most ten, he would be in the presence of the Grand
+Duke.
+
+On leaving Biriousinsk, a hare ran across the road, in
+front of the kibitka. "Ah!" exclaimed Nicholas.
+
+"What is the matter, friend?" asked Michael quickly,
+like a blind man whom the least sound arouses.
+
+"Did you not see?" said Nicholas, whose bright face
+had become suddenly clouded. Then he added, "Ah! no!
+you could not see, and it's lucky for you, little father!"
+
+"But I saw nothing," said Nadia.
+
+"So much the better! So much the better! But I -- I
+saw!"
+
+"What was it then?" asked Michael.
+
+"A hare crossing our road!" answered Nicholas.
+
+In Russia, when a hare crosses the path, the popular belief
+is that it is the sign of approaching evil. Nicholas, super-
+stitious like the greater number of Russians, stopped the
+kibitka.
+
+Michael understood his companion's hesitation, without
+sharing his credulity, and endeavored to reassure him,
+"There is nothing to fear, friend," said he.
+
+"Nothing for you, nor for her, I know, little father," an-
+swered Nicholas, "but for me!"
+
+"It is my fate," he continued. And he put his horse in
+motion again. However, in spite of these forebodings the
+day passed without any accident.
+
+At twelve o'clock the next day, the 6th of September,
+the kibitka halted in the village of Alsalevok, which was
+as deserted as the surrounding country. There, on a door-
+step, Nadia found two of those strong-bladed knives used
+by Siberian hunters. She gave one to Michael, who con-
+cealed it among his clothes, and kept the other herself.
+
+Nicholas had not recovered his usual spirits. The ill-
+omen had affected him more than could have been believed,
+and he who formerly was never half an hour without speak-
+ing, now fell into long reveries from which Nadia found it
+difficult to arouse him. The kibitka rolled swiftly along
+the road. Yes, swiftly! Nicholas no longer thought of
+being so careful of his horse, and was as anxious to arrive
+at his journey's end as Michael himself. Notwithstanding
+his fatalism, and though resigned, he would not believe him-
+self in safety until within the walls of Irkutsk. Many Rus-
+sians would have thought as he did, and more than one
+would have turned his horse and gone back again, after a
+hare had crossed his path.
+
+Some observations made by him, the justice of which was
+proved by Nadia transmitting them to Michael, made them
+fear that their trials were not yet over. Though the land
+from Krasnoiarsk had been respected in its natural produc-
+tions, its forests now bore trace of fire and steel; and it was
+evident that some large body of men had passed that way.
+
+Twenty miles before Nijni-Oudinsk, the indications of
+recent devastation could not be mistaken, and it was im-
+possible to attribute them to others than the Tartars. It
+was not only that the fields were trampled by horse's feet,
+and that trees were cut down. The few houses scattered
+along the road were not only empty, some had been partly
+demolished, others half burnt down. The marks of bullets
+could be seen on their walls.
+
+Michael's anxiety may be imagined. He could no longer
+doubt that a party of Tartars had recently passed that way,
+and yet it was impossible that they could be the Emir's
+soldiers, for they could not have passed without being seen.
+But then, who were these new invaders, and by what out-
+of-the-way path across the steppe had they been able to join
+the highroad to Irkutsk? With what new enemies was the
+Czar's courier now to meet?
+
+He did not communicate his apprehensions either to
+Nicholas or Nadia, not wishing to make them uneasy. Be-
+sides, he had resolved to continue his way, as long as no in-
+surmountable obstacle stopped him. Later, he would see
+what it was best to do. During the ensuing day, the recent
+passage of a large body of foot and horse became more and
+more apparent. Smoke was seen above the horizon. The
+kibitka advanced cautiously. Several houses in deserted
+villages still burned, and could not have been set on fire more
+than four and twenty hours before.
+
+At last, during the day, on the 8th of September, the
+kibitka stopped suddenly. The horse refused to advance.
+Serko barked furiously.
+
+"What is the matter?" asked Michael.
+
+"A corpse!" replied Nicholas, who had leapt out of the
+kibitka. The body was that of a moujik, horribly mutilated,
+and already cold. Nicholas crossed himself. Then,
+aided by Michael, he carried the body to the side of the road.
+He would have liked to give it decent burial, that the wild
+beasts of the steppe might not feast on the miserable re-
+mains, but Michael could not allow him the time.
+
+"Come, friend, come!" he exclaimed, "we must not de-
+lay, even for an hour!" And the kibitka was driven on.
+
+Besides, if Nicholas had wished to render the last duties
+to all the dead bodies they were now to meet with on the
+Siberian highroad, he would have had enough to do! As
+they approached Nijni-Oudinsk, they were found by
+twenties, stretched on the ground.
+
+It was, however, necessary to follow this road until it
+was manifestly impossible to do so longer without falling
+into the hands of the invaders. The road they were follow-
+ing could not be abandoned, and yet the signs of devastation
+and ruin increased at every village they passed through.
+The blood of the victims was not yet dry. As to gaining
+information about what had occurred, that was impossible.
+There was not a living being left to tell the tale.
+
+About four o'clock in the afternoon of this day, Nicholas
+caught sight of the tall steeples of the churches of Nijni-
+Oudinsk. Thick vapors, which could not have been clouds,
+were floating around them.
+
+Nicholas and Nadia looked, and communicated the result
+of their observations to Michael. They must make up their
+minds what to do. If the town was abandoned, they could
+pass through without risk, but if, by some inexplicable
+maneuver, the Tartars occupied it, they must at every cost
+avoid the place.
+
+"Advance cautiously," said Michael Strogoff, "but ad-
+vance!"
+
+A verst was soon traversed.
+
+"Those are not clouds, that is smoke!" exclaimed Nadia.
+"Brother, they are burning the town!"
+
+It was, indeed, only too plain. Flashes of light appeared
+in the midst of the vapor. It became thicker and thicker as
+it mounted upwards. But were they Tartars who had done
+this? They might be Russians, obeying the orders of the
+Grand Duke. Had the government of the Czar determined
+that from Krasnoiarsk, from the Yenisei, not a town, not a
+village should offer a refuge to the Emir's soldiers? What
+was Michael to do?
+
+He was undecided. However, having weighed the pros
+and cons, he thought that whatever might be the difficulties
+of a journey across the steppe without a beaten path, he
+ought not to risk capture a second time by the Tartars. He
+was just proposing to Nicholas to leave the road, when a
+shot was heard on their right. A ball whistled, and the
+horse of the kibitka fell dead, shot through the head.
+
+A dozen horsemen dashed forward, and the kibitka was
+surrounded. Before they knew where they were, Michael,
+Nadia, and Nicholas were prisoners, and were being dragged
+rapidly towards Nijni-Oudinsk.
+
+Michael, in this second attack, had lost none of his pres-
+ence of mind. Being unable to see his enemies, he had not
+thought of defending himself. Even had he possessed the
+use of his eyes, he would not have attempted it. The con-
+sequences would have been his death and that of his com-
+panions. But, though he could not see, he could listen and
+understand what was said.
+
+From their language he found that these soldiers were
+Tartars, and from their words, that they preceded the in-
+vading army.
+
+In short, what Michael learnt from the talk at the present
+moment, as well as from the scraps of conversation he over-
+heard later, was this. These men were not under the direct
+orders of the Emir, who was now detained beyond the
+Yenisei. They made part of a third column chiefly com-
+posed of Tartars from the khanats of Khokland and Koon-
+dooz, with which Feofar's army was to affect a junction in
+the neighborhood of Irkutsk.
+
+By Ogareff's advice, in order to assure the success of the
+invasion in the Eastern provinces, this column had skirted
+the base of the Altai Mountains. Pillaging and ravaging,
+it had reached the upper course of the Yenisei. There,
+guessing what had been done at Krasnoiarsk by order of the
+Czar, and to facilitate the passage of the river to the Emir's
+troops, this column had launched a flotilla of boats, which
+would enable Feofar to cross and r‚sum‚ the road to Irkutsk.
+Having done this, it had descended the valley of the Yenisei
+and struck the road on a level with Alsalevsk. From this
+little town began the frightful course of ruin which forms
+the chief part of Tartar warfare. Nijni-Oudinsk had
+shared the common fate, and the Tartars, to the number of
+fifty thousand, had now quitted it to take up a position be-
+fore Irkutsk. Before long, they would be reinforced by the
+Emir's troops.
+
+Such was the state of affairs at this date, most serious
+for this isolated part of Eastern Siberia, and for the com-
+paratively few defenders of its capital.
+
+It can be imagined with what thoughts Michael's mind
+was now occupied! Who could have been astonished had
+he, in his present situation, lost all hope and all courage?
+Nothing of the sort, however; his lips muttered no other
+words than these: "I will get there!"
+
+Half an hour after the attack of the Tartar horsemen,
+Michael Strogoff, Nadia, and Nicholas entered Nijni-
+Oudinsk. The faithful dog followed them, though at a
+distance. They could not stay in the town, as it was in
+flames, and about to be left by the last of the marauders.
+The prisoners were therefore thrown on horses and hurried
+away; Nicholas resigned as usual, Nadia, her faith in
+Michael unshaken, and Michael himself, apparently indiffer-
+ent, but ready to seize any opportunity of escaping.
+
+The Tartars were not long in perceiving that one of their
+prisoners was blind, and their natural barbarity led them to
+make game of their unfortunate victim. They were travel-
+ing fast. Michael's horse, having no one to guide him,
+often started aside, and so made confusion among the ranks.
+This drew on his rider such abuse and brutality as wrung
+Nadia's heart, and filled Nicholas with indignation. But
+what could they do? They could not speak the Tartar lan-
+guage, and their assistance was mercilessly refused. Soon
+it occurred to these men, in a refinement of cruelty, to ex-
+change the horse Michael was riding for one which was
+blind. The motive of the change was explained by a re-
+mark which Michael overheard, "Perhaps that Russian can
+see, after all!"
+
+Michael was placed on this horse, and the reins ironically
+put into his hand. Then, by dint of lashing, throwing
+stones, and shouting, the animal was urged into a gallop.
+The horse, not being guided by his rider, blind as himself,
+sometimes ran into a tree, sometimes went quite off the road
+-- in consequence, collisions and falls, which might have
+been extremely dangerous.
+
+Michael did not complain. Not a murmur escaped him.
+When his horse fell, he waited until it got up. It was, in-
+deed, soon assisted up, and the cruel fun continued. At
+sight of this wicked treatment, Nicholas could not contain
+himself; he endeavored to go to his friend's aid. He was
+prevented, and treated brutally.
+
+This game would have been prolonged, to the Tartars'
+great amusement, had not a serious accident put an end to it.
+On the 10th of September the blind horse ran away, and
+made straight for a pit, some thirty or forty feet deep, at
+the side of the road.
+
+Nicholas tried to go after him. He was held back. The
+horse, having no guide, fell with his rider to the bottom.
+Nicholas and Nadia uttered a piercing cry! They believed
+that their unfortunate companion had been killed.
+
+However, when they went to his assistance, it was found
+that Michael, having been able to throw himself out of the
+saddle, was unhurt, but the miserable horse had two legs
+broken, and was quite useless. He was left there to die
+without being put out of his suffering, and Michael, fastened
+to a Tartar's saddle, was obliged to follow the detachment
+on foot.
+
+Even now, not a protest, not a complaint! He marched
+with a rapid step, scarcely drawn by the cord which tied
+him. He was still "the Man of Iron," of whom General
+Kissoff had spoken to the Czar!
+
+The next day, the 11th of September, the detachment
+passed through the village of Chibarlinskoe. Here an in-
+cident occurred which had serious consequences. It was
+nightfall. The Tartar horsemen, having halted, were more
+or less intoxicated. They were about to start. Nadia,
+who till then, by a miracle, had been respectfully treated by
+the soldiers, was insulted by one of them.
+
+Michael could not see the insult, nor the insulter, but
+Nicholas saw for him. Then, quietly, without thinking,
+without perhaps knowing what he was doing, Nicholas
+walked straight up to the man, and, before the latter could
+make the least movement to stop him, had seized a pistol
+from his holster and discharged it full at his breast.
+
+The officer in command of the detachment hastened up on
+hearing the report. The soldiers would have cut the unfor-
+tunate Nicholas to pieces, but at a sign from their officer, he
+was bound instead, placed across a horse, and the detach-
+ment galloped off.
+
+The rope which fastened Michael, gnawed through by
+him, broke by the sudden start of the horse, and the half-
+tipsy rider galloped on without perceiving that his prisoner
+had escaped.
+
+Michael and Nadia found themselves alone on the road.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+IN THE STEPPE
+
+MICHAEL STROGOFF and Nadia were once more as free as
+they had been in the journey from Perm to the banks of
+the Irtych. But how the conditions under which they trav-
+eled were altered! Then, a comfortable tarantass, fresh
+horses, well-kept post-horses assured the rapidity of their
+journey. Now they were on foot; it was utterly impossible
+to procure any other means of locomotion, they were with-
+out resources, not knowing how to obtain even food, and
+they had still nearly three hundred miles to go! Moreover,
+Michael could now only see with Nadia's eyes.
+
+As to the friend whom chance had given them, they had
+just lost him, and fearful might be his fate. Michael had
+thrown himself down under the brushwood at the side of
+the road. Nadia stood beside him, waiting for the word
+from him to continue the march.
+
+It was ten o'clock. The sun had more than three hours
+before disappeared below the horizon. There was not a
+house in sight. The last of the Tartars was lost in the dis-
+tance. Michael and Nadia were quite alone.
+
+"What will they do with our friend?" exclaimed the
+girl. "Poor Nicholas! Our meeting will have been fatal
+to him!" Michael made no response.
+
+"Michael," continued Nadia, "do you not know that he
+defended you when you were the Tartars' sport; that he
+risked his life for me?"
+
+Michael was still silent. Motionless, his face buried in
+his hands; of what was he thinking? Perhaps, although
+he did not answer, he heard Nadia speak.
+
+Yes! he heard her, for when the young girl added,
+"Where shall I lead you, Michael?"
+
+"To Irkutsk!" he replied.
+
+"By the highroad?"
+
+"Yes, Nadia."
+
+Michael was still the same man who had sworn, what-
+ever happened, to accomplish his object. To follow the
+highroad, was certainly to go the shortest way. If the
+vanguard of Feofar-Khan's troops appeared, it would then
+be time to strike across the country.
+
+Nadia took Michael's hand, and they started.
+
+The next morning, the 13th of September, twenty versts
+further, they made a short halt in the village of Joulounov-
+skoe. It was burnt and deserted. All night Nadia had
+tried to see if the body of Nicholas had not been left on the
+road, but it was in vain that she looked among the ruins, and
+searched among the dead. Was he reserved for some cruel
+torture at Irkutsk?
+
+Nadia, exhausted with hunger, was fortunate enough to
+find in one of the houses a quantity of dried meat and
+"soukharis," pieces of bread, which, dried by evaporation,
+preserve their nutritive qualities for an indefinite time.
+
+Michael and the girl loaded themselves with as much
+as they could carry. They had thus a supply of food for
+several days, and as to water, there would be no want of
+that in a district rendered fertile by the numerous little
+affluents of the Angara.
+
+They continued their journey. Michael walked with a
+firm step, and only slackened his pace for his companion's
+sake. Nadia, not wishing to retard him, obliged herself to
+walk. Happily, he could not see to what a miserable state
+fatigue had reduced her.
+
+However, Michael guessed it. "You are quite done up,
+poor child," he said sometimes.
+
+"No," she would reply.
+
+"When you can no longer walk, I will carry you."
+
+"Yes, Michael."
+
+During this day they came to the little river Oka, but it
+was fordable, and they had no difficulty in crossing. The
+sky was cloudy and the temperature moderate. There was
+some fear that the rain might come on, which would much
+have increased their misery. A few showers fell, but they
+did not last.
+
+They went on as before, hand in hand, speaking little,
+Nadia looking about on every side; twice a day they halted.
+Six hours of the night were given to sleep. In a few huts
+Nadia again found a little mutton; but, contrary to Michael's
+hopes, there was not a single beast of burden in the country;
+horses, camels -- all had been either killed or carried off.
+They must still continue to plod on across this weary steppe
+on foot.
+
+The third Tartar column, on its way to Irkutsk, had left
+plain traces: here a dead horse, there an abandoned cart.
+The bodies of unfortunate Siberians lay along the road,
+principally at the entrances to villages. Nadia, overcoming
+her repugnance, looked at all these corpses!
+
+The chief danger lay, not before, but behind. The ad-
+vance guard of the Emir's army, commanded by Ivan
+Ogareff, might at any moment appear. The boats sent
+down the lower Yenisei must by this time have reached
+Krasnoiarsk and been made use of. The road was there-
+fore open to the invaders. No Russian force could be op-
+posed to them between Krasnoiarsk and Lake Baikal,
+Michael therefore expected before long the appearance of
+the Tartar scouts.
+
+At each halt, Nadia climbed some hill and looked anx-
+iously to the Westward, but as yet no cloud of dust had
+signaled the approach of a troop of horse.
+
+Then the march was resumed; and when Michael felt that
+he was dragging poor Nadia forward too rapidly, he went
+at a slower pace. They spoke little, and only of Nicholas.
+The young girl recalled all that this companion of a few days
+had done for them.
+
+In answering, Michael tried to give Nadia some hope
+of which he did not feel a spark himself, for he well knew
+that the unfortunate fellow would not escape death.
+
+One day Michael said to the girl, "You never speak to me
+of my mother, Nadia."
+
+His mother! Nadia had never wished to do so. Why
+renew his grief? Was not the old Siberian dead? Had
+not her son given the last kiss to her corpse stretched on
+the plain of Tomsk?
+
+"Speak to me of her, Nadia," said Michael. "Speak --
+you will please me."
+
+And then Nadia did what she had not done before. She
+told all that had passed between Marfa and herself since
+their meeting at Omsk, where they had seen each other for
+the first time. She said how an inexplicable instinct had led
+her towards the old prisoner without knowing who she was,
+and what encouragement she had received in return. At
+that time Michael Strogoff had been to her but Nicholas
+Korpanoff.
+
+"Whom I ought always to have been," replied Michael,
+his brow darkening.
+
+Then later he added, "I have broken my oath, Nadia. I
+had sworn not to see my mother!"
+
+"But you did not try to see her, Michael," replied Nadia.
+"Chance alone brought you into her presence."
+
+"I had sworn, whatever might happen, not to betray
+myself."
+
+"Michael, Michael! at sight of the lash raised upon
+Marfa, could you refrain? No! No oath could prevent a
+son from succoring his mother!"
+
+"I have broken my oath, Nadia," returned Michael.
+"May God and the Father pardon me!"
+
+"Michael," resumed the girl, "I have a question to ask
+you. Do not answer it if you think you ought not. Noth-
+ing from you would vex me!"
+
+"Speak, Nadia."
+
+"Why, now that the Czar's letter has been taken from
+you, are you so anxious to reach Irkutsk?"
+
+Michael tightly pressed his companion's hand, but he did
+not answer.
+
+"Did you know the contents of that letter before you
+left Moscow?"
+
+"No, I did not know."
+
+"Must I think, Michael, that the wish alone to place me
+in my father's hands draws you toward Irkutsk?"
+
+"No, Nadia," replied Michael, gravely. "I should de-
+ceive you if I allowed you to believe that it was so. I go
+where duty orders me to go. As to taking you to Irkutsk,
+is it not you, Nadia, who are now taking me there? Do I
+not see with your eyes; and is it not your hand that guides
+me? Have you not repaid a hundred-fold the help which
+I was able to give you at first? I do not know if fate will
+cease to go against us; but the day on which you thank me
+for having placed you in your father's hands, I in my turn
+will thank you for having led me to Irkutsk."
+
+"Poor Michael!" answered Nadia, with emotion. "Do
+not speak so. That does not answer me. Michael, why,
+now, are you in such haste to reach Irkutsk?"
+
+"Because I must be there before Ivan Ogareff," ex-
+claimed Michael.
+
+"Even now?"
+
+"Even now, and I will be there, too!"
+
+In uttering these words, Michael did not speak solely
+through hatred to the traitor. Nadia understood that her
+companion had not told, or could not tell, her all.
+
+On the 15th of September, three days later, the two
+reached the village of Kouitounskoe. The young girl suf-
+fered dreadfully. Her aching feet could scarcely support
+her; but she fought, she struggled, against her weariness,
+and her only thought was this: "Since he cannot see me,
+I will go on till I drop."
+
+There were no obstacles on this part of the journey, no
+danger either since the departure of the Tartars, only much
+fatigue. For three days it continued thus. It was plain
+that the third invading column was advancing rapidly in the
+East; that could be seen by the ruins which they left
+after them -- the cold cinders and the already decomposing
+corpses.
+
+There was nothing to be seen in the West; the Emir's
+advance-guard had not yet appeared. Michael began to
+consider the various reasons which might have caused this
+delay. Was a sufficient force of Russians directly mena-
+cing Tomsk or Krasnoiarsk? Did the third column, isolated
+from the others, run a risk of being cut off? If this was
+the case, it would be easy for the Grand Duke to defend
+Irkutsk, and any time gained against an invasion was a step
+towards repulsing it. Michael sometimes let his thoughts
+run on these hopes, but he soon saw their improbability, and
+felt that the preservation of the Grand Duke depended alone
+on him.
+
+Nadia dragged herself along. Whatever might be her
+moral energy, her physical strength would soon fail her.
+Michael knew it only too well. If he had not been blind,
+Nadia would have said to him, "Go, Michael, leave me in
+some hut! Reach Irkutsk! Accomplish your mission!
+See my father! Tell him where I am! Tell him that I
+wait for him, and you both will know where to find me!
+Start! I am not afraid! I will hide myself from the
+Tartars! I will take care of myself for him, for you! Go,
+Michael! I can go no farther!"
+
+Many times Nadia was obliged to stop. Michael then
+took her in his strong arms and, having no longer to think
+of her fatigue, walked more rapidly and with his indefat-
+igable step.
+
+On the 18th of September, at ten in the evening,
+Kimilteiskoe was at last entered. From the top of a hill,
+Nadia saw in the horizon a long light line. It was the
+Dinka River. A few lightning flashes were reflected in the
+water; summer lightning, without thunder. Nadia led her
+companion through the ruined village. The cinders were
+quite cold. The last of the Tartars had passed through at
+least five or six days before.
+
+Beyond the village, Nadia sank down on a stone bench.
+"Shall we make a halt?" asked Michael.
+
+"It is night, Michael," answered Nadia. "Do you not
+want to rest a few hours?"
+
+"I would rather have crossed the Dinka," replied
+Michael, "I should like to put that between us and the
+Emir's advance-guard. But you can scarcely drag yourself
+along, my poor Nadia!"
+
+"Come, Michael," returned Nadia, seizing her com-
+panion's hand and drawing him forward.
+
+Two or three versts further the Dinka flowed across the
+Irkutsk road. The young girl wished to attempt this last
+effort asked by her companion. She found her way by the
+light from the flashes. They were then crossing a bound-
+less desert, in the midst of which was lost the little river.
+Not a tree nor a hillock broke the flatness. Not a breath
+disturbed the atmosphere, whose calmness would allow the
+slightest sound to travel an immense distance.
+
+Suddenly, Michael and Nadia stopped, as if their feet had
+been fast to the ground. The barking of a dog came across
+the steppe. "Do you hear?" said Nadia.
+
+Then a mournful cry succeeded it -- a despairing cry, like
+the last appeal of a human being about to die.
+
+"Nicholas! Nicholas!" cried the girl, with a foreboding
+of evil. Michael, who was listening, shook his head.
+
+"Come, Michael, come," said Nadia. And she who just
+now was dragging herself with difficulty along, suddenly
+recovered strength, under violent excitement.
+
+"We have left the road," said Michael, feeling that he
+was treading no longer on powdery soil but on short grass.
+
+"Yes, we must!" returned Nadia. "It was there, on the
+right, from which the cry came!"
+
+In a few minutes they were not more than half a verst
+from the river. A second bark was heard, but, although
+more feeble, it was certainly nearer. Nadia stopped.
+
+"Yes!" said Michael. "It is Serko barking! . . . He
+has followed his master!"
+
+"Nicholas!" called the girl. Her cry was unanswered.
+
+Michael listened. Nadia gazed over the plain illumined
+now and again with electric light, but she saw nothing.
+And yet a voice was again raised, this time murmuring
+in a plaintive tone, "Michael!"
+
+Then a dog, all bloody, bounded up to Nadia.
+
+It was Serko! Nicholas could not be far off! He alone
+could have murmured the name of Michael! Where was
+he? Nadia had no strength to call again. Michael, crawl-
+ing on the ground, felt about with his hands.
+
+Suddenly Serko uttered a fresh bark and darted towards
+a gigantic bird which had swooped down. It was a vulture.
+When Serko ran towards it, it rose, but returning struck at
+the dog. The latter leapt up at it. A blow from the
+formidable beak alighted on his head, and this time Serko
+fell back lifeless on the ground.
+
+At the same moment a cry of horror escaped Nadia.
+"There . . . there!" she exclaimed.
+
+A head issued from the ground! She had stumbled
+against it in the darkness.
+
+Nadia fell on her knees beside it. Nicholas buried up to
+his neck, according to the atrocious Tartar custom, had been
+left in the steppe to die of thirst, and perhaps by the teeth
+of wolves or the beaks of birds of prey!
+
+Frightful torture for the victim imprisoned in the ground
+-- the earth pressed down so that he cannot move, his arms
+bound to his body like those of a corpse in its coffin! The
+miserable wretch, living in the mold of clay from which
+he is powerless to break out, can only long for the death
+which is so slow in coming!
+
+There the Tartars had buried their prisoner three days
+before! For three days, Nicholas waited for the help
+which now came too late! The vultures had caught sight
+of the head on a level with the ground, and for some hours
+the dog had been defending his master against these
+ferocious birds!
+
+Michael dug at the ground with his knife to release his
+friend! The eyes of Nicholas, which till then had been
+closed, opened.
+
+He recognized Michael and Nadia. "Farewell, my
+friends!" he murmured. "I am glad to have seen you
+again! Pray for me!"
+
+Michael continued to dig, though the ground, having been
+tightly rammed down, was as hard as stone, and he managed
+at last to get out the body of the unhappy man. He listened
+if his heart was still beating. . . . It was still!
+
+He wished to bury him, that he might not be left exposed;
+and the hole into which Nicholas had been placed when liv-
+ing, was enlarged, so that he might be laid in it -- dead! The
+faithful Serko was laid by his master.
+
+At that moment, a noise was heard on the road, about
+half a verst distant. Michael Strogoff listened. It was evi-
+dently a detachment of horse advancing towards the Dinka.
+"Nadia, Nadia!" he said in a low voice.
+
+Nadia, who was kneeling in prayer, arose. "Look,
+look!" said he.
+
+"The Tartars!" she whispered.
+
+It was indeed the Emir's advance-guard, passing rapidly
+along the road to Irkutsk.
+
+"They shall not prevent me from burying him!" said
+Michael. And he continued his work.
+
+Soon, the body of Nicholas, the hands crossed on the
+breast, was laid in the grave. Michael and Nadia, kneeling,
+prayed a last time for the poor fellow, inoffensive and good,
+who had paid for his devotion towards them with his life.
+
+"And now," said Michael, as he threw in the earth, "the
+wolves of the steppe will not devour him."
+
+Then he shook his fist at the troop of horsemen who were
+passing. "Forward, Nadia!" he said.
+
+Michael could not follow the road, now occupied by the
+Tartars. He must cross the steppe and turn to Irkutsk.
+He had not now to trouble himself about crossing the Dinka.
+Nadia could not move, but she could see for him. He
+took her in his arms and went on towards the southwest of
+the province.
+
+A hundred and forty miles still remained to be traversed.
+How was the distance to be performed? Should they not
+succumb to such fatigue? On what were they to live on the
+way? By what superhuman energy were they to pass the
+slopes of the Sayansk Mountains? Neither he nor Nadia
+could answer this!
+
+And yet, twelve days after, on the 2d of October, at six
+o'clock in the evening, a wide sheet of water lay at Michael
+Strogoff's feet. It was Lake Baikal.
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+BAIKAL AND ANGARA
+
+LAKE BAIKAL is situated seventeen hundred feet above
+the level of the sea. Its length is about six hundred miles,
+its breadth seventy. Its depth is not known. Madame de
+Bourboulon states that, according to the boatmen, it likes to
+be spoken of as "Madam Sea." If it is called "Sir Lake,"
+it immediately lashes itself into fury. However, it is re-
+ported and believed by the Siberians that a Russian is never
+drowned in it.
+
+This immense basin of fresh water, fed by more than
+three hundred rivers, is surrounded by magnificent volcanic
+mountains. It has no other outlet than the Angara, which
+after passing Irkutsk throws itself into the Yenisei, a little
+above the town of Yeniseisk. As to the mountains which
+encase it, they form a branch of the Toungouzes, and are
+derived from the vast system of the Altai.
+
+In this territory, subject to peculiar climatical conditions,
+the autumn appears to be absorbed in the precocious winter.
+It was now the beginning of October. The sun set at five
+o'clock in the evening, and during the long nights the tem-
+perature fell to zero. The first snows, which would last till
+summer, already whitened the summits of the neighboring
+hills. During the Siberian winter this inland sea is frozen
+over to a thickness of several feet, and is crossed by the
+sleighs of caravans.
+
+Either because there are people who are so wanting in
+politeness as to call it "Sir Lake," or for some more
+meteorological reason, Lake Baikal is subject to violent
+tempests. Its waves, short like those of all inland seas, are
+much feared by the rafts, prahms, and steamboats, which
+furrow it during the summer.
+
+It was the southwest point of the lake which Michael
+had now reached, carrying Nadia, whose whole life, so to
+speak, was concentrated in her eyes. But what could these
+two expect, in this wild region, if it was not to die of ex-
+haustion and famine? And yet, what remained of the long
+journey of four thousand miles for the Czar's courier to
+reach his end? Nothing but forty miles on the shore of
+the lake up to the mouth of the Angara, and sixty miles
+from the mouth of the Angara to Irkutsk; in all, a hundred
+miles, or three days' journey for a strong man, even on foot.
+
+Could Michael Strogoff still be that man?
+
+Heaven, no doubt, did not wish to put him to this trial.
+The fatality which had hitherto pursued his steps seemed
+for a time to spare him. This end of the Baikal, this part
+of the steppe, which he believed to be a desert, which it
+usually is, was not so now. About fifty people were col-
+lected at the angle formed by the end of the lake.
+
+Nadia immediately caught sight of this group, when
+Michael, carrying her in his arms, issued from the mountain
+pass. The girl feared for a moment that it was a Tartar
+detachment, sent to beat the shores of the Baikal, in which
+case flight would have been impossible to them both. But
+Nadia was soon reassured.
+
+"Russians!" she exclaimed. And with this last effort,
+her eyes closed and her head fell on Michael's breast.
+
+But they had been seen, and some of these Russians,
+running to them, led the blind man and the girl to a little
+point at which was moored a raft.
+
+The raft was just going to start. These Russians were
+fugitives of different conditions, whom the same interest
+had united at Lake Baikal. Driven back by the Tartar
+scouts, they hoped to obtain a refuge at Irkutsk, but not
+being able to get there by land, the invaders having occupied
+both banks of the Angara, they hoped to reach it by descend-
+ing the river which flows through the town.
+
+Their plan made Michael's heart leap; a last chance was
+before him, but he had strength to conceal this, wishing to
+keep his incognito more strictly than ever.
+
+The fugitives' plan was very simple. A current in the
+lake runs along by the upper bank to the mouth of the
+Angara; this current they hoped to utilize, and with its as-
+sistance to reach the outlet of Lake Baikal. From this point
+to Irkutsk, the rapid waters of the river would bear them
+along at a rate of eight miles an hour. In a day and a half
+they might hope to be in sight of the town.
+
+No kind of boat was to be found; they had been obliged
+to make one; a raft, or rather a float of wood, similar to
+those which usually are drifted down Siberian rivers, was
+constructed. A forest of firs, growing on the bank, had
+supplied the necessary materials; the trunks, fastened to-
+gether with osiers, made a platform on which a hundred
+people could have easily found room.
+
+On board this raft Michael and Nadia were taken. The
+girl had returned to herself; some food was given to her as
+well as to her companion. Then, lying on a bed of leaves,
+she soon fell into a deep sleep.
+
+To those who questioned him, Michael Strogoff said
+nothing of what had taken place at Tomsk. He gave him-
+self out as an inhabitant of Krasnoiarsk, who had not been
+able to get to Irkutsk before the Emir's troops arrived on
+the left bank of the Dinka, and he added that, very prob-
+ably, the bulk of the Tartar forces had taken up a position
+before the Siberian capital.
+
+There was not a moment to be lost; besides, the cold
+was becoming more and more severe. During the night
+the temperature fell below zero; ice was already forming
+on the surface of the Baikal. Although the raft managed
+to pass easily over the lake, it might not be so easy between
+the banks of the Angara, should pieces of ice be found to
+block up its course.
+
+At eight in the evening the moorings were cast off, and
+the raft drifted in the current along the shore. It was
+steered by means of long poles, under the management of
+several muscular moujiks. An old Baikal boatman took
+command of the raft. He was a man of sixty-five, browned
+by the sun, and lake breezes. A thick white beard flowed
+over his chest; a fur cap covered his head; his aspect was
+grave and austere. His large great-coat, fastened in at the
+waist, reached down to his heels. This taciturn old fellow
+was seated in the stern, and issued his commands by ges-
+tures. Besides, the chief work consisted in keeping the raft
+in the current, which ran along the shore, without drifting
+out into the open.
+
+It has been already said that Russians of all conditions
+had found a place on the raft. Indeed, to the poor moujiks,
+the women, old men, and children, were joined two or three
+pilgrims, surprised on their journey by the invasion; a few
+monks, and a priest. The pilgrims carried a staff, a gourd
+hung at the belt, and they chanted psalms in a plaintive voice:
+one came from the Ukraine, another from the Yellow sea,
+and a third from the Finland provinces. This last, who was
+an aged man, carried at his waist a little padlocked collecting-
+box, as if it had been hung at a church door. Of all that
+he collected during his long and fatiguing pilgrimage, noth-
+ing was for himself; he did not even possess the key of the
+box, which would only be opened on his return.
+
+The monks came from the North of the Empire. Three
+months before they had left the town of Archangel. They
+had visited the sacred islands near the coast of Carelia, the
+convent of Solovetsk, the convent of Troitsa, those of Saint
+Antony and Saint Theodosia, at Kiev, that of Kazan, as well
+as the church of the Old Believers, and they were now on
+their way to Irkutsk, wearing the robe, the cowl, and the
+clothes of serge.
+
+As to the papa, or priest, he was a plain village pastor,
+one of the six hundred thousand popular pastors which the
+Russian Empire contains. He was clothed as miserably as
+the moujiks, not being above them in social position; in
+fact, laboring like a peasant on his plot of ground; baptis-
+ing, marrying, burying. He had been able to protect his
+wife and children from the brutality of the Tartars by
+sending them away into the Northern provinces. He him-
+self had stayed in his parish up to the last moment; then
+he was obliged to fly, and, the Irkutsk road being stopped,
+had come to Lake Baikal.
+
+These priests, grouped in the forward part of the raft,
+prayed at regular intervals, raising their voices in the silent
+night, and at the end of each sentence of their prayer, the
+"Slava Bogu," Glory to God! issued from their lips.
+
+No incident took place during the night. Nadia re-
+mained in a sort of stupor, and Michael watched beside
+her; sleep only overtook him at long intervals, and even
+then his brain did not rest. At break of day, the raft,
+delayed by a strong breeze, which counteracted the course
+of the current, was still forty versts from the mouth of the
+Angara. It seemed probable that the fugitives could not
+reach it before three or four o'clock in the evening. This
+did not trouble them; on the contrary, for they would then
+descend the river during the night, and the darkness would
+also favor their entrance into Irkutsk.
+
+The only anxiety exhibited at times by the old boatman was
+concerning the formation of ice on the surface of the water.
+The night had been excessively cold; pieces of ice could
+be seen drifting towards the West. Nothing was to be
+dreaded from these, since they could not drift into the
+Angara, having already passed the mouth; but pieces from
+the Eastern end of the lake might be drawn by the current
+between the banks of the river; this would cause difficulty,
+possibly delay, and perhaps even an insurmountable obstacle
+which would stop the raft.
+
+Michael therefore took immense interest in ascertaining
+what was the state of the lake, and whether any large num-
+ber of ice blocks appeared. Nadia being now awake, he
+questioned her often, and she gave him an account of all
+that was going on.
+
+Whilst the blocks were thus drifting, curious phenomena
+were taking place on the surface of the Baikal. Magnifi-
+cent jets, from springs of boiling water, shot up from some
+of those artesian wells which Nature has bored in the very
+bed of the lake. These jets rose to a great height and
+spread out in vapor, which was illuminated by the solar
+rays, and almost immediately condensed by the cold. This
+curious sight would have assuredly amazed a tourist travel-
+ing in peaceful times on this Siberian sea.
+
+At four in the evening, the mouth of the Angara was
+signaled by the old boatman, between the high granite rocks
+of the shore. On the right bank could be seen the little
+port of Livenitchnaia, its church, and its few houses built
+on the bank. But the serious thing was that the ice blocks
+from the East were already drifting between the banks of
+the Angara, and consequently were descending towards
+Irkutsk. However, their number was not yet great enough
+to obstruct the course of the raft, nor the cold great enough
+to increase their number.
+
+The raft arrived at the little port and there stopped.
+The old boatman wished to put into harbor for an hour, in
+order to make some repairs. The trunks threatened to
+separate, and it was important to fasten them more securely
+together to resist the rapid current of the Angara.
+
+The old boatman did not expect to receive any fresh
+fugitives at Livenitchnaia, and yet, the moment the raft
+touched, two passengers, issuing from a deserted house,
+ran as fast as they could towards the beach.
+
+Nadia seated on the raft, was abstractedly gazing at the
+shore. A cry was about to escape her. She seized
+Michael's hand, who at that moment raised his head.
+
+"What is the matter, Nadia?" he asked.
+
+"Our two traveling companions, Michael."
+
+"The Frenchman and the Englishman whom we met in
+the defiles of the Ural?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Michael started, for the strict incognito which he wished
+to keep ran a risk of being betrayed. Indeed, it was no
+longer as Nicholas Korpanoff that Jolivet and Blount would
+now see him, but as the true Michael Strogoff, Courier of
+the Czar. The two correspondents had already met him
+twice since their separation at the Ichim post-house -- the
+first time at the Zabediero camp, when he laid open Ivan
+Ogareff's face with the knout; the second time at Tomsk,
+when he was condemned by the Emir. They therefore
+knew who he was and what depended on him.
+
+Michael Strogoff rapidly made up his mind. "Nadia,"
+said he, "when they step on board, ask them to come to
+me!"
+
+It was, in fact, Blount and Jolivet, whom the course of
+events had brought to the port of Livenitchnaia, as it had
+brought Michael Strogoff. As we know, after having been
+present at the entry of the Tartars into Tomsk, they had
+departed before the savage execution which terminated the
+fete. They had therefore never suspected that their former
+traveling companion had not been put to death, but blinded
+by order of the Emir.
+
+Having procured horses they had left Tomsk the same
+evening, with the fixed determination of henceforward dat-
+ing their letters from the Russian camp of Eastern Siberia.
+They proceeded by forced marches towards Irkutsk. They
+hoped to distance Feofar-Khan, and would certainly have
+done so, had it not been for the unexpected apparition of
+the third column, come from the South, up the valley of
+the Yenisei. They had been cut off, as had been Michael,
+before being able even to reach the Dinka, and had been
+obliged to go back to Lake Baikal.
+
+They had been in the place for three days in much per-
+plexity, when the raft arrived. The fugitives' plan was
+explained to them. There was certainly a chance that they
+might be able to pass under cover of the night, and penetrate
+into Irkutsk. They resolved to make the attempt.
+
+Alcide directly communicated with the old boatman, and
+asked a passage for himself and his companion, offering to
+pay anything he demanded, whatever it might be.
+
+"No one pays here," replied the old man gravely; "every
+one risks his life, that is all!"
+
+The two correspondents came on board, and Nadia saw
+them take their places in the forepart of the raft. Harry
+Blount was still the reserved Englishman, who had scarcely
+addressed a word to her during the whole passage over the
+Ural Mountains. Alcide Jolivet seemed to be rather more
+grave than usual, and it may be acknowledged that his
+gravity was justified by the circumstances.
+
+Jolivet had, as has been said, taken his seat on the raft,
+when he felt a hand laid on his arm. Turning, he recog-
+nized Nadia, the sister of the man who was no longer
+Nicholas Korpanoff, but Michael Strogoff, Courier of the
+Czar. He was about to make an exclamation of surprise
+when he saw the young girl lay her finger on her lips.
+
+"Come," said Nadia. And with a careless air, Alcide
+rose and followed her, making a sign to Blount to accom-
+pany him.
+
+But if the surprise of the correspondents had been great
+at meeting Nadia on the raft it was boundless when they
+perceived Michael Strogoff, whom they had believed to be
+no longer living.
+
+Michael had not moved at their approach. Jolivet turned
+towards the girl. "He does not see you, gentlemen," said
+Nadia. "The Tartars have burnt out his eyes! My poor
+brother is blind!"
+
+A feeling of lively compassion exhibited itself on the
+faces of Blount and his companion. In a moment they
+were seated beside Michael, pressing his hand and waiting
+until he spoke to them.
+
+"Gentlemen," said Michael, in a low voice, "you ought
+not to know who I am, nor what I am come to do in Siberia.
+I ask you to keep my secret. Will you promise me to do
+so?"
+
+"On my honor," answered Jolivet.
+
+"On my word as a gentleman," added Blount.
+
+"Good, gentlemen."
+
+"Can we be of any use to you?" asked Harry Blount.
+"Could we not help you to accomplish your task?"
+
+"I prefer to act alone," replied Michael.
+
+"But those blackguards have destroyed your sight," said
+Alcide.
+
+"I have Nadia, and her eyes are enough for me!"
+
+In half an hour the raft left the little port of Livenitch-
+naia, and entered the river. It was five in the evening
+and getting dusk. The night promised to be dark and very
+cold also, for the temperature was already below zero.
+
+Alcide and Blount, though they had promised to keep
+Michael's secret, did not leave him. They talked in a low
+voice, and the blind man, adding what they told him to
+what he already knew, was able to form an exact idea of
+the state of things. It was certain that the Tartars had
+actually invested Irkutsk, and that the three columns had
+effected a junction. There was no doubt that the Emir
+and Ivan Ogareff were before the capital.
+
+But why did the Czar's courier exhibit such haste to get
+there, now that the Imperial letter could no longer be given
+by him to the Grand Duke, and when he did not even know
+the contents of it? Alcide Jolivet and Blount could not
+understand it any more than Nadia had done.
+
+No one spoke of the past, except when Jolivet thought
+it his duty to say to Michael, "We owe you some apology
+for not shaking hands with you when we separated at
+Ichim."
+
+"No, you had reason to think me a coward!"
+
+"At any rate," added the Frenchman, "you knouted the
+face of that villain finely, and he will carry the mark of it
+for a long time!"
+
+"No, not a long time!" replied Michael quietly.
+
+Half an hour after leaving Livenitchnaia, Blount and
+his companion were acquainted with the cruel trials through
+which Michael and his companion had successively passed.
+They could not but heartily admire his energy, which was
+only equaled by the young girl's devotion. Their opinion
+of Michael was exactly what the Czar had expressed at
+Moscow: "Indeed, this is a Man!"
+
+The raft swiftly threaded its way among the blocks of
+ice which were carried along in the current of the Angara.
+A moving panorama was displayed on both sides of the
+river, and, by an optical illusion, it appeared as if it was
+the raft which was motionless before a succession of pic-
+turesque scenes. Here were high granite cliffs, there wild
+gorges, down which rushed a torrent; sometimes appeared
+a clearing with a still smoking village, then thick pine forests
+blazing. But though the Tartars had left their traces on
+all sides, they themselves were not to be seen as yet, for they
+were more especially massed at the approaches to Irkutsk.
+
+All this time the pilgrims were repeating their prayers
+aloud, and the old boatman, shoving away the blocks of
+ice which pressed too near them, imperturbably steered the
+raft in the middle of the rapid current of the Angara.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+BETWEEN TWO BANKS
+
+BY eight in the evening, the country, as the state of the
+sky had foretold, was enveloped in complete darkness. The
+moon being new had not yet risen. From the middle of the
+river the banks were invisible. The cliffs were confounded
+with the heavy, low-hanging clouds. At intervals a puff of
+wind came from the east, but it soon died away in the
+narrow valley of the Angara.
+
+The darkness could not fail to favor in a considerable
+degree the plans of the fugitives. Indeed, although the
+Tartar outposts must have been drawn up on both banks,
+the raft had a good chance of passing unperceived. It was
+not likely either that the besiegers would have barred the
+river above Irkutsk, since they knew that the Russians
+could not expect any help from the south of the province.
+Besides this, before long Nature would herself establish a
+barrier, by cementing with frost the blocks of ice accumu-
+lated between the two banks.
+
+Perfect silence now reigned on board the raft. The
+voices of the pilgrims were no longer heard. They still
+prayed, but their prayer was but a murmur, which could
+not reach as far as either bank. The fugitives lay flat on
+the platform, so that the raft was scarcely above the level
+of the water. The old boatman crouched down forward
+among his men, solely occupied in keeping off the ice blocks,
+a maneuver which was performed without noise.
+
+The drifting of the ice was a favorable circumstance so
+long as it did not offer an insurmountable obstacle to the
+passage of the raft. If that object had been alone on the
+water, it would have run a risk of being seen, even in the
+darkness, but, as it was, it was confounded with these mov-
+ing masses, of all shapes and sizes, and the tumult caused
+by the crashing of the blocks against each other concealed
+likewise any suspicious noises.
+
+There was a sharp frost. The fugitives suffered cruelly,
+having no other shelter than a few branches of birch. They
+cowered down together, endeavoring to keep each other
+warm, the temperature being now ten degrees below freezing
+point. The wind, though slight, having passed over the
+snow-clad mountains of the east, pierced them through and
+through.
+
+Michael and Nadia, lying in the afterpart of the raft,
+bore this increase of suffering without complaint. Jolivet
+and Blount, placed near them, stood these first assaults of
+the Siberian winter as well as they could. No one now
+spoke, even in a low voice. Their situation entirely ab-
+sorbed them. At any moment an incident might occur,
+which they could not escape unscathed.
+
+For a man who hoped soon to accomplish his mission,
+Michael was singularly calm. Even in the gravest con-
+junctures, his energy had never abandoned him. He al-
+ready saw the moment when he would be at last allowed
+to think of his mother, of Nadia, of himself! He now only
+dreaded one final unhappy chance; this was, that the raft
+might be completely barred by ice before reaching Irkutsk.
+He thought but of this, determined beforehand, if neces-
+sary, to attempt some bold stroke.
+
+Restored by a few hours' rest, Nadia had regained the
+physical energy which misery had sometimes overcome, al-
+though without ever having shaken her moral energy. She
+thought, too, that if Michael had to make any fresh effort
+to attain his end, she must be there to guide him. But in
+proportion as she drew nearer to Irkutsk, the image of her
+father rose more and more clearly before her mind. She
+saw him in the invested town, far from those he loved,
+but, as she never doubted, struggling against the invaders
+with all the spirit of his patriotism. In a few hours, if
+Heaven favored them, she would be in his arms, giving
+him her mother's last words, and nothing should ever sep-
+arate them again. If the term of Wassili Fedor's exile
+should never come to an end, his daughter would remain
+exiled with him. Then, by a natural transition, she came
+back to him who would have enabled her to see her father
+once more, to that generous companion, that "brother,"
+who, the Tartars driven back, would retake the road to
+Moscow, whom she would perhaps never meet again!
+
+As to Alcide Jolivet and Harry Blount, they had one and
+the same thought, which was, that the situation was ex-
+tremely dramatic, and that, well worked up, it would fur-
+nish a most deeply interesting article. The Englishman
+thought of the readers of the Daily Telegraph, and the
+Frenchman of those of his Cousin Madeleine. At heart,
+both were not without feeling some emotion.
+
+"Well, so much the better!" thought Alcide Jolivet, "to
+move others, one must be moved one's self! I believe there
+is some celebrated verse on the subject, but hang me if I
+can recollect it!" And with his well-practiced eyes he en-
+deavored to pierce the gloom of the river.
+
+Every now and then a burst of light dispelling the dark-
+ness for a time, exhibited the banks under some fantastic
+aspect -- either a forest on fire, or a still burning village.
+The Angara was occasionally illuminated from one bank to
+the other. The blocks of ice formed so many mirrors,
+which, reflecting the flames on every point and in every
+color, were whirled along by the caprice of the current.
+The raft passed unperceived in the midst of these floating
+masses.
+
+The danger was not at these points.
+
+But a peril of another nature menaced the fugitives.
+One that they could not foresee, and, above all, one that
+they could not avoid. Chance discovered it to Alcide
+Jolivet in this way: -- Lying at the right side of the raft,
+he let his hand hang over into the water. Suddenly he
+was surprised by the impression made on it by the current.
+It seemed to be of a slimy consistency, as if it had been
+made of mineral oil. Alcide, aiding his touch by his sense
+of smell, could not be mistaken. It was really a layer of
+liquid naphtha, floating on the surface of the river!
+
+Was the raft really floating on this substance, which is
+in the highest degree combustible? Where had this naphtha
+come from? Was it a natural phenomenon taking place on
+the surface of the Angara, or was it to serve as an engine
+of destruction, put in motion by the Tartars? Did they
+intend to carry conflagration into Irkutsk?
+
+Such were the questions which Alcide asked himself, but
+he thought it best to make this incident known only to Harry
+Blount, and they both agreed in not alarming their compan-
+ions by revealing to them this new danger.
+
+It is known that the soil of Central Asia is like a sponge
+impregnated with liquid hydrogen. At the port of Bakou,
+on the Persian frontier, on the Caspian Sea, in Asia Minor,
+in China, on the Yuen-Kiang, in the Burman Empire,
+springs of mineral oil rise in thousands to the surface of
+the ground. It is an "oil country," similar to the one
+which bears this name in North America.
+
+During certain religious festivals, principally at the port
+of Bakou, the natives, who are fire-worshipers, throw
+liquid naphtha on the surface of the sea, which buoys it up,
+its density being inferior to that of water. Then at night-
+fall, when a layer of mineral oil is thus spread over the
+Caspian, they light it, and exhibit the matchless spectacle
+of an ocean of fire undulating and breaking into waves
+under the breeze.
+
+But what is only a sign of rejoicing at Bakou, might
+prove a fearful disaster on the waters of the Angara.
+Whether it was set on fire by malevolence or imprudence,
+in the twinkling of an eye a conflagration might spread be-
+yond Irkutsk. On board the raft no imprudence was to be
+feared; but everything was to be dreaded from the con-
+flagrations on both banks of the Angara, for should a lighted
+straw or even a spark blow into the water, it would in-
+evitably set the whole current of naphtha in a blaze.
+
+The apprehensions of Jolivet and Blount may be better
+understood than described. Would it not be prudent, in
+face of this new danger, to land on one of the banks and
+wait there? "At any rate," said Alcide, "whatever the
+danger may be, I know some one who will not land!"
+
+He alluded to Michael Strogoff.
+
+In the meantime, on glided the raft among the masses
+of ice which were gradually getting closer and closer to-
+gether. Up till then, no Tartar detachment had been seen,
+which showed that the raft was not abreast of the outposts.
+At about ten o'clock, however, Harry Blount caught sight
+of a number of black objects moving on the ice blocks.
+Springing from one to the other, they rapidly approached.
+
+"Tartars!" he thought. And creeping up to the old boat-
+man, he pointed out to him the suspicious objects.
+
+The old man looked attentively. "They are only
+wolves!" said he. "I like them better than Tartars. But
+we must defend ourselves, and without noise!"
+
+The fugitives would indeed have to defend themselves
+against these ferocious beasts, whom hunger and cold had
+sent roaming through the province. They had smelt out
+the raft, and would soon attack it. The fugitives must
+struggle without using firearms, for they could not now be
+far from the Tartar posts. The women and children were
+collected in the middle of the raft, and the men, some armed
+with poles, others with their knives, stood prepared to re-
+pulse their assailants. They did not make a sound, but the
+howls of the wolves filled the air.
+
+Michael did not wish to remain inactive. He lay down
+at the side attacked by the savage pack. He drew his
+knife, and every time that a wolf passed within his reach,
+his hand found out the way to plunge his weapon into its
+throat. Neither were Jolivet and Blount idle, but fought
+bravely with the brutes. Their companions gallantly
+seconded them. The battle was carried on in silence, al-
+though many of the fugitives received severe bites.
+
+The struggle did not appear as if it would soon termi-
+nate. The pack was being continually reinforced from the
+right bank of the Angara. "This will never be finished!"
+said Alcide, brandishing his dagger, red with blood.
+
+In fact, half an hour after the commencement of the
+attack, the wolves were still coming in hundreds across the
+ice. The exhausted fugitives were getting weaker. The
+fight was going against them. At that moment, a group of
+ten huge wolves, raging with hunger, their eyes glowing in
+the darkness like red coals, sprang onto the raft. Jolivet
+and his companion threw themselves into the midst of the
+fierce beasts, and Michael was finding his way towards them,
+when a sudden change took place.
+
+In a few moments the wolves had deserted not only the
+raft, but also the ice on the river. All the black bodies dis-
+persed, and it was soon certain that they had in all haste
+regained the shore. Wolves, like other beasts of prey, re-
+quire darkness for their proceedings, and at that moment a
+bright light illuminated the entire river.
+
+It was the blaze of an immense fire. The whole of the
+small town of Poshkavsk was burning. The Tartars were
+indeed there, finishing their work. From this point, they
+occupied both banks beyond Irkutsk. The fugitives had
+by this time reached the dangerous part of their voyage,
+and they were still twenty miles from the capital.
+
+It was now half past eleven. The raft continued to glide
+on amongst the ice, with which it was quite mingled, but
+gleams of light sometimes fell upon it. The fugitives
+stretched on the platform did not permit themselves to
+make a movement by which they might be betrayed.
+
+The conflagration was going on with frightful rapidity.
+The houses, built of fir-wood, blazed like torches -- a hun-
+dred and fifty flaming at once. With the crackling of
+the fire was mingled the yells of the Tartars. The old
+boatman, getting a foothold on a near piece of ice, managed
+to shove the raft towards the right bank, by doing which a
+distance of from three to four hundred feet divided it from
+the flames of Poshkavsk.
+
+Nevertheless, the fugitives, lighted every now and then
+by the glare, would have been undoubtedly perceived had
+not the incendiaries been too much occupied in their work
+of destruction.
+
+It may be imagined what were the apprehensions of
+Jolivet and Blount, when they thought of the combustible
+liquid on which the raft floated. Sparks flew in millions
+from the houses, which resembled so many glowing fur-
+naces. They rose among the volumes of smoke to a height
+of five or six hundred feet. On the right bank, the trees
+and cliffs exposed to the fire looked as if they likewise were
+burning. A spark falling on the surface of the Angara
+would be sufficient to spread the flames along the current,
+and to carry disaster from one bank to the other. The re-
+sult of this would be in a short time the destruction of the
+raft and of all those which it carried.
+
+But, happily, the breeze did not blow from that side. It
+came from the east, and drove the flames towards the left.
+It was just possible that the fugitives would escape this
+danger. The blazing town was at last passed. Little by
+little the glare grew dimmer, the crackling became fainter,
+and the flames at last disappeared behind the high cliffs
+which arose at an abrupt turn of the river.
+
+By this time it was nearly midnight. The deep gloom
+again threw its protecting shadows over the raft. The
+Tartars were there, going to and fro near the river. They
+could not be seen, but they could be heard. The fires of
+the outposts burned brightly.
+
+In the meantime it had become necessary to steer more
+carefully among the blocks of ice. The old boatman stood
+up, and the moujiks resumed their poles. They had plenty
+of work, the management of the raft becoming more and
+more difficult as the river was further obstructed.
+
+Michael had crept forward; Jolivet followed; both lis-
+tened to what the old boatman and his men were saying.
+
+"Look out on the right!"
+
+"There are blocks drifting on to us on the left!"
+
+"Fend! fend off with your boat-hook!"
+
+"Before an hour is past we shall be stopped!"
+
+"If it is God's will!" answered the old man. "Against
+His will there is nothing to be done."
+
+"You hear them," said Alcide.
+
+"Yes," replied Michael, "but God is with us!"
+
+The situation became more and more serious. Should
+the raft be stopped, not only would the fugitives not reach
+Irkutsk, but they would be obliged to leave their floating
+platform, for it would be very soon smashed to pieces in
+the ice. The osier ropes would break, the fir trunks torn
+asunder would drift under the hard crust, and the unhappy
+people would have no refuge but the ice blocks themselves.
+Then, when day came, they would be seen by the Tartars,
+and massacred without mercy!
+
+Michael returned to the spot where Nadia was waiting
+for him. He approached the girl, took her hand, and put
+to her the invariable question: "Nadia, are you ready?" to
+which she replied as usual, "I am ready!"
+
+For a few versts more the raft continued to drift amongst
+the floating ice. Should the river narrow, it would soon
+form an impassable barrier. Already they seemed to drift
+slower. Every moment they encountered severe shocks or
+were compelled to make detours; now, to avoid running
+foul of a block, there to enter a channel, of which it was
+necessary to take advantage. At length the stoppages be-
+came still more alarming. There were only a few more
+hours of night. Could the fugitives not reach Irkutsk by
+five o'clock in the morning, they must lose all hope of ever
+getting there at all.
+
+At half-past one, notwithstanding all efforts, the raft
+came up against a thick barrier and stuck fast. The ice,
+which was drifting down behind it, pressed it still closer,
+and kept it motionless, as though it had been stranded.
+
+At this spot the Angara narrowed, it being half its usual
+breadth. This was the cause of the accumulation of ice,
+which became gradually soldered together, under the double
+influence of the increased pressure and of the cold. Five
+hundred feet beyond, the river widened again, and the
+blocks, gradually detaching themselves from the floe, con-
+tinued to drift towards Irkutsk. It was probable that had
+the banks not narrowed, the barrier would not have formed.
+But the misfortune was irreparable, and the fugitives must
+give up all hope of attaining their object.
+
+Had they possessed the tools usually employed by whalers
+to cut channels through the ice-fields -- had they been able
+to get through to where the river widened -- they might have
+been saved. But they had nothing which could make the
+least incision in the ice, hard as granite in the excessive
+frost. What were they to do?
+
+At that moment several shots on the right bank startled
+the unhappy fugitives. A shower of balls fell on the raft.
+The devoted passengers had been seen. Immediately after-
+wards shots were heard fired from the left bank. The
+fugitives, taken between two fires, became the mark of the
+Tartar sharpshooters. Several were wounded, although in
+the darkness it was only by chance that they were hit.
+
+"Come, Nadia," whispered Michael in the girl's ear.
+
+Without making a single remark, "ready for anything,"
+Nadia took Michael's hand.
+
+"We must cross the barrier," he said in a low tone.
+"Guide me, but let no one see us leave the raft."
+
+Nadia obeyed. Michael and she glided rapidly over the
+floe in the obscurity, only broken now and again by the
+flashes from the muskets. Nadia crept along in front of
+Michael. The shot fell around them like a tempest of hail,
+and pattered on the ice. Their hands were soon covered
+with blood from the sharp and rugged ice over which they
+clambered, but still on they went.
+
+In ten minutes, the other side of the barrier was reached.
+There the waters of the Angara again flowed freely. Sev-
+eral pieces of ice, detached gradually from the floe, were
+swept along in the current down towards the town. Nadia
+guessed what Michael wished to attempt. One of the blocks
+was only held on by a narrow strip.
+
+"Come," said Nadia. And the two crouched on the
+piece of ice, which their weight detached from the floe.
+
+It began to drift. The river widened, the way was open.
+Michael and Nadia heard the shots, the cries of distress, the
+yells of the Tartars. Then, little by little, the sounds of
+agony and of ferocious joy grew faint in the distance.
+
+"Our poor companions!" murmured Nadia.
+
+For half an hour the current hurried along the block of
+ice which bore Michael and Nadia. They feared every
+moment that it would give way beneath them. Swept
+along in the middle of the current, it was unnecessary to
+give it an oblique direction until they drew near the quays
+of Irkutsk. Michael, his teeth tight set, his ear on the
+strain, did not utter a word. Never had he been so near
+his object. He felt that he was about to attain it!
+
+Towards two in the morning a double row of lights
+glittered on the dark horizon in which were confounded
+the two banks of the Angara. On the right hand were the
+lights of Irkutsk; on the left, the fires of the Tartar camp.
+
+Michael Strogoff was not more than half a verst from
+the town. "At last!" he murmured.
+
+But suddenly Nadia uttered a cry.
+
+At the cry Michael stood up on the ice, which was waver-
+ing. His hand was extended up the Angara. His face, on
+which a bluish light cast a peculiar hue, became almost fear-
+ful to look at, and then, as if his eyes had been opened to
+the bright blaze spreading across the river, "Ah!" he ex-
+claimed, "then Heaven itself is against us!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+IRKUTSK
+
+IRKUTSK, the capital of Eastern Siberia, is a populous
+town, containing, in ordinary times, thirty thousand inhabi-
+tants. On the right side of the Angara rises a hill, on
+which are built numerous churches, a lofty cathedral, and
+dwellings disposed in picturesque disorder.
+
+Seen at a distance, from the top of the mountain which
+rises at about twenty versts off along the Siberian highroad,
+this town, with its cupolas, its bell-towers, its steeples slender
+as minarets, its domes like pot-bellied Chinese jars, presents
+something of an oriental aspect. But this similarity van-
+ishes as the traveler enters.
+
+The town, half Byzantine, half Chinese, becomes Euro-
+pean as soon as he sees its macadamized roads, bordered
+with pavements, traversed by canals, planted with gigantic
+birches, its houses of brick and wood, some of which have
+several stories, the numerous equipages which drive along,
+not only tarantasses but broughams and coaches; lastly, its
+numerous inhabitants far advanced in civilization, to whom
+the latest Paris fashions are not unknown.
+
+Being the refuge for all the Siberians of the province,
+Irkutsk was at this time very full. Stores of every kind
+had been collected in abundance. Irkutsk is the emporium
+of the innumerable kinds of merchandise which are ex-
+changed between China, Central Asia, and Europe. The
+authorities had therefore no fear with regard to admitting
+the peasants of the valley of the Angara, and leaving a
+desert between the invaders and the town.
+
+Irkutsk is the residence of the governor-general of East-
+ern Siberia. Below him acts a civil governor, in whose
+hands is the administration of the province; a head of police,
+who has much to do in a town where exiles abound; and,
+lastly, a mayor, chief of the merchants, and a person of
+some importance, from his immense fortune and the in-
+fluence which he exercises over the people.
+
+The garrison of Irkutsk was at that time composed of an
+infantry regiment of Cossacks, consisting of two thousand
+men, and a body of police wearing helmets and blue uniforms
+laced with silver. Besides, as has been said, in consequence
+of the events which had occurred, the brother of the Czar
+had been shut up in the town since the beginning of the in-
+vasion.
+
+A journey of political importance had taken the Grand
+Duke to these distant provinces of Central Asia. After
+passing through the principal Siberian cities, the Grand
+Duke, who traveled en militaire rather than en prince, with-
+out any parade, accompanied by his officers, and escorted
+by a regiment of Cossacks, arrived in the Trans-Baikalcine
+provinces. Nikolaevsk, the last Russian town situated on
+the shore of the Sea of Okhotsk, had been honored by a
+visit from him. Arrived on the confines of the immense
+Muscovite Empire, the Grand Duke was returning towards
+Irkutsk, from which place he intended to retake the road to
+Moscow, when, sudden as a thunder clap, came the news of
+the invasion.
+
+He hastened to the capital, but only reached it just
+before communication with Russia had been interrupted.
+There was time to receive only a few telegrams from St.
+Petersburg and Moscow, and with difficulty to answer them
+before the wire was cut. Irkutsk was isolated from the rest
+of the world.
+
+The Grand Duke had now only to prepare for resistance,
+and this he did with that determination and coolness of
+which, under other circumstances, he had given incontest-
+able proofs. The news of the taking of Ichim, Omsk, and
+Tomsk, successively reached Irkutsk. It was necessary at
+any price to save the capital of Siberia. Reinforcements
+could not be expected for some time. The few troops scat-
+tered about in the provinces of Siberia could not arrive in
+sufficiently large numbers to arrest the progress of the Tar-
+tar columns. Since therefore it was impossible for Irkutsk
+to escape attack, the most important thing to be done was to
+put the town in a state to sustain a siege of some duration.
+
+The preparations were begun on the day Tomsk fell into
+the hands of the Tartars. At the same time with this last
+news, the Grand Duke heard that the Emir of Bokhara
+and the allied Khans were directing the invasion in person,
+but what he did not know was, that the lieutenant of these
+barbarous chiefs was Ivan Ogareff, a Russian officer whom
+he had himself reduced to the ranks, but with whose person
+he was not acquainted.
+
+First of all, as we have seen, the inhabitants of the prov-
+ince of Irkutsk were compelled to abandon the towns and
+villages. Those who did not take refuge in the capital had
+to retire beyond Lake Baikal, a district to which the invasion
+would probably not extend its ravages. The harvests of
+corn and fodder were collected and stored up in the town,
+and Irkutsk, the last bulwark of the Muscovite power in the
+Far East, was put in a condition to resist the enemy for a
+lengthened period.
+
+Irkutsk, founded in 1611, is situated at the confluence
+of the Irkut and the Angara, on the right bank of the latter
+river. Two wooden draw-bridges, built on piles, connected
+the town with its suburbs on the left bank. On this side,
+defence was easy. The suburbs were abandoned, the
+bridges destroyed. The Angara being here very wide, it
+would not be possible to pass it under the fire of the besieged.
+
+But the river might be crossed both above and below the
+town, and consequently, Irkutsk ran a risk of being attacked
+on its east side, on which there was no wall to protect it.
+
+The whole population were immediately set to work on
+the fortifications. They labored day and night. The
+Grand Duke observed with satisfaction the zeal exhibited
+by the people in the work, whom ere long he would find
+equally courageous in the defense. Soldiers, merchants,
+exiles, peasants, all devoted themselves to the common
+safety. A week before the Tartars appeared on the Angara,
+earth-works had been raised. A fosse, flooded by the
+waters of the Angara, was dug between the scarp and
+counterscarp. The town could not now be taken by a coup
+de main. It must be invested and besieged.
+
+The third Tartar column -- the one which came up the
+valley of the Yenisei on the 24th of September -- appeared
+in sight of Irkutsk. It immediately occupied the deserted
+suburbs, every building in which had been destroyed so as
+not to impede the fire of the Grand Duke's guns, unfor-
+tunately but few in number and of small caliber. The Tar-
+tar troops as they arrived organized a camp on the bank of
+the Angara, whilst waiting the arrival of the two other
+columns, commanded by the Emir and his allies.
+
+The junction of these different bodies was effected on
+the 25th of September, in the Angara camp, and the whole
+of the invading army, except the garrisons left in the prin-
+cipal conquered towns, was concentrated under the command
+of Feofar-Khan.
+
+The passage of the Angara in front of Irkutsk having
+been regarded by Ogareff as impracticable, a strong body of
+troops crossed, several versts up the river, by means of
+bridges formed with boats. The Grand Duke did not at-
+tempt to oppose the enemy in their passage. He could only
+impede, not prevent it, having no field-artillery at his dis-
+posal, and he therefore remained in Irkutsk.
+
+The Tartars now occupied the right bank of the river;
+then, advancing towards the town, they burnt, in passing,
+the summer-house of the governor-general, and at last hav-
+ing entirely invested Irkutsk, took up their positions for the
+siege.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, who was a clever engineer, was perfectly
+competent to direct a regular siege; but he did not possess
+the materials for operating rapidly. He was disappointed
+too in the chief object of all his efforts -- the surprise of
+Irkutsk. Things had not turned out as he hoped. First,
+the march of the Tartar army was delayed by the battle of
+Tomsk; and secondly, the preparations for the defense were
+made far more rapidly than he had supposed possible; these
+two things had balked his plans. He was now under the
+necessity of instituting a regular siege of the town.
+
+However, by his suggestion, the Emir twice attempted
+the capture of the place, at the cost of a large sacrifice of
+men. He threw soldiers on the earth-works which pre-
+sented any weak point; but these two assaults were repulsed
+with the greatest courage. The Grand Duke and his officers
+did not spare themselves on this occasion. They appeared
+in person; they led the civil population to the ramparts.
+Citizens and peasants both did their duty.
+
+At the second attack, the Tartars managed to force one
+of the gates. A fight took place at the head of Bolchaia
+Street, two versts long, on the banks of the Angara. But
+the Cossacks, the police, the citizens, united in so fierce a
+resistance that the Tartars were driven out.
+
+Ivan Ogareff then thought of obtaining by stratagem
+what he could not gain by force. We have said that his
+plan was to penetrate into the town, make his way to the
+Grand Duke, gain his confidence, and, when the time came,
+give up the gates to the besiegers; and, that done, wreak his
+vengeance on the brother of the Czar. The Tsigane San-
+garre, who had accompanied him to the Angara, urged him
+to put this plan in execution.
+
+Indeed, it was necessary to act without delay. The Rus-
+sian troops from the government of Yakutsk were advanc-
+ing towards Irkutsk. They had concentrated along the
+upper course of the Lena. In six days they would arrive.
+Therefore, before six days had passed, Irkutsk must be be-
+trayed. Ogareff hesitated no longer.
+
+One evening, the 2d of October, a council of war was
+held in the grand saloon of the palace of the governor-gen-
+eral. This palace, standing at the end of Bolchaia Street,
+overlooked the river. From its windows could be seen the
+camp of the Tartars, and had the invaders possessed guns
+of wider range, they would have rendered the palace un-
+inhabitable.
+
+The Grand Duke, General Voranzoff, the governor of the
+town, and the chief of the merchants, with several officers,
+had collected to determine upon various proposals.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the Grand Duke, "you know our
+situation exactly. I have the firm hope that we shall be
+able to hold out until the arrival of the Yakutsk troops.
+We shall then be able to drive off these barbarian hordes,
+and it will not be my fault if they do not pay dearly for
+this invasion of the Muscovite territory."
+
+"Your Highness knows that all the population of Irkutsk
+may be relied on," said General Voranzoff.
+
+"Yes, general," replied the Grand Duke, "and I do
+justice to their patriotism. Thanks to God, they have not
+yet been subjected to the horrors of epidemic and famine,
+and I have reason to hope that they will escape them; but
+I cannot admire their courage on the ramparts enough.
+You hear my words, Sir Merchant, and I beg you to repeat
+such to them."
+
+"I thank your Highness in the name of the town," an-
+swered the merchant chief. "May I ask you what is the
+most distant date when we may expect the relieving army?"
+
+"Six days at most, sir," replied the Grand Duke. "A
+brave and clever messenger managed this morning to get
+into the town, and he told me that fifty thousand Russians
+under General Kisselef, are advancing by forced marches.
+Two days ago, they were on the banks of the Lena, at
+Kirensk, and now, neither frost nor snow will keep them
+back. Fifty thousand good men, taking the Tartars on the
+flank, will soon set us free."
+
+"I will add," said the chief of the merchants, "that we
+shall be ready to execute your orders, any day that your
+Highness may command a sortie."
+
+"Good, sir," replied the Grand Duke. "Wait till the
+heads of the relieving columns appear on the heights, and
+we will speedily crush these invaders."
+
+Then turning to General Voranzoff, "To-morrow," said
+he, "we will visit the works on the right bank. Ice is drift-
+ing down the Angara, which will not be long in freezing, and
+in that case the Tartars might perhaps cross."
+
+"Will your Highness allow me to make an observation?"
+said the chief of the merchants.
+
+"Do so, sir."
+
+"I have more than once seen the temperature fall to
+thirty and forty degrees below zero, and the Angara has
+still carried down drifting ice without entirely freezing.
+This is no doubt owing to the swiftness of its current. If
+therefore the Tartars have no other means of crossing the
+river, I can assure your Highness that they will not enter
+Irkutsk in that way."
+
+The governor-general confirmed this assertion.
+
+"It is a fortunate circumstance," responded the Grand
+Duke. "Nevertheless, we must hold ourselves ready for
+any emergency."
+
+He then, turning towards the head of the police, asked,
+"Have you nothing to say to me, sir?"
+
+"I have your Highness," answered the head of police, "a
+petition which is addressed to you through me."
+
+"Addressed by whom?"
+
+"By the Siberian exiles, whom, as your Highness knows,
+are in the town to the number of five hundred."
+
+The political exiles, distributed over the province, had
+been collected in Irkutsk, from the beginning of the inva-
+sion. They had obeyed the order to rally in the town, and
+leave the villages where they exercised their different profes-
+sions, some doctors, some professors, either at the Gymna-
+sium, or at the Japanese School, or at the School of Naviga-
+tion. The Grand Duke, trusting like the Czar in their
+patriotism, had armed them, and they had thoroughly proved
+their bravery.
+
+"What do the exiles ask?" said the Grand Duke.
+
+"They ask the consent of your Highness," answered the
+head of police, "to their forming a special corps and being
+placed in the front of the first sortie."
+
+"Yes," replied the Grand Duke with an emotion which
+he did not seek to hide, "these exiles are Russians, and it
+is their right to fight for their country!"
+
+"I believe I may assure your Highness," said the gover-
+nor-general, "you will have no better soldiers."
+
+"But they must have a chief," said the Grand Duke,
+"who will he be?"
+
+"They wish to recommend to your Highness," said the
+head of police, "one of their number, who has distinguished
+himself on several occasions."
+
+"Is he a Russian?"
+
+"Yes, a Russian from the Baltic provinces."
+
+"His name?"
+
+"Is Wassili Fedor."
+
+This exile was Nadia's father. Wassili Fedor, as we
+have already said, followed his profession of a medical man
+in Irkutsk. He was clever and charitable, and also pos-
+sessed the greatest courage and most sincere patriotism. All
+the time which he did not devote to the sick he employed in
+organizing the defense. It was he who had united his com-
+panions in exile in the common cause. The exiles, till then
+mingled with the population, had behaved in such a way as
+to draw on themselves the attention of the Grand Duke.
+In several sorties, they had paid with their blood their debt
+to holy Russia -- holy as they believe, and adored by her
+children! Wassili Fedor had behaved heroically; his name
+had been mentioned several times, but he never asked either
+thanks or favors, and when the exiles of Irkutsk thought of
+forming themselves into a special corps, he was ignorant of
+their intention of choosing him for their captain.
+
+When the head of police mentioned this name, the Grand
+Duke answered that it was not unknown to him.
+
+"Indeed," remarked General Voranzoff, "Wassili Fedor
+is a man of worth and courage. His influence over his com-
+panions has always been very great."
+
+"How long has he been at Irkutsk?" asked the Duke.
+
+"For two years."
+
+"And his conduct?"
+
+"His conduct," answered the head of police, "is that of a
+man obedient to the special laws which govern him."
+
+"General," said the Grand Duke, "General, be good
+enough to present him to me immediately."
+
+The orders of the Grand Duke were obeyed, and before
+half an hour had passed, Fedor was introduced into
+his presence. He was a man over forty, tall, of a stern and
+sad countenance. One felt that his whole life was summed
+up in a single word -- strife -- he had striven and suffered.
+His features bore a marked resemblance to those of his
+daughter, Nadia Fedor.
+
+This Tartar invasion had severely wounded him in his
+tenderest affections, and ruined the hope of the father,
+exiled eight thousand versts from his native town. A letter
+had apprised him of the death of his wife, and at the same
+time of the departure of his daughter, who had obtained
+from the government an authorization to join him at
+Irkutsk. Nadia must have left Riga on the 10th of July.
+The invasion had begun on the 15th of July; if at that time
+Nadia had passed the frontier, what could have become of
+her in the midst of the invaders? The anxiety of the un-
+happy father may be supposed when, from that time, he
+had no further news of his daughter.
+
+Wassili Fedor entered the presence of the Grand Duke,
+bowed, and waited to be questioned.
+
+"Wassili Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "your com-
+panions in exile have asked to be allowed to form a select
+corps. They are not ignorant that in this corps they must
+make up their minds to be killed to the last man?"
+
+"They are not ignorant of it," replied Fedor.
+
+"They wish to have you for their captain."
+
+"I, your Highness?"
+
+"Do you consent to be placed at their head?"
+
+"Yes, if it is for the good of Russia."
+
+"Captain Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "you are no
+longer an exile."
+
+"Thanks, your Highness, but can I command those who
+are so still?"
+
+"They are so no longer!" The brother of the Czar had
+granted a pardon to all Fedor's companions in exile, now
+his companions in arms!
+
+Wassili Fedor wrung, with emotion, the hand which the
+Grand Duke held out to him, and retired.
+
+The latter, turned to his officers, "The Czar will not re-
+fuse to ratify that pardon," said he, smiling; "we need
+heroes to defend the capital of Siberia, and I have just made
+some."
+
+This pardon, so generously accorded to the exiles of
+Irkutsk, was indeed an act of real justice and sound
+policy.
+
+It was now night. Through the windows of the palace
+burned the fires of the Tartar camp, flickering beyond the
+Angara. Down the river drifted numerous blocks of ice,
+some of which stuck on the piles of the old bridges; others
+were swept along by the current with great rapidity. It
+was evident, as the merchant had observed, that it would
+be very difficult for the Angara to freeze all over. The
+defenders of Irkutsk had not to dread being attacked on
+that side. Ten o'clock had just struck. The Grand Duke
+was about to dismiss his officers and retire to his apartments,
+when a tumult was heard outside the palace.
+
+Almost immediately the door was thrown open, an aide-
+de-camp appeared, and advanced rapidly towards the Grand
+Duke.
+
+"Your Highness," said he, "a courier from the Czar!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+THE CZAR'S COURIER
+
+ALL the members of the council simultaneously started
+forward. A courier from the Czar arrived in Irkutsk! Had
+these officers for a moment considered the improbability of
+this fact, they would certainly not have credited what they
+heard.
+
+The Grand Duke advanced quickly to his aide-de-camp.
+"This courier!" he exclaimed.
+
+A man entered. He appeared exhausted with fatigue.
+He wore the dress of a Siberian peasant, worn into tatters,
+and exhibiting several shot-holes. A Muscovite cap was
+on his head. His face was disfigured by a recently-healed
+scar. The man had evidently had a long and painful jour-
+ney; his shoes being in a state which showed that he had
+been obliged to make part of it on foot.
+
+"His Highness the Grand Duke?" he asked.
+
+The Grand Duke went up to him. "You are a courier
+from the Czar?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, your Highness."
+
+"You come?"
+
+"From Moscow."
+
+"You left Moscow?"
+
+"On the 15th of July."
+
+"Your name?"
+
+"Michael Strogoff."
+
+It was Ivan Ogareff. He had taken the designation of
+the man whom he believed that he had rendered powerless.
+Neither the Grand Duke nor anyone knew him in Irkutsk,
+and he had not even to disguise his features. As he was
+in a position to prove his pretended identity, no one could
+have any reason for doubting him. He came, therefore,
+sustained by his iron will, to hasten by treason and assassi-
+nation the great object of the invasion.
+
+After Ogareff had replied, the Grand Duke signed to all
+his officers to withdraw. He and the false Michael Strogoff
+remained alone in the saloon.
+
+The Grand Duke looked at Ivan Ogareff for some mo-
+ments with extreme attention. Then he said, "On the 15th
+of July you were at Moscow?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness; and on the night of the 14th I
+saw His Majesty the Czar at the New Palace."
+
+"Have you a letter from the Czar?"
+
+"Here it is."
+
+And Ivan Ogareff handed to the Grand Duke the Imperial
+letter, crumpled to almost microscopic size.
+
+"Was the letter given you in this state?"
+
+"No, your Highness, but I was obliged to tear the en-
+velope, the better to hide it from the Emir's soldiers."
+
+"Were you taken prisoner by the Tartars?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness, I was their prisoner for several
+days," answered Ogareff. "That is the reason that, having
+left Moscow on the 15th of July, as the date of that letter
+shows, I only reached Irkutsk on the 2d of October, after
+traveling seventy-nine days."
+
+The Grand Duke took the letter. He unfolded it and
+recognized the Czar's signature, preceded by the decisive
+formula, written by his brother's hand. There was no pos-
+sible doubt of the authenticity of this letter, nor of the
+identity of the courier. Though Ogareff's countenance had
+at first inspired the Grand Duke with some distrust, he let
+nothing of it appear, and it soon vanished.
+
+The Grand Duke remained for a few minutes without
+speaking. He read the letter slowly, so as to take in its
+meaning fully. "Michael Strogoff, do you know the con-
+tents of this letter?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, your Highness. I might have been obliged to
+destroy it, to prevent its falling into the hands of the
+Tartars, and should such have been the case, I wished to
+be able to bring the contents of it to your Highness."
+
+"You know that this letter enjoins us all to die, rather
+than give up the town?"
+
+"I know it."
+
+"You know also that it informs me of the movements of
+the troops which have combined to stop the invasion?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness, but the movements have failed."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that Ichim, Omsk, Tomsk, to speak only of the
+more important towns of the two Siberias, have been suc-
+cessively occupied by the soldiers of Feofar-Khan."
+
+"But there has been fighting? Have not our Cossacks
+met the Tartars?"
+
+"Several times, your Highness."
+
+"And they were repulsed?"
+
+"They were not in sufficient force to oppose the enemy."
+
+"Where did the encounters take place?"
+
+"At Kolyvan, at Tomsk." Until now, Ogareff had only
+spoken the truth, but, in the hope of troubling the defenders
+of Irkutsk by exaggerating the defeats, he added, "And a
+third time before Krasnoiarsk."
+
+"And what of this last engagement?" asked the Grand
+Duke, through whose compressed lips the words could
+scarcely pass.
+
+"It was more than an engagement, your Highness," an-
+swered Ogareff; "it was a battle."
+
+"A battle?"
+
+"Twenty thousand Russians, from the frontier prov-
+inces and the government of Tobolsk, engaged with a hun-
+dred and fifty thousand Tartars, and, notwithstanding their
+courage, were overwhelmed."
+
+"You lie!" exclaimed the Grand Duke, endeavoring in
+vain to curb his passion.
+
+"I speak the truth, your Highness," replied Ivan Ogareff
+coldly. "I was present at the battle of Krasnoiarsk, and it
+was there I was made prisoner!"
+
+The Grand Duke grew calmer, and by a significant ges-
+ture he gave Ogareff to understand that he did not doubt
+his veracity. "What day did this battle of Krasnoiarsk
+take place?" he asked.
+
+"On the 2d of September."
+
+"And now all the Tartar troops are concentrated here?"
+
+"All."
+
+"And you estimate them?"
+
+"At about four hundred thousand men."
+
+Another exaggeration of Ogareff's in the estimate of the
+Tartar army, with the same object as before.
+
+"And I must not expect any help from the West prov-
+inces?" asked the Grand Duke.
+
+"None, your Highness, at any rate before the end of the
+winter."
+
+"Well, hear this, Michael Strogoff. Though I must ex-
+pect no help either from the East or from the West, even
+were these barbarians six hundred thousand strong, I will
+never give up Irkutsk!"
+
+Ogareff's evil eye slightly contracted. The traitor
+thought to himself that the brother of the Czar did not
+reckon the result of treason.
+
+The Grand Duke, who was of a nervous temperament,
+had great difficulty in keeping calm whilst hearing this
+disastrous news. He walked to and fro in the room, under
+the gaze of Ogareff, who eyed him as a victim reserved for
+vengeance. He stopped at the windows, he looked forth at
+the fires in the Tartar camp, he listened to the noise of the
+ice-blocks drifting down the Angara.
+
+A quarter of an hour passed without his putting any
+more questions. Then taking up the letter, he re-read a
+passage and said, "You know that in this letter I am warned
+of a traitor, of whom I must beware?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness."
+
+"He will try to enter Irkutsk in disguise; gain my con-
+fidence, and betray the town to the Tartars."
+
+"I know all that, your Highness, and I know also that
+Ivan Ogareff has sworn to revenge himself personally on
+the Czar's brother."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It is said that the officer in question was condemned
+by the Grand Duke to a humiliating degradation."
+
+"Yes, I remember. But it is a proof that the villain,
+who could afterwards serve against his country and head an
+invasion of barbarians, deserved it."
+
+"His Majesty the Czar," said Ogareff, "was particularly
+anxious that you should be warned of the criminal projects
+of Ivan Ogareff against your person."
+
+"Yes; of that the letter informs me."
+
+"And His Majesty himself spoke to me of it, telling me
+I was above all things to beware of the traitor."
+
+"Did you meet with him?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness, after the battle of Krasnoiarsk.
+If he had only guessed that I was the bearer of a letter
+addressed to your Highness, in which his plans were re-
+vealed, I should not have got off so easily."
+
+"No; you would have been lost!" replied the Grand
+Duke. "And how did you manage to escape?"
+
+"By throwing myself into the Irtych."
+
+"And how did you enter Irkutsk?"
+
+"Under cover of a sortie, which was made this evening
+to repulse a Tartar detachment. I mingled with the de-
+fenders of the town, made myself known, and was imme-
+diately conducted before your Highness."
+
+"Good, Michael Strogoff," answered the Grand Duke.
+"You have shown courage and zeal in your difficult mission.
+I will not forget you. Have you any favor to ask?"
+
+"None; unless it is to be allowed to fight at the side of
+your Highness," replied Ogareff.
+
+"So be it, Strogoff. I attach you from to-day to my
+person, and you shall be lodged in the palace."
+
+"And if according to his intention, Ivan Ogareff should
+present himself to your Highness under a false name?"
+
+"We will unmask him, thanks to you, who know him, and
+I will make him die under the knout. Go!"
+
+Ogareff gave a military salute, not forgetting that he was
+a captain of the couriers of the Czar, and retired.
+
+Ogareff had so far played his unworthy part with suc-
+cess. The Grand Duke's entire confidence had been ac-
+corded him. He could now betray it whenever it suited
+him. He would inhabit the very palace. He would be in
+the secret of all the operations for the defense of the town.
+He thus held the situation in his hand, as it were. No one
+in Irkutsk knew him, no one could snatch off his mask. He
+resolved therefore to set to work without delay.
+
+Indeed, time pressed. The town must be captured before
+the arrival of the Russians from the North and East, and
+that was only a question of a few days. The Tartars once
+masters of Irkutsk, it would not be easy to take it again from
+them. At any rate, even if they were obliged to abandon
+it later, they would not do so before they had utterly de-
+stroyed it, and before the head of the Grand Duke had
+rolled at the feet of Feofar-Khan.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, having every facility for seeing, observing,
+and acting, occupied himself the next day with visiting the
+ramparts. He was everywhere received with cordial con-
+gratulations from officers, soldiers, and citizens. To them
+this courier from the Czar was a link which connected them
+with the empire.
+
+Ogareff recounted, with an assurance which never failed,
+numerous fictitious events of his journey. Then, with the
+cunning for which he was noted, without dwelling too much
+on it at first, he spoke of the gravity of the situation, ex-
+aggerating the success of the Tartars and the numbers of
+the barbarian forces, as he had when speaking to the Grand
+Duke. According to him, the expected succors would be
+insufficient, if ever they arrived at all, and it was to be
+feared that a battle fought under the walls of Irkutsk would
+be as fatal as the battles of Kolyvan, Tomsk, and Kras-
+noiarsk.
+
+Ogareff was not too free in these insinuations. He
+wished to allow them to sink gradually into the minds of
+the defenders of Irkutsk. He pretended only to answer
+with reluctance when much pressed with questions. He
+always added that they must fight to the last man, and
+blow up the town rather than yield!
+
+These false statements would have done more harm had
+it been possible; but the garrison and the population of
+Irkutsk were too patriotic to let themselves be moved. Of
+all the soldiers and citizens shut up in this town, isolated at
+the extremity of the Asiatic world, not one dreamed of even
+speaking of a capitulation. The contempt of the Russians
+for these barbarians was boundless.
+
+No one suspected the odious part played by Ivan Ogareff;
+no one guessed that the pretended courier of the Czar was a
+traitor. It occurred very naturally that on his arrival in
+Irkutsk, a frequent intercourse was established between
+Ogareff and one of the bravest defenders of the town,
+Wassili Fedor. We know what anxiety this unhappy
+father suffered. If his daughter, Nadia Fedor, had left
+Russia on the date fixed by the last letter he had received
+from Riga, what had become of her? Was she still trying
+to cross the invaded provinces, or had she long since been
+taken prisoner? The only alleviation to Wassili Fedor's
+anxiety was when he could obtain an opportunity of engag-
+ing in battle with the Tartars -- opportunities which came too
+seldom for his taste. The very evening the pretended
+courier arrived, Wassili Fedor went to the governor-gen-
+eral's palace and, acquainting Ogareff with the circum-
+stances under which his daughter must have left European
+Russia, told him all his uneasiness about her. Ogareff did
+not know Nadia, although he had met her at Ichim on the
+day she was there with Michael Strogoff; but then, he had
+not paid more attention to her than to the two reporters, who
+at the same time were in the post-house; he therefore could
+give Wassili Fedor no news of his daughter.
+
+"But at what time," asked Ogareff, "must your daughter
+have left the Russian territory?"
+
+"About the same time that you did," replied Fedor.
+
+"I left Moscow on the 15th of July."
+
+"Nadia must also have quitted Moscow at that time.
+Her letter told me so expressly."
+
+"She was in Moscow on the 15th of July?"
+
+"Yes, certainly, by that date."
+
+"Then it was impossible for her -- But no, I am mistaken --
+I was confusing dates. Unfortunately, it is too probable
+that your daughter must have passed the frontier, and you
+can only have one hope, that she stopped on learning the
+news of the Tartar invasion!"
+
+The father's head fell! He knew Nadia, and he knew
+too well that nothing would have prevented her from setting
+out. Ivan Ogareff had just committed gratuitously an act
+of real cruelty. With a word he might have reassured
+Fedor. Although Nadia had passed the frontier under cir-
+cumstances with which we are acquainted, Fedor, by com-
+paring the date on which his daughter would have been at
+Nijni-Novgorod, and the date of the proclamation which
+forbade anyone to leave it, would no doubt have concluded
+thus: that Nadia had not been exposed to the dangers of the
+invasion, and that she was still, in spite of herself, in the
+European territory of the Empire.
+
+Ogareff obedient to his nature, a man who was never
+touched by the sufferings of others, might have said that
+word. He did not say it. Fedor retired with his heart
+broken. In that interview his last hope was crushed.
+
+During the two following days, the 3rd and 4th of Octo-
+ber, the Grand Duke often spoke to the pretended Michael
+Strogoff, and made him repeat all that he had heard in the
+Imperial Cabinet of the New Palace. Ogareff, prepared for
+all these questions, replied without the least hesitation. He
+intentionally did not conceal that the Czar's government had
+been utterly surprised by the invasion, that the insurrection
+had been prepared in the greatest possible secrecy, that the
+Tartars were already masters of the line of the Obi when
+the news reached Moscow, and lastly, that none of the neces-
+sary preparations were completed in the Russian provinces
+for sending into Siberia the troops requisite for repulsing
+the invaders.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, being entirely free in his movements, be-
+gan to study Irkutsk, the state of its fortifications, their
+weak points, so as to profit subsequently by his observations,
+in the event of being prevented from consummating his act
+of treason. He examined particularly the Bolchaia Gate,
+the one he wished to deliver up.
+
+Twice in the evening he came upon the glacis of this gate.
+He walked up and down, without fear of being discovered
+by the besiegers, whose nearest posts were at least a mile
+from the ramparts. He fancied that he was recognized
+by no one, till he caught sight of a shadow gliding along
+outside the earthworks. Sangarre had come at the risk of
+her life for the purpose of putting herself in communica-
+tion with Ivan Ogareff.
+
+For two days the besieged had enjoyed a tranquillity to
+which the Tartars had not accustomed them since the com-
+mencement of the investment. This was by Ogareff's or-
+ders. Feofar-Khan's lieutenant wished that all attempts to
+take the town by force should be suspended. He hoped the
+watchfulness of the besieged would relax. At any rate,
+several thousand Tartars were kept in readiness at the out-
+posts, to attack the gate, deserted, as Ogareff anticipated
+that it would be, by its defenders, whenever he should sum-
+mon the besiegers to the assault.
+
+This he could not now delay in doing. All must be over
+by the time that the Russian troops should come in sight of
+Irkutsk. Ogareff's arrangements were made, and on this
+evening a note fell from the top of the earthworks into
+Sangarre's hands.
+
+On the next day, that is to say during the hours of dark-
+ness from the 5th to the 6th of October, at two o'clock in
+the morning, Ivan Ogareff had resolved to deliver up
+Irkutsk.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+THE NIGHT OF THE FIFTH OF OCTOBER
+
+IVAN OGAREFF'S plan had been contrived with the great-
+est care, and except for some unforeseen accident he believed
+that it must succeed. It was of importance that the
+Bolchaia Gate should be unguarded or only feebly held when
+he gave it up. The attention of the besieged was therefore
+to be drawn to another part of the town. A diversion was
+agreed upon with the Emir.
+
+This diversion was to be effected both up and down the
+river, on the Irkutsk bank. The attack on these two points
+was to be conducted in earnest, and at the same time a
+feigned attempt at crossing the Angara from the left bank
+was to be made. The Bolchaia Gate, would be probably
+deserted, so much the more because on this side the Tartar
+outposts having drawn back, would appear to have broken
+up.
+
+It was the 5th of October. In four and twenty hours,
+the capital of Eastern Siberia would be in the hands of the
+Emir, and the Grand Duke in the power of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+During the day, an unusual stir was going on in the
+Angara camp. From the windows of the palace important
+preparations on the opposite shore could be distinctly seen.
+Numerous Tartar detachments were converging towards the
+camp, and from hour to hour reinforced the Emir's troops.
+These movements, intended to deceive the besieged, were
+conducted in the most open manner possible before their
+eyes.
+
+Ogareff had warned the Grand Duke that an attack was
+to be feared. He knew, he said, that an assault was to be
+made, both above and below the town, and he counselled the
+Duke to reinforce the two directly threatened points. Ac-
+cordingly, after a council of war had been held in the palace,
+orders were issued to concentrate the defense on the bank
+of the Angara and at the two ends of the town, where the
+earthworks protected the river.
+
+This was exactly what Ogareff wished. He did not ex-
+pect that the Bolchaia Gate would be left entirely without
+defenders, but that there would only be a small number.
+Besides, Ogareff meant to give such importance to the diver-
+sion, that the Grand Duke would be obliged to oppose it with
+all his available forces. The traitor planned also to pro-
+duce so frightful a catastrophe that terror must inevitably
+overwhelm the hearts of the besieged.
+
+All day the garrison and population of Irkutsk were on
+the alert. The measures to repel an attack on the points
+hitherto unassailed had been taken. The Grand Duke and
+General Voranzoff visited the posts, strengthened by their
+orders. Wassili Fedor's corps occupied the North of the
+town, but with orders to throw themselves where the danger
+was greatest. The right bank of the Angara had been pro-
+tected with the few guns possessed by the defenders. With
+these measures, taken in time, thanks to the advice so op-
+portunely given by Ivan Ogareff, there was good reason to
+hope that the expected attack would be repulsed. In that
+case the Tartars, momentarily discouraged, would no doubt
+not make another attempt against the town for several days.
+Now the troops expected by the Grand Duke might arrive
+at any hour. The safety or the loss of Irkutsk hung only
+by a thread.
+
+On this day, the sun which had risen at twenty minutes
+to six, set at forty minutes past five, having traced its
+diurnal arc for eleven hours above the horizon. The
+twilight would struggle with the night for another two
+hours. Then it would be intensely dark, for the sky was
+cloudy, and there would be no moon. This gloom would
+favor the plans of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+For a few days already a sharp frost had given warning
+of the approaching rigor of the Siberian winter, and this
+evening it was especially severe. The Russians posted by
+the bank of the Angara, obliged to conceal their position,
+lighted no fires. They suffered cruelly from the low tem-
+perature. A few feet below them, the ice in large masses
+drifted down the current. All day these masses had been
+seen passing rapidly between the two banks.
+
+This had been considered by the Grand Duke and his
+officers as fortunate. Should the channel of the Angara
+continue to be thus obstructed, the passage must be im-
+practicable. The Tartars could use neither rafts nor boats.
+As to their crossing the river on the ice, that was not pos-
+sible. The newly-frozen plain could not bear the weight of
+an assaulting column.
+
+This circumstance, as it appeared favorable to the de-
+fenders of Irkutsk, Ogareff might have regretted. He did
+not do so, however. The traitor knew well that the Tar-
+tars would not try to pass the Angara, and that, on its side
+at least, their attempt was only a feint.
+
+About ten in the evening, the state of the river sensibly
+improved, to the great surprise of the besieged and still
+more to their disadvantage. The passage till then imprac-
+ticable, became all at once possible. The bed of the Angara
+was clear. The blocks of ice, which had for some days
+drifted past in large numbers, disappeared down the cur-
+rent, and five or six only now occupied the space between
+the banks. The Russian officers reported this change in
+the river to the Grand Duke. They suggested that it was
+probably caused by the circumstance that in some narrower
+part of the Angara, the blocks had accumulated so as to
+form a barrier.
+
+We know this was the case. The passage of the Angara
+was thus open to the besiegers. There was great reason
+for the Russians to be on their guard.
+
+Up to midnight nothing had occurred. On the Eastern
+side, beyond the Bolchaia Gate, all was quiet. Not a
+glimmer was seen in the dense forest, which appeared con-
+founded on the horizon with the masses of clouds hanging
+low down in the sky. Lights flitting to and fro in the
+Angara camp, showed that a considerable movement was
+taking place. From a verst above and below the point
+where the scarp met the river's bank, came a dull murmur,
+proving that the Tartars were on foot, expecting some
+signal. An hour passed. Nothing new.
+
+The bell of the Irkutsk cathedral was about to strike two
+o'clock in the morning, and not a movement amongst the
+besiegers had yet shown that they were about to commence
+the assault. The Grand Duke and his officers began to
+suspect that they had been mistaken. Had it really been
+the Tartars' plan to surprise the town? The preceding
+nights had not been nearly so quiet -- musketry rattling from
+the outposts, shells whistling through the air; and this time,
+nothing. The officers waited, ready to give their orders,
+according to circumstances.
+
+We have said that Ogareff occupied a room in the palace.
+It was a large chamber on the ground floor, its windows
+opening on a side terrace. By taking a few steps along
+this terrace, a view of the river could be obtained.
+
+Profound darkness reigned in the room. Ogareff stood
+by a window, awaiting the hour to act. The signal, of
+course, could come from him, alone. This signal once given,
+when the greater part of the defenders of Irkutsk would
+be summoned to the points openly attacked, his plan was
+to leave the palace and hurry to the Bolchaia Gate. If it
+was unguarded, he would open it; or at least he would direct
+the overwhelming mass of its assailants against the few de-
+fenders.
+
+He now crouched in the shadow, like a wild beast ready
+to spring on its prey. A few minutes before two o'clock,
+the Grand Duke desired that Michael Strogoff -- which was
+the only name they could give to Ivan Ogareff -- should be
+brought to him. An aide-de-camp came to the room, the
+door of which was closed. He called.
+
+Ogareff, motionless near the window, and invisible in
+the shade did not answer. The Grand Duke was therefore
+informed that the Czar's courier was not at that moment in
+the palace.
+
+Two o'clock struck. Now was the time to cause the
+diversion agreed upon with the Tartars, waiting for the
+assault. Ivan Ogareff opened the window and stationed
+himself at the North angle of the side terrace.
+
+Below him flowed the roaring waters of the Angara.
+Ogareff took a match from his pocket, struck it and lighted
+a small bunch of tow, impregnated with priming powder,
+which he threw into the river.
+
+It was by the orders of Ivan Ogareff that the torrents of
+mineral oil had been thrown on the surface of the Angara!
+There are numerous naphtha springs above Irkutsk, on the
+right bank, between the suburb of Poshkavsk and the town.
+Ogareff had resolved to employ this terrible means to carry
+fire into Irkutsk. He therefore took possession of the im-
+mense reservoirs which contained the combustible liquid.
+It was only necessary to demolish a piece of wall in order
+to allow it to flow out in a vast stream.
+
+This had been done that night, a few hours previously,
+and this was the reason that the raft which carried the
+true Courier of the Czar, Nadia, and the fugitives, floated
+on a current of mineral oil. Through the breaches in these
+reservoirs of enormous dimensions rushed the naphtha in
+torrents, and, following the inclination of the ground, it
+spread over the surface of the river, where its density
+allowed it to float. This was the way Ivan Ogareff carried
+on warfare! Allied with Tartars, he acted like a Tartar,
+and against his own countrymen!
+
+The tow had been thrown on the waters of the Angara.
+In an instant, with electrical rapidity, as if the current had
+been of alcohol, the whole river was in a blaze above and
+below the town. Columns of blue flames ran between the
+two banks. Volumes of vapor curled up above. The few
+pieces of ice which still drifted were seized by the burning
+liquid, and melted like wax on the top of a furnace, the
+evaporated water escaping in shrill hisses.
+
+At the same moment, firing broke out on the North and
+South of the town. The enemy's batteries discharged their
+guns at random. Several thousand Tartars rushed to the
+assault of the earth-works. The houses on the bank, built
+of wood, took fire in every direction. A bright light dis-
+sipated the darkness of the night.
+
+"At last!" said Ivan Ogareff.
+
+He had good reason for congratulating himself. The
+diversion which he had planned was terrible. The defenders
+of Irkutsk found themselves between the attack of the Tar-
+tars and the fearful effects of fire. The bells rang, and
+all the able-bodied of the population ran, some towards the
+points attacked, and others towards the houses in the grasp
+of the flames, which it seemed too probable would ere long
+envelop the whole town.
+
+The Gate of Bolchaia was nearly free. Only a very small
+guard had been left there. And by the traitor's suggestion,
+and in order that the event might be explained apart from
+him, as if by political hate, this small guard had been chosen
+from the little band of exiles.
+
+Ogareff re-entered his room, now brilliantly lighted by
+the flames from the Angara; then he made ready to go out.
+But scarcely had he opened the door, when a woman rushed
+into the room, her clothes drenched, her hair in disorder.
+
+"Sangarre!" exclaimed Ogareff, in the first moment of
+surprise, and not supposing that it could be any other
+woman than the gypsy.
+
+It was not Sangarre; it was Nadia!
+
+At the moment when, floating on the ice, the girl had
+uttered a cry on seeing the fire spreading along the current,
+Michael had seized her in his arms, and plunged with her
+into the river itself to seek a refuge in its depths from the
+flames. The block which bore them was not thirty fathoms
+from the first quay of Irkutsk.
+
+Swimming beneath the water, Michael managed to get
+a footing with Nadia on the quay. Michael Strogoff had
+reached his journey's end! He was in Irkutsk!
+
+"To the governor's palace!" said he to Nadia.
+
+In less than ten minutes, they arrived at the entrance
+to the palace. Long tongues of flame from the Angara
+licked its walls, but were powerless to set it on fire. Be-
+yond the houses on the bank were in a blaze.
+
+The palace being open to all, Michael and Nadia entered
+without difficulty. In the confusion, no one remarked them,
+although their garments were dripping. A crowd of
+officers coming for orders, and of soldiers running to ex-
+ecute them, filled the great hall on the ground floor. There,
+in a sudden eddy of the confused multitude, Michael and the
+young girl were separated from each other.
+
+Nadia ran distracted through the passages, calling her
+companion, and asking to be taken to the Grand Duke. A
+door into a room flooded with light opened before her.
+She entered, and found herself suddenly face to face with
+the man whom she had met at Ichim, whom she had seen
+at Tomsk; face to face with the one whose villainous hand
+would an instant later betray the town!
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" she cried.
+
+On hearing his name pronounced, the wretch started.
+His real name known, all his plans would be balked. There
+was but one thing to be done: to kill the person who had
+just uttered it. Ogareff darted at Nadia; but the girl, a
+knife in her hand, retreated against the wall, determined to
+defend herself.
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" again cried Nadia, knowing well that
+so detested a name would soon bring her help.
+
+"Ah! Be silent!" hissed out the traitor between his
+clenched teeth.
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" exclaimed a third time the brave young
+girl, in a voice to which hate had added ten-fold strength.
+
+Mad with fury, Ogareff, drawing a dagger from his belt,
+again rushed at Nadia and compelled her to retreat into a
+corner of the room. Her last hope appeared gone, when the
+villain, suddenly lifted by an irresistible force, was dashed
+to the ground.
+
+"Michael!" cried Nadia.
+
+It was Michael Strogoff. Michael had heard Nadia's
+call. Guided by her voice, he had just in time reached Ivan
+Ogareff's room, and entered by the open door.
+
+"Fear nothing, Nadia," said he, placing himself between
+her and Ogareff.
+
+"Ah!" cried the girl, "take care, brother! The traitor
+is armed! He can see!"
+
+Ogareff rose, and, thinking he had an immeasurable ad-
+vantage over the blind man leaped upon him. But with
+one hand, the blind man grasped the arm of his enemy,
+seized his weapon, and hurled him again to the ground.
+
+Pale with rage and shame, Ogareff remembered that he
+wore a sword. He drew it and returned a second time to
+the charge. A blind man! Ogareff had only to deal with
+a blind man! He was more than a match for him!
+
+Nadia, terrified at the danger which threatened her com-
+panion ran to the door calling for help!
+
+"Close the door, Nadia!" said Michael. "Call no one,
+and leave me alone! The Czar's courier has nothing to fear
+to-day from this villain! Let him come on, if he dares!
+I am ready for him."
+
+In the mean time, Ogareff, gathering himself together
+like a tiger about to spring, uttered not a word. The noise
+of his footsteps, his very breathing, he endeavored to con-
+ceal from the ear of the blind man. His object was to strike
+before his opponent was aware of his approach, to strike
+him with a deadly blow.
+
+Nadia, terrified and at the same time confident, watched
+this terrible scene with involuntary admiration. Michael's
+calm bearing seemed to have inspired her. Michael's sole
+weapon was his Siberian knife. He did not see his adver-
+sary armed with a sword, it is true; but Heaven's support
+seemed to be afforded him. How, almost without stirring,
+did he always face the point of the sword?
+
+Ivan Ogareff watched his strange adversary with visible
+anxiety. His superhuman calm had an effect upon him.
+In vain, appealing to his reason, did he tell himself that in
+so unequal a combat all the advantages were on his side.
+The immobility of the blind man froze him. He had
+settled on the place where he would strike his victim. He
+had fixed upon it! What, then, hindered him from putting
+an end to his blind antagonist?
+
+At last, with a spring he drove his sword full at Michael's
+breast. An imperceptible movement of the blind man's
+knife turned aside the blow. Michael had not been touched,
+and coolly he awaited a second attack.
+
+Cold drops stood on Ogareff's brow. He drew back a
+step, then again leaped forward. But as had the first, this
+second attempt failed. The knife had simply parried the
+blow from the traitor's useless sword.
+
+Mad with rage and terror before this living statue, he
+gazed into the wide-open eyes of the blind man. Those
+eyes which seemed to pierce to the bottom of his soul, and
+yet which did not, could not, see -- exercised a sort of dread-
+ful fascination over him.
+
+All at once, Ogareff uttered a cry. A sudden light
+flashed across his brain. "He sees!" he exclaimed, "he
+sees!" And like a wild beast trying to retreat into its den,
+step by step, terrified, he drew back to the end of the room.
+
+Then the statue became animated, the blind man walked
+straight up to Ivan Ogareff, and placing himself right before
+him, "Yes, I see!" said he. "I see the mark of the knout
+which I gave you, traitor and coward! I see the place
+where I am about to strike you! Defend your life! It is
+a duel I deign to offer you! My knife against your
+sword!"
+
+"He sees!" said Nadia. "Gracious Heaven, is it pos-
+sible!"
+
+Ogareff felt that he was lost. But mustering all his
+courage, he sprang forward on his impassible adversary.
+The two blades crossed, but at a touch from Michael's knife,
+wielded in the hand of the Siberian hunter, the sword flew
+in splinters, and the wretch, stabbed to the heart, fell life-
+less on the ground.
+
+At the same moment, the door was thrown open. The
+Grand Duke, accompanied by some of his officers, appeared
+on the threshold. The Grand Duke advanced. In the
+body lying on the ground, he recognized the man whom he
+believed to be the Czar's courier.
+
+Then, in a threatening voice, "Who killed that man?"
+he asked.
+
+"I," replied Michael.
+
+One of the officers put a pistol to his temple, ready to fire.
+
+"Your name?" asked the Grand Duke, before giving
+the order for his brains to be blown out.
+
+"Your Highness," answered Michael, "ask me rather
+the name of the man who lies at your feet!"
+
+"That man, I know him! He is a servant of my brother!
+He is the Czar's courier!"
+
+"That man, your Highness, is not a courier of the Czar!
+He is Ivan Ogareff!"
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" exclaimed the Grand Duke.
+
+"Yes, Ivan the Traitor!"
+
+"But who are you, then?"
+
+"Michael Strogoff!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+CONCLUSION
+
+MICHAEL STROGOFF was not, had never been, blind. A
+purely human phenomenon, at the same time moral and
+physical, had neutralized the action of the incandescent
+blade which Feofar's executioner had passed before his
+eyes.
+
+It may be remembered, that at the moment of the ex-
+ecution, Marfa Strogoff was present, stretching out her
+hands towards her son. Michael gazed at her as a son
+would gaze at his mother, when it is for the last time. The
+tears, which his pride in vain endeavored to subdue, welling
+up from his heart, gathered under his eyelids, and volatiliz-
+ing on the cornea, had saved his sight. The vapor formed
+by his tears interposing between the glowing saber and his
+eyeballs, had been sufficient to annihilate the action of the
+heat. A similar effect is produced, when a workman
+smelter, after dipping his hand in vapor, can with impunity
+hold it over a stream of melted iron.
+
+Michael had immediately understood the danger in which
+he would be placed should he make known his secret to any-
+one. He at once saw, on the other hand, that he might
+make use of his supposed blindness for the accomplishment
+of his designs. Because it was believed that he was blind,
+he would be allowed to go free. He must therefore be
+blind, blind to all, even to Nadia, blind everywhere, and
+not a gesture at any moment must let the truth be sus-
+pected. His resolution was taken. He must risk his life
+even to afford to all he might meet the proof of his want of
+sight. We know how perfectly he acted the part he had
+determined on.
+
+His mother alone knew the truth, and he had whispered
+it to her in Tomsk itself, when bending over her in the dark
+he covered her with kisses.
+
+When Ogareff had in his cruel irony held the Imperial
+letter before the eyes which he believed were destroyed,
+Michael had been able to read, and had read the letter which
+disclosed the odious plans of the traitor. This was the
+reason of the wonderful resolution he exhibited during the
+second part of his journey. This was the reason of his un-
+alterable longing to reach Irkutsk, so as to perform his mis-
+sion by word of mouth. He knew that the town would be
+betrayed! He knew that the life of the Grand Duke was
+threatened! The safety of the Czar's brother and of
+Siberia was in his hands.
+
+This story was told in a few words to the Grand Duke,
+and Michael repeated also -- and with what emotion! -- the
+part Nadia had taken in these events.
+
+"Who is this girl?" asked the Grand Duke.
+
+"The daughter of the exile, Wassili Fedor," replied
+Michael.
+
+"The daughter of Captain Fedor," said the Grand Duke,
+"has ceased to be the daughter of an exile. There are no
+longer exiles in Irkutsk."
+
+Nadia, less strong in joy than she had been in grief, fell
+on her knees before the Grand Duke, who raised her with
+one hand, while he extended the other to Michael.
+
+An hour after, Nadia was in her father's arms. Michael
+Strogoff, Nadia, and Wassili Fedor were united. This was
+the height of happiness to them all.
+
+The Tartars had been repulsed in their double attack on
+the town. Wassili Fedor, with his little band, had driven
+back the first assailants who presented themselves at the
+Bolchaia Gate, expecting to find it open and which, by an
+instinctive feeling, often arising from sound judgment,
+he had determined to remain at and defend.
+
+At the same time as the Tartars were driven back the
+besieged had mastered the fire. The liquid naphtha having
+rapidly burnt to the surface of the water, the flames did
+not go beyond the houses on the shore, and left the other
+quarters of the town uninjured. Before daybreak the
+troops of Feofar-Khan had retreated into their camp, leav-
+ing a large number of dead on and below the ramparts.
+
+Among the dead was the gypsy Sangarre, who had vainly
+endeavored to join Ivan Ogareff.
+
+For two days the besiegers attempted no fresh assault.
+They were discouraged by the death of Ogareff. This man
+was the mainspring of the invasion, and he alone, by his
+plots long since contrived, had had sufficient influence over
+the khans and their hordes to bring them to the conquest
+of Asiatic Russia.
+
+However, the defenders of Irkutsk kept on their guard,
+and the investment still continued; but on the 7th of Octo-
+ber, at daybreak, cannon boomed out from the heights
+around Irkutsk. It was the succoring army under the com-
+mand of General Kisselef, and it was thus that he made
+known his welcome arrival to the Grand Duke.
+
+The Tartars did not wait to be attacked. Not daring
+to run the risk of a battle under the walls of Irkutsk, they
+immediately broke up the Angara camp. Irkutsk was at
+last relieved.
+
+With the first Russian soldiers, two of Michael's friends
+entered the city. They were the inseparable Blount and
+Jolivet. On gaining the right bank of the Angara by
+means of the icy barrier, they had escaped, as had the other
+fugitives, before the flames had reached their raft. This
+had been noted by Alcide Jolivet in his book in this way:
+"Ran a narrow chance of being finished up like a lemon in
+a bowl of punch!"
+
+Their joy was great on finding Nadia and Michael safe
+and sound; above all, when they learnt that their brave
+companion was not blind. Harry Blount inscribed this ob-
+servation: "Red-hot iron is insufficient in some cases to de-
+stroy the sensibility of the optic nerve."
+
+Then the two correspondents, settled for a time in
+Irkutsk, busied themselves in putting the notes and impres-
+sions of their journey in order. Thence were sent to Lon-
+don and Paris two interesting articles relative to the Tartar
+invasion, and which -- a rare thing -- did not contradict each
+other even on the least important points.
+
+The remainder of the campaign was unfortunate to the
+Emir and his allies. This invasion, futile as all which at-
+tack the Russian Colossus must be, was very fatal to them.
+They soon found themselves cut off by the Czar's troops,
+who retook in succession all the conquered towns. Besides
+this, the winter was terrible, and, decimated by the cold,
+only a small part of these hordes returned to the steppes
+of Tartary.
+
+The Irkutsk road, by way of the Ural Mountains, was
+now open. The Grand Duke was anxious to return to
+Moscow, but he delayed his journey to be present at a
+touching ceremony, which took place a few days after the
+entry of the Russian troops.
+
+Michael Strogoff sought Nadia, and in her father's pres-
+ence said to her, "Nadia, my sister still, when you left Riga
+to come to Irkutsk, did you leave it with any other regret
+than that for your mother?"
+
+"No," replied Nadia, "none of any sort whatever."
+
+"Then, nothing of your heart remains there?"
+
+"Nothing, brother."
+
+"Then, Nadia," said Michael, "I think that God, in al-
+lowing us to meet, and to go through so many severe trials
+together, must have meant us to be united forever."
+
+"Ah!" said Nadia, falling into Michael's arms. Then
+turning towards Wassili Fedor, "My father," said she,
+blushing.
+
+"Nadia," said Captain Fedor, "it will be my joy to call
+you both my children!"
+
+The marriage ceremony took place in Irkutsk cathedral.
+
+Jolivet and Blount very naturally assisted at this mar-
+riage, of which they wished to give an account to their
+readers.
+
+"And doesn't it make you wish to imitate them?" asked
+Alcide of his friend.
+
+"Pooh!" said Blount. "Now if I had a cousin like
+you --"
+
+"My cousin isn't to be married!" answered Alcide, laugh-
+ing.
+
+"So much the better," returned Blount, "for they speak
+of difficulties arising between London and Pekin. Have
+you no wish to go and see what is going on there?"
+
+"By Jove, my dear Blount!" exclaimed Alcide Jolivet,
+"I was just going to make the same proposal to you."
+
+And that was how the two inseparables set off for China.
+
+A few days after the ceremony, Michael and Nadia
+Strogoff, accompanied by Wassili Fedor, took the route to
+Europe. The road so full of suffering when going, was a
+road of joy in returning. They traveled swiftly, in one
+of those sleighs which glide like an express train across
+the frozen steppes of Siberia.
+
+However, when they reached the banks of the Dinka,
+just before Birskoe, they stopped for a while. Michael
+found the place where he had buried poor Nicholas. A
+cross was erected there, and Nadia prayed a last time on
+the grave of the humble and heroic friend, whom neither
+of them would ever forget.
+
+At Omsk, old Marfa awaited them in the little house of
+the Strogoffs. She clasped passionately in her arms the
+girl whom in her heart she had already a hundred times
+called "daughter." The brave old Siberian, on that day,
+had the right to recognize her son and say she was proud
+of him.
+
+After a few days passed at Omsk, Michael and Nadia
+entered Europe, and, Wassili Fedor settling down in St.
+Petersburg, neither his son nor his daughter had any occa-
+sion to leave him, except to go and see their old mother.
+
+The young courier was received by the Czar, who at-
+tached him specially to his own person, and gave him the
+Cross of St. George. In the course of time, Michael
+Strogoff reached a high station in the Empire. But it is
+not the history of his success, but the history of his trials,
+which deserves to be related.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Michael Strogoff, by Jules Verne
+
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Michael Strogoff
+
+Author: Jules Verne
+
+Release Date: August, 1999 [EBook #1842]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on May 16, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: iso-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MICHAEL STROGOFF ***
+
+
+
+
+Eric Eldred from an etext prepared by Judy Boss
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h1>Michael Strogoff</h1>
+
+<h3>or</h3>
+
+<h3>The Courier of the Czar</h3>
+
+<h2>by Jules Verne</h2>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<h1>Michael Strogoff</h1>
+
+<h2>BOOK I</h2>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I A FETE AT THE NEW PALACE</h2>
+
+
+<p>"SIRE, a fresh dispatch."</p>
+
+<p>"Whence?"</p>
+
+<p>"From Tomsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is the wire cut beyond that city?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sire, since yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Telegraph hourly to Tomsk, General, and keep me informed of
+all that occurs."</p>
+
+<p>"Sire, it shall be done," answered General Kissoff.</p>
+
+<p>These words were exchanged about two hours after midnight, at
+the moment when the fete given at the New Palace was at the
+height of its splendor.</p>
+
+<p>
+ During the whole evening the bands of the Preobra-jensky and
+Paulowsky regiments had played without cessation polkas,
+mazurkas, schottisches, and waltzes from among the choicest of
+their repertoires.
+ Innumerable couples of dancers whirled through the magnificent
+saloons of the palace, which stood at a few paces only from the
+"old house of stones"--in former days the scene of so many
+terrible dramas, the echoes of whose walls were this night
+awakened by the gay strains of the musicians.</p>
+
+<p>The grand-chamberlain of the court, was, besides, well
+seconded in his arduous and delicate duties. The grand-dukes and
+their aides-de-camp, the chamberlains-in-waiting and other
+officers of the palace, presided personally in the arrangement of
+the dances.
+ The grand duchesses, covered with diamonds, the
+ladies-in-waiting in their most exquisite costumes, set the
+example to the wives of the military and civil dignitaries of the
+ancient "city of white stone." When, therefore, the signal for
+the "polonaise"
+ resounded through the saloons, and the guests of all ranks took
+part in that measured promenade, which on occasions of this kind
+has all the importance of a national dance, the mingled costumes,
+the sweeping robes adorned with lace, and uniforms covered with
+orders, presented a scene of dazzling splendor, lighted by
+hundreds of lusters multiplied tenfold by the numerous mirrors
+adorning the walls.</p>
+
+<p>The grand saloon, the finest of all those contained in the New
+Palace, formed to this procession of exalted personages and
+splendidly dressed women a frame worthy of the magnificence they
+displayed.
+ The rich ceiling, with its gilding already softened by the touch
+of time, appeared as if glittering with stars. The embroidered
+drapery of the curtains and doors, falling in gorgeous folds,
+assumed rich and varied hues, broken by the shadows of the heavy
+masses of damask.</p>
+
+<p>Through the panes of the vast semicircular bay-windows the
+light, with which the saloons were filled, shone forth with the
+brilliancy of a conflagration, vividly illuminating the gloom in
+which for some hours the palace had been shrouded.
+ The attention of those of the guests not taking part in the
+dancing was attracted by the contrast.
+ Resting in the recesses of the windows, they could discern,
+standing out dimly in the darkness, the vague outlines of the
+countless towers, domes, and spires which adorn the ancient
+city.
+ Below the sculptured balconies were visible numerous sentries,
+pacing silently up and down, their rifles carried horizontally on
+the shoulder, and the spikes of their helmets glittering like
+flames in the glare of light issuing from the palace.
+ The steps also of the patrols could be heard beating time on the
+stones beneath with even more regularity than the feet of the
+dancers on the floor of the saloon.
+ From time to time the watchword was repeated from post to post,
+and occasionally the notes of a trumpet, mingling with the
+strains of the orchestra, penetrated into their midst.
+ Still farther down, in front of the facade, dark masses obscured
+the rays of light which proceeded from the windows of the New
+Palace. These were boats descending the course of a river, whose
+waters, faintly illumined by a few lamps, washed the lower
+portion of the terraces.</p>
+
+<p>The principal personage who has been mentioned, the giver of
+the fete, and to whom General Kissoff had been speaking in that
+tone of respect with which sovereigns alone are usually
+addressed, wore the simple uniform of an officer of chasseurs of
+the guard.
+ This was not affectation on his part, but the custom of a man
+who cared little for dress, his contrasting strongly with the
+gorgeous costumes amid which he moved, encircled by his escort of
+Georgians, Cossacks, and Circassians--a brilliant band,
+splendidly clad in the glittering uniforms of the Caucasus.</p>
+
+<p>This personage, of lofty stature, affable demeanor, and
+physiognomy calm, though bearing traces of anxiety, moved from
+group to group, seldom speaking, and appearing to pay but little
+attention either to the merriment of the younger guests or the
+graver remarks of the exalted dignitaries or members of the
+diplomatic corps who represented at the Russian court the
+principal governments of Europe. Two or three of these astute
+politicians--physiognomists by virtue of their profession--
+failed not to detect on the countenance of their host symptoms of
+disquietude, the source of which eluded their penetration; but
+none ventured to interrogate him on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>It was evidently the intention of the officer of chasseurs
+that his own anxieties should in no way cast a shade over the
+festivities; and, as he was a personage whom almost the
+population of a world in itself was wont to obey, the gayety of
+the ball was not for a moment checked.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, General Kissoff waited until the officer to whom
+he had just communicated the dispatch forwarded from Tomsk should
+give him permission to withdraw; but the latter still remained
+silent.
+ He had taken the telegram, he had read it carefully, and his
+visage became even more clouded than before.
+ Involuntarily he sought the hilt of his sword, and then passed
+his hand for an instant before his eyes, as though, dazzled by
+the brilliancy of the light, he wished to shade them, the better
+to see into the recesses of his own mind.</p>
+
+<p>"We are, then," he continued, after having drawn General
+Kissoff aside towards a window, "since yesterday without
+intelligence from the Grand Duke?"</p>
+
+<p>"Without any, sire; and it is to be feared that in a short
+time dispatches will no longer cross the Siberian frontier."</p>
+
+<p>"But have not the troops of the provinces of Amoor and
+Irkutsk, as those also of the Trans-Balkan territory, received
+orders to march immediately upon Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"The orders were transmitted by the last telegram we were able
+to send beyond Lake Baikal."</p>
+
+<p>"And the governments of Yeniseisk, Omsk, Semipolatinsk, and
+Tobolsk--are we still in direct communication with them as before
+the insurrection?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sire; our dispatches have reached them, and we are
+assured at the present moment that the Tartars have not advanced
+beyond the Irtish and the Obi."</p>
+
+<p>"And the traitor Ivan Ogareff, are there no tidings of
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"None," replied General Kissoff. "The head of the police
+cannot state whether or not he has crossed the frontier."</p>
+
+<p>"Let a description of him be immediately dispatched to
+Nijni-Novgorod, Perm, Ekaterenburg, Kasirnov, Tioumen, Ishim,
+Omsk, Tomsk, and to all the telegraphic stations with which
+communication is yet open."</p>
+
+<p>"Your majesty's orders shall be instantly carried out."</p>
+
+<p>"You will observe the strictest silence as to this."</p>
+
+<p>The General, having made a sign of respectful assent, bowing
+low, mingled with the crowd, and finally left the apartments
+without his departure being remarked.</p>
+
+<p>The officer remained absorbed in thought for a few moments,
+when, recovering himself, he went among the various groups in the
+saloon, his countenance reassuming that calm aspect which had for
+an instant been disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the important occurrence which had occasioned
+these rapidly exchanged words was not so unknown as the officer
+of the chasseurs of the guard and General Kissoff had possibly
+supposed. It was not spoken of officially, it is true, nor even
+officiously, since tongues were not free; but a few exalted
+personages had been informed, more or less exactly, of the events
+which had taken place beyond the frontier.
+ At any rate, that which was only slightly known, that which was
+not matter of conversation even between members of the corps
+diplomatique, two guests, distinguished by no uniform, no
+decoration, at this reception in the New Palace, discussed in a
+low voice, and with apparently very correct information.</p>
+
+<p>By what means, by the exercise of what acuteness had these two
+ordinary mortals ascertained that which so many persons of the
+highest rank and importance scarcely even suspected? It is
+impossible to say.
+ Had they the gifts of foreknowledge and foresight? Did they
+possess a supplementary sense, which enabled them to see beyond
+that limited horizon which bounds all human gaze? Had they
+obtained a peculiar power of divining the most secret events? Was
+it owing to the habit, now become a second nature, of living on
+information, that their mental constitution had thus become
+really transformed?
+ It was difficult to escape from this conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Of these two men, the one was English, the other French; both
+were tall and thin, but the latter was sallow as are the southern
+Provencals, while the former was ruddy like a Lancashire
+gentleman.
+ The Anglo-Norman, formal, cold, grave, parsimonious of gestures
+and words, appeared only to speak or gesticulate under the
+influence of a spring operating at regular intervals.
+ The Gaul, on the contrary, lively and petulant, expressed
+himself with lips, eyes, hands, all at once, having twenty
+different ways of explaining his thoughts, whereas his
+interlocutor seemed to have only one, immutably stereotyped on
+his brain.</p>
+
+<p>The strong contrast they presented would at once have struck
+the most superficial observer; but a physiognomist, regarding
+them closely, would have defined their particular characteristics
+by saying, that if the Frenchman was "all eyes," the Englishman
+was "all ears."</p>
+
+<p>In fact, the visual apparatus of the one had been singularly
+perfected by practice. The sensibility of its retina must have
+been as instantaneous as that of those conjurors who recognize a
+card merely by a rapid movement in cutting the pack or by the
+arrangement only of marks invisible to others.
+ The Frenchman indeed possessed in the highest degree what may be
+called "the memory of the eye."</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman, on the contrary, appeared especially organized
+to listen and to hear. When his aural apparatus had been once
+struck by the sound of a voice he could not forget it, and after
+ten or even twenty years he would have recognized it among a
+thousand.
+ His ears, to be sure, had not the power of moving as freely as
+those of animals who are provided with large auditory flaps; but,
+since scientific men know that human ears possess, in fact, a
+very limited power of movement, we should not be far wrong in
+affirming that those of the said Englishman became erect, and
+turned in all directions while endeavoring to gather in the
+sounds, in a manner apparent only to the naturalist.
+ It must be observed that this perfection of sight and hearing
+was of wonderful assistance to these two men in their vocation,
+for the Englishman acted as correspondent of the Daily Telegraph,
+and the Frenchman, as correspondent of what newspaper, or of what
+newspapers, he did not say; and when asked, he replied in a
+jocular manner that he corresponded with "his cousin Madeleine."
+This Frenchman, however, neath his careless surface, was
+wonderfully shrewd and sagacious.
+ Even while speaking at random, perhaps the better to hide his
+desire to learn, he never forgot himself. His loquacity even
+helped him to conceal his thoughts, and he was perhaps even more
+discreet than his confrere of the Daily Telegraph. Both were
+present at this fete given at the New Palace on the night of the
+15th of July in their character of reporters.</p>
+
+<p>
+ It is needless to say that these two men were devoted to their
+mission in the world--that they delighted to throw themselves in
+the track of the most unexpected intelligence--that nothing
+terrified or discouraged them from succeeding--that they
+possessed the imperturbable sang froid and the genuine
+intrepidity of men of their calling.
+ Enthusiastic jockeys in this steeplechase, this hunt after
+information, they leaped hedges, crossed rivers, sprang over
+fences, with the ardor of pure-blooded racers, who will run "a
+good first" or die!</p>
+
+<p>Their journals did not restrict them with regard to money--
+the surest, the most rapid, the most perfect element of
+information known to this day. It must also be added, to their
+honor, that neither the one nor the other ever looked over or
+listened at the walls of private life, and that they only
+exercised their vocation when political or social interests were
+at stake.
+ In a word, they made what has been for some years called "the
+great political and military reports."</p>
+
+<p>It will be seen, in following them, that they had generally an
+independent mode of viewing events, and, above all, their
+consequences, each having his own way of observing and
+appreciating.</p>
+
+<p>The French correspondent was named Alcide Jolivet. Harry
+Blount was the name of the Englishman. They had just met for the
+first time at this fete in the New Palace, of which they had been
+ordered to give an account in their papers. The dissimilarity of
+their characters, added to a certain amount of jealousy, which
+generally exists between rivals in the same calling, might have
+rendered them but little sympathetic. However, they did not avoid
+each other, but endeavored rather to exchange with each other the
+chat of the day.
+ They were sportsmen, after all, hunting on the same ground.
+ That which one missed might be advantageously secured by the
+other, and it was to their interest to meet and converse.</p>
+
+<p>This evening they were both on the look out; they felt, in
+fact, that there was something in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"Even should it be only a wildgoose chase," said Alcide
+Jolivet to himself, "it may be worth powder and shot."</p>
+
+<p>The two correspondents therefore began by cautiously sounding
+each other.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, my dear sir, this little fete is charming!"
+ said Alcide Jolivet pleasantly, thinking himself obliged to
+begin the conversation with this eminently French phrase.</p>
+
+<p>"I have telegraphed already, 'splendid!'" replied Harry Blount
+calmly, employing the word specially devoted to expressing
+admiration by all subjects of the United Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless," added Alcide Jolivet, "I felt compelled to
+remark to my cousin--"</p>
+
+<p>"Your cousin?" repeated Harry Blount in a tone of surprise,
+interrupting his brother of the pen.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," returned Alcide Jolivet, "my cousin Madeleine. It is
+with her that I correspond, and she likes to be quickly and well
+informed, does my cousin. I therefore remarked to her that,
+during this fete, a sort of cloud had appeared to overshadow the
+sovereign's brow."</p>
+
+<p>"To me, it seemed radiant," replied Harry Blount, who perhaps,
+wished to conceal his real opinion on this topic.</p>
+
+<p>"And, naturally, you made it 'radiant,' in the columns of the
+Daily Telegraph."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember, Mr. Blount, what occurred at Zakret in
+1812?"</p>
+
+<p>"I remember it as well as if I had been there, sir,"
+ replied the English correspondent.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," continued Alcide Jolivet, "you know that, in the
+middle of a fete given in his honor, it was announced to the
+Emperor Alexander that Napoleon had just crossed the Niemen with
+the vanguard of the French army. Nevertheless the Emperor did not
+leave the fete, and notwithstanding the extreme gravity of
+intelligence which might cost him his empire, he did not allow
+himself to show more uneasiness."</p>
+
+<p>"Than our host exhibited when General Kissoff informed him
+that the telegraphic wires had just been cut between the frontier
+and the government of Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you are aware of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am!"</p>
+
+<p>"As regards myself, it would be difficult to avoid knowing it,
+since my last telegram reached Udinsk," observed Alcide Jolivet,
+with some satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"And mine only as far as Krasnoiarsk," answered Harry Blount,
+in a no less satisfied tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you know also that orders have been sent to the troops
+of Nikolaevsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do, sir; and at the same time a telegram was sent to the
+Cossacks of the government of Tobolsk to concentrate their
+forces."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing can be more true, Mr. Blount; I was equally well
+acquainted with these measures, and you may be sure that my dear
+cousin shall know of them to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly as the readers of the Daily Telegraph shall know it
+also, M. Jolivet."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, when one sees all that is going on. . . ."</p>
+
+<p>"And when one hears all that is said. . . ."</p>
+
+<p>"An interesting campaign to follow, Mr. Blount."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall follow it, M. Jolivet!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is possible that we shall find ourselves on ground
+less safe, perhaps, than the floor of this ball-room."</p>
+
+<p>"Less safe, certainly, but--"</p>
+
+<p>"But much less slippery," added Alcide Jolivet, holding up his
+companion, just as the latter, drawing back, was about to lose
+his equilibrium.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon the two correspondents separated, pleased that the
+one had not stolen a march on the other.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the doors of the rooms adjoining the great
+reception saloon were thrown open, disclosing to view several
+immense tables beautifully laid out, and groaning under a
+profusion of valuable china and gold plate. On the central table,
+reserved for the princes, princesses, and members of the corps
+diplomatique, glittered an epergne of inestimable price, brought
+from London, and around this chef-d'oeuvre of chased gold
+reflected under the light of the lusters a thousand pieces of
+most beautiful service from the manufactories of Sevres.</p>
+
+<p>The guests of the New Palace immediately began to stream
+towards the supper-rooms.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment. General Kissoff, who had just re-entered,
+quickly approached the officer of chasseurs.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" asked the latter abruptly, as he had done the former
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"Telegrams pass Tomsk no longer, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"A courier this moment!"</p>
+
+<p>The officer left the hall and entered a large antechamber
+adjoining.
+ It was a cabinet with plain oak furniture, situated in an angle
+of the New Palace. Several pictures, amongst others some by
+Horace Vernet, hung on the wall.</p>
+
+<p>The officer hastily opened a window, as if he felt the want of
+air, and stepped out on a balcony to breathe the pure atmosphere
+of a lovely July night. Beneath his eyes, bathed in moonlight,
+lay a fortified inclosure, from which rose two cathedrals, three
+palaces, and an arsenal.
+ Around this inclosure could be seen three distinct towns:
+Kitai-Gorod, Beloi-Gorod, Zemlianai-Gorod--European, Tartar, and
+Chinese quarters of great extent, commanded by towers, belfries,
+minarets, and the cupolas of three hundred churches, with green
+domes, surmounted by the silver cross.
+ A little winding river, here and there reflected the rays of the
+moon.</p>
+
+<p>This river was the Moskowa; the town Moscow; the fortified
+inclosure the Kremlin; and the officer of chasseurs of the guard,
+who, with folded arms and thoughtful brow, was listening dreamily
+to the sounds floating from the New Palace over the old Muscovite
+city, was the Czar.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II RUSSIANS AND TARTARS</h2>
+
+<h2> </h2>
+
+<p>THE Czar had not so suddenly left the ball-room of the New
+Palace, when the fete he was giving to the civil and military
+authorities and principal people of Moscow was at the height of
+its brilliancy, without ample cause; for he had just received
+information that serious events were taking place beyond the
+frontiers of the Ural. It had become evident that a formidable
+rebellion threatened to wrest the Siberian provinces from the
+Russian crown.</p>
+
+<p>Asiatic Russia, or Siberia, covers a superficial area of
+1,790,208 square miles, and contains nearly two millions of
+inhabitants.
+ Extending from the Ural Mountains, which separate it from Russia
+in Europe, to the shores of the Pacific Ocean, it is bounded on
+the south by Turkestan and the Chinese Empire; on the north by
+the Arctic Ocean, from the Sea of Kara to Behring's Straits. It
+is divided into several governments or provinces, those of
+Tobolsk, Yeniseisk, Irkutsk, Omsk, and Yakutsk; contains two
+districts, Okhotsk and Kamtschatka; and possesses two countries,
+now under the Muscovite dominion-- that of the Kirghiz and that
+of the Tshouktshes. This immense extent of steppes, which
+includes more than one hundred and ten degrees from west to east,
+is a land to which criminals and political offenders are
+banished.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Two governor-generals represent the supreme authority of the
+Czar over this vast country. The higher one resides at Irkutsk,
+the far capital of Eastern Siberia. The River Tchouna separates
+the two Siberias.</p>
+
+<p>No rail yet furrows these wide plains, some of which are in
+reality extremely fertile. No iron ways lead from those precious
+mines which make the Siberian soil far richer below than above
+its surface.
+ The traveler journeys in summer in a kibick or telga; in winter,
+in a sledge.</p>
+
+<p>An electric telegraph, with a single wire more than eight
+thousand versts in length, alone affords communication between
+the western and eastern frontiers of Siberia. On issuing from the
+Ural, it passes through Ekaterenburg, Kasirnov, Tioumen, Ishim,
+Omsk, Elamsk, Kolyvan, Tomsk, Krasnoiarsk, Nijni-Udinsk, Irkutsk,
+Verkne-Nertschink, Strelink, Albazine, Blagowstenks, Radde,
+Orlomskaya, Alexandrowskoe, and Nikolaevsk; and six roubles and
+nineteen copecks are paid for every word sent from one end to the
+other. From Irkutsk there is a branch to Kiatka, on the Mongolian
+frontier; and from thence, for thirty copecks a word, the post
+conveys the dispatches to Pekin in a fortnight.</p>
+
+<p>It was this wire, extending from Ekaterenburg to Nikolaevsk,
+which had been cut, first beyond Tomsk, and then between Tomsk
+and Kolyvan.</p>
+
+<p>This was why the Czar, to the communication made to him for
+the second time by General Kissoff, had answered by the words, "A
+courier this moment!"</p>
+
+<p>The Czar remained motionless at the window for a few moments,
+when the door was again opened. The chief of police appeared on
+the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>"Enter, General," said the Czar briefly, "and tell me all you
+know of Ivan Ogareff."</p>
+
+<p>"He is an extremely dangerous man, sire," replied the chief of
+police.</p>
+
+<p>"He ranked as colonel, did he not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he an intelligent officer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very intelligent, but a man whose spirit it was impossible to
+subdue; and possessing an ambition which stopped at nothing, he
+became involved in secret intrigues, and was degraded from his
+rank by his Highness the Grand Duke, and exiled to Siberia."</p>
+
+<p>"How long ago was that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Two years since. Pardoned after six months of exile by your
+majesty's favor, he returned to Russia."</p>
+
+<p>"And since that time, has he not revisited Siberia?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sire; but he voluntarily returned there," replied the
+chief of police, adding, and slightly lowering his voice, "there
+was a time, sire, when NONE returned from Siberia."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, whilst I live, Siberia is and shall be a country whence
+men CAN return."</p>
+
+<p>The Czar had the right to utter these words with some pride,
+for often, by his clemency, he had shown that Russian justice
+knew how to pardon.</p>
+
+<p>The head of the police did not reply to this observation, but
+it was evident that he did not approve of such half-measures.
+According to his idea, a man who had once passed the Ural
+Mountains in charge of policemen, ought never again to cross
+them. Now, it was not thus under the new reign, and the chief of
+police sincerely deplored it.
+ What! no banishment for life for other crimes than those against
+social order! What! political exiles returning from Tobolsk, from
+Yakutsk, from Irkutsk! In truth, the chief of police, accustomed
+to the despotic sentences of the ukase which formerly never
+pardoned, could not understand this mode of governing.
+ But he was silent, waiting until the Czar should interrogate him
+further.
+ The questions were not long in coming.</p>
+
+<p>"Did not Ivan Ogareff," asked the Czar, "return to Russia a
+second time, after that journey through the Siberian provinces,
+the object of which remains unknown?"</p>
+
+<p>"He did."</p>
+
+<p>"And have the police lost trace of him since?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sire; for an offender only becomes really dangerous from
+the day he has received his pardon."</p>
+
+<p>The Czar frowned. Perhaps the chief of police feared that he
+had gone rather too far, though the stubbornness of his ideas was
+at least equal to the boundless devotion he felt for his
+master.
+ But the Czar, disdaining to reply to these indirect reproaches
+cast on his policy, continued his questions.
+ "Where was Ogareff last heard of?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the province of Perm."</p>
+
+<p>"In what town?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Perm itself."</p>
+
+<p>"What was he doing?"</p>
+
+<p>"He appeared unoccupied, and there was nothing suspicious in
+his conduct."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he was not under the surveillance of the secret
+police?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"When did he leave Perm?"</p>
+
+<p>"About the month of March?"</p>
+
+<p>"To go...?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where, is unknown."</p>
+
+<p>"And it is not known what has become of him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sire; it is not known."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, I myself know," answered the Czar. "I have
+received anonymous communications which did not pass through the
+police department; and, in the face of events now taking place
+beyond the frontier, I have every reason to believe that they are
+correct."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean, sire," cried the chief of police, "that Ivan
+Ogareff has a hand in this Tartar rebellion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I do; and I will now tell you something which you are
+ignorant of. After leaving Perm, Ivan Ogareff crossed the Ural
+mountains, entered Siberia, and penetrated the Kirghiz steppes,
+and there endeavored, not without success, to foment rebellion
+amongst their nomadic population.
+ He then went so far south as free Turkestan; there, in the
+provinces of Bokhara, Khokhand, and Koondooz, he found chiefs
+willing to pour their Tartar hordes into Siberia, and excite a
+general rising in Asiatic Russia. The storm has been silently
+gathering, but it has at last burst like a thunderclap, and now
+all means of communication between Eastern and Western Siberia
+have been stopped. Moreover, Ivan Ogareff, thirsting for
+vengeance, aims at the life of my brother!"</p>
+
+<p>The Czar had become excited whilst speaking, and now paced up
+and down with hurried steps. The chief of police said nothing,
+but he thought to himself that, during the time when the emperors
+of Russia never pardoned an exile, schemes such as those of Ivan
+Ogareff could never have been realized.
+ Approaching the Czar, who had thrown himself into an armchair,
+he asked, "Your majesty has of course given orders so that this
+rebellion may be suppressed as soon as possible?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the Czar. "The last telegram which reached
+Nijni-Udinsk would set in motion the troops in the governments of
+Yenisei, Irkutsk, Yakutsk, as well as those in the provinces of
+the Amoor and Lake Baikal. At the same time, the regiments from
+Perm and Nijni-Novgorod, and the Cossacks from the frontier, are
+advancing by forced marches towards the Ural Mountains; but some
+weeks must pass before they can attack the Tartars."</p>
+
+<p>"And your majesty's brother, his Highness the Grand Duke, is
+now isolated in the government of Irkutsk, and is no longer in
+direct communication with Moscow?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is so."</p>
+
+<p>"But by the last dispatches, he must know what measures have
+been taken by your majesty, and what help he may expect from the
+governments nearest Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"He knows that," answered the Czar; "but what he does not know
+is, that Ivan Ogareff, as well as being a rebel, is also playing
+the part of a traitor, and that in him he has a personal and
+bitter enemy.
+ It is to the Grand Duke that Ogareff owes his first disgrace;
+and what is more serious is, that this man is not known to
+him.
+ Ogareff's plan, therefore, is to go to Irkutsk, and, under an
+assumed name, offer his services to the Grand Duke. Then, after
+gaining his confidence, when the Tartars have invested Irkutsk,
+he will betray the town, and with it my brother, whose life he
+seeks.
+ This is what I have learned from my secret intelligence; this is
+what the Grand Duke does not know; and this is what he must
+know!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sire, an intelligent, courageous courier . . ."</p>
+
+<p>"I momentarily expect one."</p>
+
+<p>"And it is to be hoped he will be expeditious," added the
+chief of police; "for, allow me to add, sire, that Siberia is a
+favorable land for rebellions."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say. General, that the exiles would make
+common cause with the rebels?" exclaimed the Czar.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, your majesty," stammered the chief of police, for
+that was really the idea suggested to him by his uneasy and
+suspicious mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe in their patriotism," returned the Czar.</p>
+
+<p>"There are other offenders besides political exiles in
+Siberia,"
+ said the chief of police.</p>
+
+<p>"The criminals? Oh, General, I give those up to you!
+ They are the vilest, I grant, of the human race.
+ They belong to no country. But the insurrection, or rather, the
+rebellion, is not to oppose the emperor; it is raised against
+Russia, against the country which the exiles have not lost all
+hope of again seeing--and which they will see again.
+ No, a Russian would never unite with a Tartar, to weaken, were
+it only for an hour, the Muscovite power!"</p>
+
+<p>The Czar was right in trusting to the patriotism of those whom
+his policy kept, for a time, at a distance. Clemency, which was
+the foundation of his justice, when he could himself direct its
+effects, the modifications he had adopted with regard to
+applications for the formerly terrible ukases, warranted the
+belief that he was not mistaken.
+ But even without this powerful element of success in regard to
+the Tartar rebellion, circumstances were not the less very
+serious; for it was to be feared that a large part of the Kirghiz
+population would join the rebels.</p>
+
+<p>The Kirghiz are divided into three hordes, the greater, the
+lesser, and the middle, and number nearly four hundred thousand
+"tents,"
+ or two million souls. Of the different tribes some are
+independent and others recognize either the sovereignty of Russia
+or that of the Khans of Khiva, Khokhand, and Bokhara, the most
+formidable chiefs of Turkestan. The middle horde, the richest, is
+also the largest, and its encampments occupy all the space
+between the rivers Sara Sou, Irtish, and the Upper Ishim, Lake
+Saisang and Lake Aksakal. The greater horde, occupying the
+countries situated to the east of the middle one, extends as far
+as the governments of Omsk and Tobolsk. Therefore, if the Kirghiz
+population should rise, it would be the rebellion of Asiatic
+Russia, and the first thing would be the separation of Siberia,
+to the east of the Yenisei.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that these Kirghiz, mere novices in the art of war,
+are rather nocturnal thieves and plunderers of caravans than
+regular soldiers.
+ As M. Levchine says, "a firm front or a square of good infantry
+could repel ten times the number of Kirghiz; and a single cannon
+might destroy a frightful number."</p>
+
+<p>That may be; but to do this it is necessary for the square of
+good infantry to reach the rebellious country, and the cannon to
+leave the arsenals of the Russian provinces, perhaps two or three
+thousand versts distant. Now, except by the direct route from
+Ekaterenburg to Irkutsk, the often marshy steppes are not easily
+practicable, and some weeks must certainly pass before the
+Russian troops could reach the Tartar hordes.</p>
+
+<p>Omsk is the center of that military organization of Western
+Siberia which is intended to overawe the Kirghiz population. Here
+are the bounds, more than once infringed by the half-subdued
+nomads, and there was every reason to believe that Omsk was
+already in danger.
+ The line of military stations, that is to say, those Cossack
+posts which are ranged in echelon from Omsk to Semipolatinsk,
+must have been broken in several places. Now, it was to be feared
+that the "Grand Sultans," who govern the Kirghiz districts would
+either voluntarily accept, or involuntarily submit to, the
+dominion of Tartars, Mussulmen like themselves, and that to the
+hate caused by slavery was not united the hate due to the
+antagonism of the Greek and Mussulman religions.
+ For some time, indeed, the Tartars of Turkestan had endeavored,
+both by force and persuasion, to subdue the Kirghiz hordes.</p>
+
+<p>A few words only with respect to these Tartars. The Tartars
+belong more especially to two distinct races, the Caucasian and
+the Mongolian. The Caucasian race, which, as Abel de Remusat
+says, "is regarded in Europe as the type of beauty in our
+species, because all the nations in this part of the world have
+sprung from it,"
+ includes also the Turks and the Persians. The purely Mongolian
+race comprises the Mongols, Manchoux, and Thibetans.</p>
+
+<p>The Tartars who now threatened the Russian Empire, belonged to
+the Caucasian race, and occupied Turkestan. This immense country
+is divided into different states, governed by Khans, and hence
+termed Khanats. The principal khanats are those of Bokhara,
+Khokhand, Koondooz, etc. At this period, the most important and
+the most formidable khanat was that of Bokhara. Russia had
+already been several times at war with its chiefs, who, for their
+own interests, had supported the independence of the Kirghiz
+against the Muscovite dominion.
+ The present chief, Feofar-Khan, followed in the steps of his
+predecessors.</p>
+
+<p>The khanat of Bokhara has a population of two million five
+hundred thousand inhabitants, an army of sixty thousand men,
+trebled in time of war, and thirty thousand horsemen.
+ It is a rich country, with varied animal, vegetable, and mineral
+products, and has been increased by the accession of the
+territories of Balkh, Aukoi, and Meimaneh. It possesses nineteen
+large towns. Bokhara, surrounded by a wall measuring more than
+eight English miles, and flanked with towers, a glorious city,
+made illustrious by Avicenna and other learned men of the tenth
+century, is regarded as the center of Mussulman science, and
+ranks among the most celebrated cities of Central Asia.
+Samarcand, which contains the tomb of Tamerlane and the famous
+palace where the blue stone is kept on which each new khan must
+seat himself on his accession, is defended by a very strong
+citadel. Karschi, with its triple cordon, situated in an oasis,
+surrounded by a marsh peopled with tortoises and lizards, is
+almost impregnable, Is-chardjoui is defended by a population of
+twenty thousand souls.
+ Protected by its mountains, and isolated by its steppes, the
+khanat of Bokhara is a most formidable state; and Russia would
+need a large force to subdue it.</p>
+
+<p>The fierce and ambitious Feofar now governed this corner of
+Tartary. Relying on the other khans--principally those of
+Khokhand and Koondooz, cruel and rapacious warriors, all ready to
+join an enterprise so dear to Tartar instincts--aided by the
+chiefs who ruled all the hordes of Central Asia, he had placed
+himself at the head of the rebellion of which Ivan Ogareff was
+the instigator.
+ This traitor, impelled by insane ambition as much as by hate,
+had ordered the movement so as to attack Siberia. Mad indeed he
+was, if he hoped to rupture the Muscovite Empire. Acting under
+his suggestion, the Emir--which is the title taken by the khans
+of Bokhara--had poured his hordes over the Russian frontier.
+ He invaded the government of Semipolatinsk, and the Cossacks,
+who were only in small force there, had been obliged to retire
+before him. He had advanced farther than Lake Balkhash, gaining
+over the Kirghiz population on his way. Pillaging, ravaging,
+enrolling those who submitted, taking prisoners those who
+resisted, he marched from one town to another, followed by those
+impedimenta of Oriental sovereignty which may be called his
+household, his wives and his slaves--all with the cool audacity
+of a modern Ghengis-Khan. It was impossible to ascertain where he
+now was; how far his soldiers had marched before the news of the
+rebellion reached Moscow; or to what part of Siberia the Russian
+troops had been forced to retire. All communication was
+interrupted.
+ Had the wire between Kolyvan and Tomsk been cut by Tartar
+scouts, or had the Emir himself arrived at the Yeniseisk
+provinces?
+ Was all the lower part of Western Siberia in a ferment?
+ Had the rebellion already spread to the eastern regions?
+ No one could say. The only agent which fears neither cold nor
+heat, which can neither be stopped by the rigors of winter nor
+the heat of summer, and which flies with the rapidity of
+lightning-- the electric current--was prevented from traversing
+the steppes, and it was no longer possible to warn the Grand
+Duke, shut up in Irkutsk, of the danger threatening him from the
+treason of Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>A courier only could supply the place of the interrupted
+current.
+ It would take this man some time to traverse the five thousand
+two hundred versts between Moscow and Irkutsk. To pass the ranks
+of the rebels and invaders he must display almost superhuman
+courage and intelligence.
+ But with a clear head and a firm heart much can be done.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I be able to find this head and heart?" thought the
+Czar.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III MICHAEL STROGOFF MEETS THE CZAR</h2>
+
+<p>THE door of the imperial cabinet was again opened and General
+Kissoff was announced.</p>
+
+<p>"The courier?" inquired the Czar eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"He is here, sire," replied General Kissoff.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you found a fitting man?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will answer for him to your majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he been in the service of the Palace?"</p>
+
+<p>
+ "Yes, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"You know him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Personally, and at various times he has fulfilled difficult
+missions with success."</p>
+
+<p>"Abroad?"</p>
+
+<p>"In Siberia itself."</p>
+
+<p>"Where does he come from?"</p>
+
+<p>"From Omsk. He is a Siberian."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he coolness, intelligence, courage?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sire; he has all the qualities necessary to succeed,
+even where others might possibly fail."</p>
+
+<p>"What is his age?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thirty."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he strong and vigorous?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sire, he can bear cold, hunger, thirst, fatigue, to the very
+last extremities."</p>
+
+<p>"He must have a frame of iron."</p>
+
+<p>"Sire, he has."</p>
+
+<p>"And a heart?"</p>
+
+<p>"A heart of gold."</p>
+
+<p>"His name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Michael Strogoff."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he ready to set out?"</p>
+
+<p>"He awaits your majesty's orders in the guard-room."</p>
+
+<p>"Let him come in," said the Czar.</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments Michael Strogoff, the courier, entered the
+imperial library. He was a tall, vigorous, broad-shouldered,
+deep-chested man.
+ His powerful head possessed the fine features of the Caucasian
+race.
+ His well-knit frame seemed built for the performance of feats of
+strength. It would have been a difficult task to move such a man
+against his will, for when his feet were once planted on the
+ground, it was as if they had taken root. As he doffed his
+Muscovite cap, locks of thick curly hair fell over his broad,
+massive forehead.
+ When his ordinarily pale face became at all flushed, it arose
+solely from a more rapid action of the heart.
+ His eyes, of a deep blue, looked with clear, frank, firm
+gaze.
+ The slightly-contracted eyebrows indicated lofty heroism--"the
+hero's cool courage," according to the definition of the
+physiologist.
+ He possessed a fine nose, with large nostrils; and a well-shaped
+mouth, with the slightly-projecting lips which denote a generous
+and noble heart.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff had the temperament of the man of action, who
+does not bite his nails or scratch his head in doubt and
+indecision.
+ Sparing of gestures as of words, he always stood motionless like
+a soldier before his superior; but when he moved, his step showed
+a firmness, a freedom of movement, which proved the confidence
+and vivacity of his mind.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff wore a handsome military uniform something
+resembling that of a light-cavalry officer in the field-- boots,
+spurs, half tightly-fitting trousers, brown pelisse, trimmed with
+fur and ornamented with yellow braid.
+ On his breast glittered a cross and several medals.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff belonged to the special corps of the Czar's
+couriers, ranking as an officer among those picked men.
+ His most discernible characteristic--particularly in his walk,
+his face, in the whole man, and which the Czar perceived at a
+glance--was, that he was "a fulfiller of orders."
+ He therefore possessed one of the most serviceable qualities in
+Russia--one which, as the celebrated novelist Tourgueneff says,
+"will lead to the highest positions in the Muscovite empire."</p>
+
+<p>In short, if anyone could accomplish this journey from Moscow
+to Irkutsk, across a rebellious country, surmount obstacles, and
+brave perils of all sorts, Michael Strogoff was the man.</p>
+
+<p>A circumstance especially favorable to the success of his plan
+was, that he was thoroughly acquainted with the country which he
+was about to traverse, and understood its different dialects--
+not only from having traveled there before, but because he was of
+Siberian origin.</p>
+
+<p>His father--old Peter Strogoff, dead ten years since--
+inhabited the town of Omsk, situated in the government of the
+same name; and his mother, Marfa Strogoff, lived there still.
+ There, amid the wild steppes of the provinces of Omsk and
+Tobolsk, had the famous huntsman brought up his son Michael to
+endure hardship.
+ Peter Strogoff was a huntsman by profession. Summer and winter--
+in the burning heat, as well as when the cold was sometimes fifty
+degrees below zero--he scoured the frozen plains, the thickets of
+birch and larch, the pine forests; setting traps; watching for
+small game with his gun, and for large game with the spear or
+knife.
+ The large game was nothing less than the Siberian bear, a
+formidable and ferocious animal, in size equaling its fellow of
+the frozen seas.
+ Peter Strogoff had killed more than thirty-nine bears--that is
+to say, the fortieth had fallen under his blows; and, according
+to Russian legends, most huntsmen who have been lucky enough up
+to the thirty-ninth bear, have succumbed to the fortieth.</p>
+
+<p>Peter Strogoff had, however, passed the fatal number without
+even a scratch. From that time, his son Michael, aged eleven
+years, never failed to accompany him to the hunt, carrying the
+ragatina or spear to aid his father, who was armed only with the
+knife.
+ When he was fourteen, Michael Strogoff had killed his first
+bear, quite alone--that was nothing; but after stripping it he
+dragged the gigantic animal's skin to his father's house, many
+versts distant, exhibiting remarkable strength in a boy so
+young.</p>
+
+<p>This style of life was of great benefit to him, and when he
+arrived at manhood he could bear any amount of cold, heat,
+hunger, thirst, or fatigue. Like the Yakout of the northern
+countries, he was made of iron. He could go four-and-twenty hours
+without eating, ten nights without sleeping, and could make
+himself a shelter in the open steppe where others would have been
+frozen to death.
+ Gifted with marvelous acuteness, guided by the instinct of the
+Delaware of North America, over the white plain, when every
+object is hidden in mist, or even in higher latitudes, where the
+polar night is prolonged for many days, he could find his way
+when others would have had no idea whither to turn. All his
+father's secrets were known to him. He had learnt to read almost
+imperceptible signs-- the forms of icicles, the appearance of the
+small branches of trees, mists rising far away in the horizon,
+vague sounds in the air, distant reports, the flight of birds
+through the foggy atmosphere, a thousand circumstances which are
+so many words to those who can decipher them. Moreover, tempered
+by snow like a Damascus blade in the waters of Syria, he had a
+frame of iron, as General Kissoff had said, and, what was no less
+true, a heart of gold.</p>
+
+<p>The only sentiment of love felt by Michael Strogoff was that
+which he entertained for his mother, the aged Marfa, who could
+never be induced to leave the house of the Strogoffs, at Omsk, on
+the banks of the Irtish, where the old huntsman and she had lived
+so long together.
+ When her son left her, he went away with a full heart, but
+promising to come and see her whenever he could possibly do so;
+and this promise he had always religiously kept.</p>
+
+<p>When Michael was twenty, it was decided that he should enter
+the personal service of the Emperor of Russia, in the corps of
+the couriers of the Czar. The hardy, intelligent, zealous,
+well-conducted young Siberian first distinguished himself
+especially, in a journey to the Caucasus, through the midst of a
+difficult country, ravaged by some restless successors of
+Schamyl; then later, in an important mission to Petropolowski, in
+Kamtschatka, the extreme limit of Asiatic Russia. During these
+long journeys he displayed such marvelous coolness, prudence, and
+courage, as to gain him the approbation and protection of his
+chiefs, who rapidly advanced him in his profession.</p>
+
+<p>The furloughs which were his due after these distant missions,
+he never failed to devote to his old mother. Having been much
+employed in the south of the empire, he had not seen old Marfa
+for three years-- three ages!--the first time in his life he had
+been so long absent from her. Now, however, in a few days he
+would obtain his furlough, and he had accordingly already made
+preparations for departure for Omsk, when the events which have
+been related occurred.
+ Michael Strogoff was therefore introduced into the Czar's
+presence in complete ignorance of what the emperor expected from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The Czar fixed a penetrating look upon him without uttering a
+word, whilst Michael stood perfectly motionless.</p>
+
+<p>The Czar, apparently satisfied with his scrutiny, motioned to
+the chief of police to seat himself, and dictated in a low voice
+a letter of not more than a few lines.</p>
+
+<p>The letter penned, the Czar re-read it attentively, then
+signed it, preceding his name with the words "Byt po semou,"
+which, signifying "So be it," constitutes the decisive formula of
+the Russian emperors.</p>
+
+<p>The letter was then placed in an envelope, which was sealed
+with the imperial arms.</p>
+
+<p>The Czar, rising, told Michael Strogoff to draw near.</p>
+
+<p>Michael advanced a few steps, and then stood motionless, ready
+to answer.</p>
+
+<p>The Czar again looked him full in the face and their eyes
+met.
+ Then in an abrupt tone, "Thy name?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Michael Strogoff, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"Thy rank?"</p>
+
+<p>"Captain in the corps of couriers of the Czar."</p>
+
+<p>"Thou dost know Siberia?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am a Siberian."</p>
+
+<p>"A native of?"</p>
+
+<p>"Omsk, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"Hast thou relations there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes sire."</p>
+
+<p>"What relations?"</p>
+
+<p>"My old mother."</p>
+
+<p>The Czar suspended his questions for a moment. Then, pointing
+to the letter which he held in his hand, "Here is a letter which
+I charge thee, Michael Strogoff, to deliver into the hands of the
+Grand Duke, and to no other but him."</p>
+
+<p>"I will deliver it, sire."</p>
+
+<p>"The Grand Duke is at Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go to Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"Thou wilt have to traverse a rebellious country, invaded by
+Tartars, whose interest it will be to intercept this letter."</p>
+
+<p>"I will traverse it."</p>
+
+<p>"Above all, beware of the traitor, Ivan Ogareff, who will
+perhaps meet thee on the way."</p>
+
+<p>"I will beware of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Wilt thou pass through Omsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sire, that is my route."</p>
+
+<p>"If thou dost see thy mother, there will be the risk of being
+recognized.
+ Thou must not see her!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff hesitated a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not see her," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Swear to me that nothing will make thee acknowledge who thou
+art, nor whither thou art going."</p>
+
+<p>"I swear it."</p>
+
+<p>"Michael Strogoff," continued the Czar, giving the letter to
+the young courier, "take this letter; on it depends the safety of
+all Siberia, and perhaps the life of my brother the Grand
+Duke."</p>
+
+<p>"This letter shall be delivered to his Highness the Grand
+Duke."</p>
+
+<p>"Then thou wilt pass whatever happens?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall pass, or they shall kill me."</p>
+
+<p>"I want thee to live."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall live, and I shall pass," answered Michael
+Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>The Czar appeared satisfied with Strogoff's calm and simple
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Go then, Michael Strogoff," said he, "go for God, for Russia,
+for my brother, and for myself!"</p>
+
+<p>The courier, having saluted his sovereign, immediately left
+the imperial cabinet, and, in a few minutes, the New Palace.</p>
+
+<p>"You made a good choice there, General," said the Czar.</p>
+
+<p>"I think so, sire," replied General Kissoff; "and your majesty
+may be sure that Michael Strogoff will do all that a man can
+do."</p>
+
+<p>"He is indeed a man," said the Czar.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV FROM MOSCOW TO NIJNI-NOVGOROD</h2>
+
+<p>THE distance between Moscow and Irkutsk, about to be traversed
+by Michael Strogoff, was three thousand four hundred miles.
+ Before the telegraph wire extended from the Ural Mountains to
+the eastern frontier of Siberia, the dispatch service was
+performed by couriers, those who traveled the most rapidly taking
+eighteen days to get from Moscow to Irkutsk. But this was the
+exception, and the journey through Asiatic Russia usually
+occupied from four to five weeks, even though every available
+means of transport was placed at the disposal of the Czar's
+messengers.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff was a man who feared neither frost nor
+snow.
+ He would have preferred traveling during the severe winter
+season, in order that he might perform the whole distance by
+sleighs.
+ At that period of the year the difficulties which all other
+means of locomotion present are greatly diminished, the wide
+steppes being leveled by snow, while there are no rivers to
+cross, but simply sheets of glass, over which the sleigh glides
+rapidly and easily.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Perhaps certain natural phenomena are most to be feared at that
+time, such as long-continuing and dense fogs, excessive cold,
+fearfully heavy snow-storms, which sometimes envelop whole
+caravans and cause their destruction. Hungry wolves also roam
+over the plain in thousands.
+ But it would have been better for Michael Strogoff to face these
+risks; for during the winter the Tartar invaders would have been
+stationed in the towns, any movement of their troops would have
+been impracticable, and he could consequently have more easily
+performed his journey.
+ But it was not in his power to choose either weather or
+time.
+ Whatever the circumstances, he must accept them and set out.</p>
+
+<p>Such were the difficulties which Michael Strogoff boldly
+confronted and prepared to encounter.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, he must not travel as a courier of the
+Czar usually would. No one must even suspect what he really
+was.
+ Spies swarm in a rebellious country; let him be recognized, and
+his mission would be in danger. Also, while supplying him with a
+large sum of money, which was sufficient for his journey, and
+would facilitate it in some measure, General Kissoff had not
+given him any document notifying that he was on the Emperor's
+service, which is the Sesame par excellence.
+ He contented himself with furnishing him with a "podorojna."</p>
+
+<p>This podorojna was made out in the name of Nicholas Korpanoff,
+merchant, living at Irkutsk. It authorized Nicholas Korpanoff to
+be accompanied by one or more persons, and, moreover, it was, by
+special notification, made available in the event of the
+Muscovite government forbidding natives of any other countries to
+leave Russia.</p>
+
+<p>The podorojna is simply a permission to take post-horses; but
+Michael Strogoff was not to use it unless he was sure that by so
+doing he would not excite suspicion as to his mission, that is to
+say, whilst he was on European territory.
+ The consequence was that in Siberia, whilst traversing the
+insurgent provinces, he would have no power over the relays,
+either in the choice of horses in preference to others, or in
+demanding conveyances for his personal use; neither was Michael
+Strogoff to forget that he was no longer a courier, but a plain
+merchant, Nicholas Korpanoff, traveling from Moscow to Irkutsk,
+and, as such exposed to all the impediments of an ordinary
+journey.</p>
+
+<p>To pass unknown, more or less rapidly, but to pass somehow,
+such were the directions he had received.</p>
+
+<p>Thirty years previously, the escort of a traveler of rank
+consisted of not less than two hundred mounted Cossacks, two
+hundred foot-soldiers, twenty-five Baskir horsemen, three hundred
+camels, four hundred horses, twenty-five wagons, two portable
+boats, and two pieces of cannon.
+ All this was requisite for a journey in Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, however, had neither cannon, nor horsemen,
+nor foot-soldiers, nor beasts of burden. He would travel in a
+carriage or on horseback, when he could; on foot, when he could
+not.</p>
+
+<p>There would be no difficulty in getting over the first
+thousand miles, the distance between Moscow and the Russian
+frontier.
+ Railroads, post-carriages, steamboats, relays of horses, were at
+everyone's disposal, and consequently at the disposal of the
+courier of the Czar.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, on the morning of the 16th of July, having doffed
+his uniform, with a knapsack on his back, dressed in the simple
+Russian costume--tightly-fitting tunic, the traditional belt of
+the Moujik, wide trousers, gartered at the knees, and high
+boots-- Michael Strogoff arrived at the station in time for the
+first train.
+ He carried no arms, openly at least, but under his belt was
+hidden a revolver and in his pocket, one of those large knives,
+resembling both a cutlass and a yataghan, with which a Siberian
+hunter can so neatly disembowel a bear, without injuring its
+precious fur.</p>
+
+<p>A crowd of travelers had collected at the Moscow station.
+ The stations on the Russian railroads are much used as places
+for meeting, not only by those who are about to proceed by the
+train, but by friends who come to see them off.
+ The station resembles, from the variety of characters assembled,
+a small news exchange.</p>
+
+<p>The train in which Michael took his place was to set him down
+at Nijni-Novgorod. There terminated at that time, the iron road
+which, uniting Moscow and St. Petersburg, has since been
+continued to the Russian frontier. It was a journey of under
+three hundred miles, and the train would accomplish it in ten
+hours.
+ Once arrived at Nijni-Novgorod, Strogoff would either take the
+land route or the steamer on the Volga, so as to reach the Ural
+Mountains as soon as possible.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff ensconced himself in his corner, like a
+worthy citizen whose affairs go well with him, and who endeavors
+to kill time by sleep. Nevertheless, as he was not alone in his
+compartment, he slept with one eye open, and listened with both
+his ears.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, rumor of the rising of the Kirghiz hordes, and of the
+Tartar invasion had transpired in some degree. The occupants of
+the carriage, whom chance had made his traveling companions,
+discussed the subject, though with that caution which has become
+habitual among Russians, who know that spies are ever on the
+watch for any treasonable expressions which may be uttered.</p>
+
+<p>These travelers, as well as the large number of persons in the
+train, were merchants on their way to the celebrated fair of
+Nijni-Novgorod;--a very mixed assembly, composed of Jews, Turks,
+Cossacks, Russians, Georgians, Kalmucks, and others, but nearly
+all speaking the national tongue.</p>
+
+<p>They discussed the pros and cons of the serious events which
+were taking place beyond the Ural, and those merchants seemed to
+fear lest the government should be led to take certain
+restrictive measures, especially in the provinces bordering on
+the frontier--measures from which trade would certainly
+suffer.
+ They apparently thought only of the struggle from the single
+point of view of their threatened interests. The presence of a
+private soldier, clad in his uniform--and the importance of a
+uniform in Russia is great--would have certainly been enough to
+restrain the merchants' tongues. But in the compartment occupied
+by Michael Strogoff, there was no one who seemed a military man,
+and the Czar's courier was not the person to betray himself.
+ He listened, then.</p>
+
+<p>"They say that caravan teas are up," remarked a Persian, known
+by his cap of Astrakhan fur, and his ample brown robe, worn
+threadbare by use.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there's no fear of teas falling," answered an old Jew of
+sullen aspect. "Those in the market at Nijni-Novgorod will be
+easily cleared off by the West; but, unfortunately, it won't be
+the same with Bokhara carpets."</p>
+
+<p>"What! are you expecting goods from Bokhara?" asked the
+Persian.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but from Samarcand, and that is even more exposed.
+ The idea of reckoning on the exports of a country in which the
+khans are in a state of revolt from Khiva to the Chinese
+frontier!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," replied the Persian, "if the carpets do not arrive,
+the drafts will not arrive either, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"And the profits, Father Abraham!" exclaimed the little Jew,
+"do you reckon them as nothing?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," said another; "goods from Central Asia run a
+great risk in the market, and it will be the same with the tallow
+and shawls from the East."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, look out, little father," said a Russian traveler, in a
+bantering tone; "you'll grease your shawls terribly if you mix
+them up with your tallow."</p>
+
+<p>"That amuses you," sharply answered the merchant, who had
+little relish for that sort of joke.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if you tear your hair, or if you throw ashes on your
+head,"
+ replied the traveler, "will that change the course of
+events?
+ No; no more than the course of the Exchange."</p>
+
+<p>"One can easily see that you are not a merchant," observed the
+little Jew.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, no, worthy son of Abraham! I sell neither hops, nor
+eider-down, nor honey, nor wax, nor hemp-seed, nor salt meat, nor
+caviare, nor wood, nor wool, nor ribbons, nor, hemp, nor flax,
+nor morocco, nor furs."</p>
+
+<p>"But do you buy them?" asked the Persian, interrupting the
+traveler's list.</p>
+
+<p>"As little as I can, and only for my own private use,"
+ answered the other, with a wink.</p>
+
+<p>"He's a wag," said the Jew to the Persian.</p>
+
+<p>"Or a spy," replied the other, lowering his voice.
+ "We had better take care, and not speak more than necessary.
+ The police are not over-particular in these times, and you never
+can know with whom you are traveling."</p>
+
+<p>In another corner of the compartment they were speaking less
+of mercantile affairs, and more of the Tartar invasion and its
+annoying consequences.</p>
+
+<p>"All the horses in Siberia will be requisitioned," said a
+traveler, "and communication between the different provinces of
+Central Asia will become very difficult."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it true," asked his neighbor, "that the Kirghiz of the
+middle horde have joined the Tartars?"</p>
+
+<p>"So it is said," answered the traveler, lowering his voice;
+"but who can flatter themselves that they know anything really of
+what is going on in this country?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard speak of a concentration of troops on the
+frontier.
+ The Don Cossacks have already gathered along the course of the
+Volga, and they are to be opposed to the rebel Kirghiz."</p>
+
+<p>"If the Kirghiz descend the Irtish, the route to Irkutsk will
+not be safe," observed his neighbor. "Besides, yesterday I wanted
+to send a telegram to Krasnoiarsk, and it could not be
+forwarded.
+ It's to be feared that before long the Tartar columns will have
+isolated Eastern Siberia."</p>
+
+<p>"In short, little father," continued the first speaker, "these
+merchants have good reason for being uneasy about their trade and
+transactions.
+ After requisitioning the horses, they will take the boats,
+carriages, every means of transport, until presently no one will
+be allowed to take even one step in all the empire."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm much afraid that the Nijni-Novgorod fair won't end as
+brilliantly as it has begun," responded the other, shaking his
+head.
+ "But the safety and integrity of the Russian territory before
+everything.
+ Business is business."</p>
+
+<p>If in this compartment the subject of conversation varied but
+little-- nor did it, indeed, in the other carriages of the
+train--in all it might have been observed that the talkers used
+much circumspection.
+ When they did happen to venture out of the region of facts, they
+never went so far as to attempt to divine the intentions of the
+Muscovite government, or even to criticize them.</p>
+
+<p>This was especially remarked by a traveler in a carriage at
+the front part of the train. This person--evidently a stranger--
+made good use of his eyes, and asked numberless questions, to
+which he received only evasive answers. Every minute leaning out
+of the window, which he would keep down, to the great disgust of
+his fellow-travelers, he lost nothing of the views to the
+right.
+ He inquired the names of the most insignificant places, their
+position, what were their commerce, their manufactures, the
+number of their inhabitants, the average mortality, etc., and all
+this he wrote down in a note-book, already full.</p>
+
+<p>This was the correspondent Alcide Jolivet, and the reason of
+his putting so many insignificant questions was, that amongst the
+many answers he received, he hoped to find some interesting fact
+"for his cousin."
+ But, naturally enough, he was taken for a spy, and not a word
+treating of the events of the day was uttered in his hearing.</p>
+
+<p>Finding, therefore, that he could learn nothing of the Tartar
+invasion, he wrote in his book, "Travelers of great
+discretion.
+ Very close as to political matters."</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Alcide Jolivet noted down his impressions thus
+minutely, his confrere, in the same train, traveling for the same
+object, was devoting himself to the same work of observation in
+another compartment. Neither of them had seen each other that day
+at the Moscow station, and they were each ignorant that the other
+had set out to visit the scene of the war.
+ Harry Blount, speaking little, but listening much, had not
+inspired his companions with the suspicions which Alcide Jolivet
+had aroused.
+ He was not taken for a spy, and therefore his neighbors, without
+constraint, gossiped in his presence, allowing themselves even to
+go farther than their natural caution would in most cases have
+allowed them. The correspondent of the Daily Telegraph had thus
+an opportunity of observing how much recent events preoccupied
+the merchants of Nijni-Novgorod, and to what a degree the
+commerce with Central Asia was threatened in its transit.</p>
+
+<p>He therefore noted in his book this perfectly correct
+observation, "My fellow-travelers extremely anxious. Nothing is
+talked of but war, and they speak of it, with a freedom which is
+astonishing, as having broken out between the Volga and the
+Vistula."</p>
+
+<p>The readers of the Daily Telegraph would not fail to be as
+well informed as Alcide Jolivet's "cousin." But as Harry Blount,
+seated at the left of the train, only saw one part of the
+country, which was hilly, without giving himself the trouble of
+looking at the right side, which was composed of wide plains, he
+added, with British assurance, "Country mountainous between
+Moscow and Wladimir."</p>
+
+<p>It was evident that the Russian government purposed taking
+severe measures to guard against any serious eventualities even
+in the interior of the empire. The rebel lion had not crossed the
+Siberian frontier, but evil influences might be feared in the
+Volga provinces, so near to the country of the Kirghiz.</p>
+
+<p>The police had as yet found no traces of Ivan Ogareff. It was
+not known whether the traitor, calling in the foreigner to avenge
+his personal rancor, had rejoined Feofar-Khan, or whether he was
+endeavoring to foment a revolt in the government of
+Nijni-Novgorod, which at this time of year contained a population
+of such diverse elements. Perhaps among the Persians, Armenians,
+or Kalmucks, who flocked to the great market, he had agents,
+instructed to provoke a rising in the interior.
+ All this was possible, especially in such a country as Russia.
+In fact, this vast empire, 4,000,000 square miles in extent, does
+not possess the homogeneousness of the states of Western Europe.
+The Russian territory in Europe and Asia contains more than
+seventy millions of inhabitants. In it thirty different languages
+are spoken.
+ The Sclavonian race predominates, no doubt, but there are
+besides Russians, Poles, Lithuanians, Courlanders. Add to these,
+Finns, Laplanders, Esthonians, several other northern tribes with
+unpronounceable names, the Permiaks, the Germans, the Greeks, the
+Tartars, the Caucasian tribes, the Mongol, Kalmuck, Samoid,
+Kamtschatkan, and Aleutian hordes, and one may understand that
+the unity of so vast a state must be difficult to maintain, and
+that it could only be the work of time, aided by the wisdom of
+many successive rulers.</p>
+
+<p>Be that as it may, Ivan Ogareff had hitherto managed to escape
+all search, and very probably he might have rejoined the Tartar
+army.
+ But at every station where the train stopped, inspectors came
+forward who scrutinized the travelers and subjected them all to a
+minute examination, as by order of the superintendent of police,
+these officials were seeking Ivan Ogareff. The government, in
+fact, believed it to be certain that the traitor had not yet been
+able to quit European Russia. If there appeared cause to suspect
+any traveler, he was carried off to explain himself at the police
+station, and in the meantime the train went on its way, no person
+troubling himself about the unfortunate one left behind.</p>
+
+<p>With the Russian police, which is very arbitrary, it is
+absolutely useless to argue. Military rank is conferred on its
+employees, and they act in military fashion. How can anyone,
+moreover, help obeying, unhesitatingly, orders which emanate from
+a monarch who has the right to employ this formula at the head of
+his ukase: "We, by the grace of God, Emperor and Autocrat of all
+the Russias of Moscow, Kiev, Wladimir, and Novgorod, Czar of
+Kasan and Astrakhan, Czar of Poland, Czar of Siberia, Czar of the
+Tauric Chersonese, Seignior of Pskov, Prince of Smolensk,
+Lithuania, Volkynia, Podolia, and Finland, Prince of Esthonia,
+Livonia, Courland, and of Semigallia, of Bialystok, Karelia,
+Sougria, Perm, Viatka, Bulgaria, and many other countries; Lord
+and Sovereign Prince of the territory of Nijni-Novgorod,
+Tchemigoff, Riazan, Polotsk, Rostov, Jaroslavl, Bielozersk,
+Oudoria, Obdoria, Kondinia, Vitepsk, and of Mstislaf, Governor of
+the Hyperborean Regions, Lord of the countries of Iveria,
+Kartalinia, Grou-zinia, Kabardinia, and Armenia, Hereditary Lord
+and Suzerain of the Scherkess princes, of those of the mountains,
+and of others; heir of Norway, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein,
+Stormarn, Dittmarsen, and Oldenburg." A powerful lord, in truth,
+is he whose arms are an eagle with two heads, holding a scepter
+and a globe, surrounded by the escutcheons of Novgorod, Wladimir,
+Kiev, Kasan, Astrakhan, and of Siberia, and environed by the
+collar of the order of St. Andrew, surmounted by a royal
+crown!</p>
+
+<p>As to Michael Strogoff, his papers were in order, and he was,
+consequently, free from all police supervision.</p>
+
+<p>At the station of Wladimir the train stopped for several
+minutes, which appeared sufficient to enable the correspondent of
+the Daily Telegraph to take a twofold view, physical and moral,
+and to form a complete estimate of this ancient capital of
+Russia.</p>
+
+<p>At the Wladimir station fresh travelers joined the train.
+ Among others, a young girl entered the compartment occupied by
+Michael Strogoff. A vacant place was found opposite the
+courier.
+ The young girl took it, after placing by her side a modest
+traveling-bag of red leather, which seemed to constitute all her
+luggage.
+ Then seating herself with downcast eyes, not even glancing at
+the fellow-travelers whom chance had given her, she prepared for
+a journey which was still to last several hours.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff could not help looking attentively at his
+newly-arrived fellow-traveler. As she was so placed as to travel
+with her back to the engine, he even offered her his seat, which
+he might prefer to her own, but she thanked him with a slight
+bend of her graceful neck.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl appeared to be about sixteen or seventeen years
+of age.
+ Her head, truly charming, was of the purest Sclavonic type--
+slightly severe, and likely in a few summers to unfold into
+beauty rather than mere prettiness. From beneath a sort of
+kerchief which she wore on her head escaped in profusion light
+golden hair.
+ Her eyes were brown, soft, and expressive of much sweetness of
+temper.
+ The nose was straight, and attached to her pale and somewhat
+thin cheeks by delicately mobile nostrils. The lips were finely
+cut, but it seemed as if they had long since forgotten how to
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>The young traveler was tall and upright, as far as could be
+judged of her figure from the very simple and ample pelisse that
+covered her.
+ Although she was still a very young girl in the literal sense of
+the term, the development of her high forehead and clearly-cut
+features gave the idea that she was the possessor of great moral
+energy-- a point which did not escape Michael Strogoff. Evidently
+this young girl had already suffered in the past, and the future
+doubtless did not present itself to her in glowing colors; but
+she had surely known how to struggle still with the trials of
+life.
+ Her energy was evidently both prompt and persistent, and her
+calmness unalterable, even under circumstances in which a man
+would be likely to give way or lose his self-command.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the impression which she produced at first sight.
+ Michael Strogoff, being himself of an energetic temperament, was
+naturally struck by the character of her physiognomy, and, while
+taking care not to cause her annoyance by a too persistent gaze,
+he observed his neighbor with no small interest. The costume of
+the young traveler was both extremely simple and appropriate.
+ She was not rich--that could be easily seen; but not the
+slightest mark of negligence was to be discerned in her
+dress.
+ All her luggage was contained in the leather bag which, for want
+of room, she held on her lap.</p>
+
+<p>She wore a long, dark pelisse, gracefully adjusted at the neck
+by a blue tie. Under this pelisse, a short skirt, also dark, fell
+over a robe which reached the ankles. Half-boots of leather,
+thickly soled, as if chosen in anticipation of a long journey,
+covered her small feet.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff fancied that he recognized, by certain
+details, the fashion of the costume of Livonia, and thought his
+neighbor a native of the Baltic provinces.</p>
+
+<p>But whither was this young girl going, alone, at an age when
+the fostering care of a father, or the protection of a brother,
+is considered a matter of necessity? Had she now come, after an
+already long journey, from the provinces of Western Russia? Was
+she merely going to Nijni-Novgorod, or was the end of her travels
+beyond the eastern frontiers of the empire?
+ Would some relation, some friend, await her arrival by the
+train?
+ Or was it not more probable, on the contrary, that she would
+find herself as much isolated in the town as she was in this
+compartment?
+ It was probable.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, the effect of habits contracted in solitude was
+clearly manifested in the bearing of the young girl. The manner
+in which she entered the carriage and prepared herself for the
+journey, the slight disturbance she caused among those around
+her, the care she took not to incommode or give trouble to
+anyone, all showed that she was accustomed to be alone, and to
+depend on herself only.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff observed her with interest, but, himself
+reserved, he sought no opportunity of accosting her. Once only,
+when her neighbor-- the merchant who had jumbled together so
+imprudently in his remarks tallow and shawls--being asleep, and
+threatening her with his great head, which was swaying from one
+shoulder to the other, Michael Strogoff awoke him somewhat
+roughly, and made him understand that he must hold himself
+upright.</p>
+
+<p>The merchant, rude enough by nature, grumbled some words
+against "people who interfere with what does not concern them,"
+but Michael Strogoff cast on him a glance so stern that the
+sleeper leant on the opposite side, and relieved the young
+traveler from his unpleasant vicinity.</p>
+
+<p>The latter looked at the young man for an instant, and mute
+and modest thanks were in that look.</p>
+
+<p>But a circumstance occurred which gave Strogoff a just idea of
+the character of the maiden. Twelve versts before arriving at
+Nijni-Novgorod, at a sharp curve of the iron way, the train
+experienced a very violent shock. Then, for a minute, it ran onto
+the slope of an embankment.</p>
+
+<p>Travelers more or less shaken about, cries, confusion, general
+disorder in the carriages--such was the effect at first
+produced.
+ It was to be feared that some serious accident had happened.
+ Consequently, even before the train had stopped, the doors were
+opened, and the panic-stricken passengers thought only of getting
+out of the carriages.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff thought instantly of the young girl; but,
+while the passengers in her compartment were precipitating
+themselves outside, screaming and struggling, she had remained
+quietly in her place, her face scarcely changed by a slight
+pallor.</p>
+
+<p>She waited--Michael Strogoff waited also.</p>
+
+<p>Both remained quiet.</p>
+
+<p>"A determined nature!" thought Michael Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>However, all danger had quickly disappeared. A breakage of the
+coupling of the luggage-van had first caused the shock to, and
+then the stoppage of, the train, which in another instant would
+have been thrown from the top of the embankment into a bog.
+ There was an hour's delay. At last, the road being cleared, the
+train proceeded, and at half-past eight in the evening arrived at
+the station of Nijni-Novgorod.</p>
+
+<p>Before anyone could get out of the carriages, the inspectors
+of police presented themselves at the doors and examined the
+passengers.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff showed his podorojna, made out in the name of
+Nicholas Korpanoff. He had consequently no difficulty.
+ As to the other travelers in the compartment, all bound for
+Nijni-Novgorod, their appearance, happily for them, was in nowise
+suspicious.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl in her turn, exhibited, not a passport, since
+passports are no longer required in Russia, but a permit indorsed
+with a private seal, and which seemed to be of a special
+character.
+ The inspector read the permit with attention. Then, having
+attentively examined the person whose description it
+contained:</p>
+
+<p>"You are from Riga?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the young girl.</p>
+
+<p>"You are going to Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"By what route?"</p>
+
+<p>"By Perm."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" replied the inspector. "Take care to have your permit
+vised, at the police station of Nijni-Novgorod."</p>
+
+<p>The young girl bent her head in token of assent.</p>
+
+<p>Hearing these questions and replies, Michael Strogoff
+experienced a mingled sentiment both of surprise and pity.
+ What! this young girl, alone, journeying to that far-off
+Siberia, and at a time when, to its ordinary dangers, were added
+all the perils of an invaded country and one in a state of
+insurrection!
+ How would she reach it? What would become of her?</p>
+
+<p>The inspection ended, the doors of the carriages were then
+opened, but, before Michael Strogoff could move towards her, the
+young Livonian, who had been the first to descend, had
+disappeared in the crowd which thronged the platforms of the
+railway station.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V THE TWO ANNOUNCEMENTS</h2>
+
+<p>NIJNI-NOVGOROD, Lower Novgorod, situate at the junction of the
+Volga and the Oka, is the chief town in the district of the same
+name.
+ It was here that Michael Strogoff was obliged to leave the
+railway, which at the time did not go beyond that town. Thus, as
+he advanced, his traveling would become first less speedy and
+then less safe.</p>
+
+<p>Nijni-Novgorod, the fixed population of which is only from
+thirty to thirty-five thousand inhabitants, contained at that
+time more than three hundred thousand; that is to say, the
+population was increased tenfold. This addition was in
+consequence of the celebrated fair, which was held within the
+walls for three weeks.
+ Formerly Makariew had the benefit of this concourse of traders,
+but since 1817 the fair had been removed to Nijni-Novgorod.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Even at the late hour at which Michael Strogoff left the
+platform, there was still a large number of people in the two
+towns, separated by the stream of the Volga, which compose
+Nijni-Novgorod. The highest of these is built on a steep
+rock.
+ and defended by a fort called in Russia "kreml."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff expected some trouble in finding a hotel, or
+even an inn, to suit him. As he had not to start immediately, for
+he was going to take a steamer, he was compelled to look out for
+some lodging; but, before doing so, he wished to know exactly the
+hour at which the steamboat would start.
+ He went to the office of the company whose boats plied between
+Nijni-Novgorod and Perm. There, to his great annoyance, he found
+that no boat started for Perm till the following day at twelve
+o'clock. Seventeen hours to wait!
+ It was very vexatious to a man so pressed for time.
+ However, he never senselessly murmured. Besides, the fact was
+that no other conveyance could take him so quickly either to Perm
+or Kasan. It would be better, then, to wait for the steamer,
+which would enable him to regain lost time.</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, was Michael Strogoff, strolling through the town
+and quietly looking out for some inn in which to pass the
+night.
+ However, he troubled himself little on this score, and, but that
+hunger pressed him, he would probably have wandered on till
+morning in the streets of Nijni-Novgorod. He was looking for
+supper rather than a bed. But he found both at the sign of the
+City of Constantinople. There, the landlord offered him a fairly
+comfortable room, with little furniture, it is true, but not
+without an image of the Virgin, and a few saints framed in yellow
+gauze.</p>
+
+<p>A goose filled with sour stuffing swimming in thick cream,
+barley bread, some curds, powdered sugar mixed with cinnamon, and
+a jug of kwass, the ordinary Russian beer, were placed before
+him, and sufficed to satisfy his hunger. He did justice to the
+meal, which was more than could be said of his neighbor at table,
+who, having, in his character of "old believer"
+ of the sect of Raskalniks, made the vow of abstinence, rejected
+the potatoes in front of him, and carefully refrained from
+putting sugar in his tea.</p>
+
+<p>His supper finished, Michael Strogoff, instead of going up to
+his bedroom, again strolled out into the town. But, although the
+long twilight yet lingered, the crowd was already dispersing, the
+streets were gradually becoming empty, and at length everyone
+retired to his dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>Why did not Michael Strogoff go quietly to bed, as would have
+seemed more reasonable after a long railway journey? Was he
+thinking of the young Livonian girl who had been his traveling
+companion?
+ Having nothing better to do, he WAS thinking of her. Did he fear
+that, lost in this busy city, she might be exposed to insult? He
+feared so, and with good reason. Did he hope to meet her, and, if
+need were, to afford her protection? No. To meet would be
+difficult.
+ As to protection--what right had he--</p>
+
+<p>"Alone," he said to himself, "alone, in the midst of these
+wandering tribes! And yet the present dangers are nothing
+compared to those she must undergo. Siberia! Irkutsk! I am about
+to dare all risks for Russia, for the Czar, while she is about to
+do so--For whom? For what? She is authorized to cross the
+frontier! The country beyond is in revolt!
+ The steppes are full of Tartar bands!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff stopped for an instant, and reflected.</p>
+
+<p>"Without doubt," thought he, "she must have determined on
+undertaking her journey before the invasion. Perhaps she is even
+now ignorant of what is happening. But no, that cannot be; the
+merchants discussed before her the disturbances in Siberia-- and
+she did not seem surprised. She did not even ask an
+explanation.
+ She must have known it then, and knowing it, is still
+resolute.
+ Poor girl! Her motive for the journey must be urgent indeed!
+ But though she may be brave--and she certainly is so--her
+strength must fail her, and, to say nothing of dangers and
+obstacles, she will be unable to endure the fatigue of such a
+journey.
+ Never can she reach Irkutsk!"</p>
+
+<p>Indulging in such reflections, Michael Strogoff wandered on as
+chance led him; being well acquainted with the town, he knew that
+he could easily retrace his steps.</p>
+
+<p>Having strolled on for about an hour, he seated himself on a
+bench against the wall of a large wooden cottage, which stood,
+with many others, on a vast open space.
+ He had scarcely been there five minutes when a hand was laid
+heavily on his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?" roughly demanded a tall and
+powerful man, who had approached unperceived.</p>
+
+<p>"I am resting," replied Michael Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to stay all night on the bench?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if I feel inclined to do so," answered Michael Strogoff,
+in a tone somewhat too sharp for the simple merchant he wished to
+personate.</p>
+
+<p>"Come forward, then, so I can see you," said the man.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, remembering that, above all, prudence was
+requisite, instinctively drew back. "It is not necessary," he
+replied, and calmly stepped back ten paces.</p>
+
+<p>The man seemed, as Michael observed him well, to have the look
+of a Bohemian, such as are met at fairs, and with whom contact,
+either physical or moral, is unpleasant. Then, as he looked more
+attentively through the dusk, he perceived, near the cottage, a
+large caravan, the usual traveling dwelling of the Zingaris or
+gypsies, who swarm in Russia wherever a few copecks can be
+obtained.</p>
+
+<p>As the gypsy took two or three steps forward, and was about to
+interrogate Michael Strogoff more closely, the door of the
+cottage opened.
+ He could just see a woman, who spoke quickly in a language which
+Michael Strogoff knew to be a mixture of Mongol and Siberian.</p>
+
+<p>"Another spy! Let him alone, and come to supper.
+ The papluka is waiting for you."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff could not help smiling at the epithet
+bestowed on him, dreading spies as he did above all else.</p>
+
+<p>In the same dialect, although his accent was very different,
+the Bohemian replied in words which signify, "You are right,
+Sangarre! Besides, we start to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow?" repeated the woman in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sangarre," replied the Bohemian; "to-morrow, and the
+Father himself sends us--where we are going!"</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon the man and woman entered the cottage, and carefully
+closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" said Michael Strogoff, to himself; "if these gipsies
+do not wish to be understood when they speak before me, they had
+better use some other language."</p>
+
+<p>From his Siberian origin, and because he had passed his
+childhood in the Steppes, Michael Strogoff, it has been said,
+understood almost all the languages in usage from Tartary to the
+Sea of Ice. As to the exact signification of the words he had
+heard, he did not trouble his head.
+ For why should it interest him?</p>
+
+<p>It was already late when he thought of returning to his inn to
+take some repose. He followed, as he did so, the course of the
+Volga, whose waters were almost hidden under the countless number
+of boats floating on its bosom.</p>
+
+<p>An hour after, Michael Strogoff was sleeping soundly on one of
+those Russian beds which always seem so hard to strangers, and on
+the morrow, the 17th of July, he awoke at break of day.</p>
+
+<p>He had still five hours to pass in Nijni-Novgorod; it seemed
+to him an age. How was he to spend the morning unless in
+wandering, as he had done the evening before, through the
+streets?
+ By the time he had finished his breakfast, strapped up his bag,
+had his podorojna inspected at the police office, he would have
+nothing to do but start. But he was not a man to lie in bed after
+the sun had risen; so he rose, dressed himself, placed the letter
+with the imperial arms on it carefully at the bottom of its usual
+pocket within the lining of his coat, over which he fastened his
+belt; he then closed his bag and threw it over his shoulder.
+ This done, he had no wish to return to the City of
+Constantinople, and intending to breakfast on the bank of the
+Volga near the wharf, he settled his bill and left the inn. By
+way of precaution, Michael Strogoff went first to the office of
+the steam-packet company, and there made sure that the Caucasus
+would start at the appointed hour.
+ As he did so, the thought for the first time struck him that,
+since the young Livonian girl was going to Perm, it was very
+possible that her intention was also to embark in the Caucasus,
+in which case he should accompany her.</p>
+
+<p>The town above with its kremlin, whose circumference measures
+two versts, and which resembles that of Moscow, was altogether
+abandoned.
+ Even the governor did not reside there. But if the town above
+was like a city of the dead, the town below, at all events, was
+alive.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, having crossed the Volga on a bridge of
+boats, guarded by mounted Cossacks, reached the square where the
+evening before he had fallen in with the gipsy camp. This was
+somewhat outside the town, where the fair of Nijni-Novgorod was
+held.
+ In a vast plain rose the temporary palace of the
+governor-general, where by imperial orders that great functionary
+resided during the whole of the fair, which, thanks to the people
+who composed it, required an ever-watchful surveillance.</p>
+
+<p>This plain was now covered with booths symmetrically arranged
+in such a manner as to leave avenues broad enough to allow the
+crowd to pass without a crush.</p>
+
+<p>Each group of these booths, of all sizes and shapes, formed a
+separate quarter particularly dedicated to some special branch of
+commerce.
+ There was the iron quarter, the furriers' quarter, the woolen
+quarter, the quarter of the wood merchants, the weavers' quarter,
+the dried fish quarter, etc. Some booths were even built of fancy
+materials, some of bricks of tea, others of masses of salt
+meat--that is to say, of samples of the goods which the owners
+thus announced were there to the purchasers--a singular, and
+somewhat American, mode of advertisement.</p>
+
+<p>In the avenues and long alleys there was already a large
+assemblage of people--the sun, which had risen at four o'clock,
+being well above the horizon--an extraordinary mixture of
+Europeans and Asiatics, talking, wrangling, haranguing, and
+bargaining.
+ Everything which can be bought or sold seemed to be heaped up in
+this square. Furs, precious stones, silks, Cashmere shawls,
+Turkey carpets, weapons from the Caucasus, gauzes from Smyrna and
+Ispahan. Tiflis armor, caravan teas. European bronzes, Swiss
+clocks, velvets and silks from Lyons, English cottons, harness,
+fruits, vegetables, minerals from the Ural, malachite,
+lapis-lazuli, spices, perfumes, medicinal herbs, wood, tar, rope,
+horn, pumpkins, water-melons, etc-- all the products of India,
+China, Persia, from the shores of the Caspian and the Black Sea,
+from America and Europe, were united at this corner of the
+globe.</p>
+
+<p>It is scarcely possible truly to portray the moving mass of
+human beings surging here and there, the excitement, the
+confusion, the hubbub; demonstrative as were the natives and the
+inferior classes, they were completely outdone by their visitors.
+There were merchants from Central Asia, who had occupied a year
+in escorting their merchandise across its vast plains, and who
+would not again see their shops and counting-houses for another
+year to come.
+ In short, of such importance is this fair of Nijni-Novgorod,
+that the sum total of its transactions amounts yearly to nearly a
+hundred million dollars.</p>
+
+<p>On one of the open spaces between the quarters of this
+temporary city were numbers of mountebanks of every description;
+gypsies from the mountains, telling fortunes to the credulous
+fools who are ever to be found in such assemblies; Zingaris or
+Tsiganes-- a name which the Russians give to the gypsies who are
+the descendants of the ancient Copts--singing their wildest
+melodies and dancing their most original dances; comedians of
+foreign theaters, acting Shakespeare, adapted to the taste of
+spectators who crowded to witness them. In the long avenues the
+bear showmen accompanied their four-footed dancers, menageries
+resounded with the hoarse cries of animals under the influence of
+the stinging whip or red-hot irons of the tamer; and, besides all
+these numberless performers, in the middle of the central square,
+surrounded by a circle four deep of enthusiastic amateurs, was a
+band of "mariners of the Volga,"
+ sitting on the ground, as on the deck of their vessel, imitating
+the action of rowing, guided by the stick of the master of the
+orchestra, the veritable helmsman of this imaginary vessel!
+ A whimsical and pleasing custom!</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, according to a time-honored observance in the fair
+of Nijni-Novgorod, above the heads of the vast concourse a flock
+of birds was allowed to escape from the cages in which they had
+been brought to the spot. In return for a few copecks charitably
+offered by some good people, the bird-fanciers opened the prison
+doors of their captives, who flew out in hundreds, uttering their
+joyous notes.</p>
+
+<p>It should be mentioned that England and France, at all events,
+were this year represented at the great fair of Nijni-Novgorod by
+two of the most distinguished products of modern civilization,
+Messrs. Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet. Jolivet, an optimist by
+nature, found everything agreeable, and as by chance both lodging
+and food were to his taste, he jotted down in his book some
+memoranda particularly favorable to the town of Nijni-Novgorod.
+Blount, on the contrary, having in vain hunted for a supper, had
+been obliged to find a resting-place in the open air.
+ He therefore looked at it all from another point of view, and
+was preparing an article of the most withering character against
+a town in which the landlords of the inns refused to receive
+travelers who only begged leave to be flayed, "morally and
+physically."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, one hand in his pocket, the other holding
+his cherry-stemmed pipe, appeared the most indifferent and least
+impatient of men; yet, from a certain contraction of his eyebrows
+every now and then, a careful observer would have seen that he
+was burning to be off.</p>
+
+<p>For two hours he kept walking about the streets, only to find
+himself invariably at the fair again. As he passed among the
+groups of buyers and sellers he discovered that those who came
+from countries on the confines of Asia manifested great
+uneasiness.
+ Their trade was visibly suffering. Another symptom also was
+marked.
+ In Russia military uniforms appear on every occasion. Soldiers
+are wont to mix freely with the crowd, the police agents being
+almost invariably aided by a number of Cossacks, who, lance on
+shoulder, keep order in the crowd of three hundred thousand
+strangers.
+ But on this occasion the soldiers, Cossacks and the rest, did
+not put in an appearance at the great market. Doubtless, a sudden
+order to move having been foreseen, they were restricted to their
+barracks.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, while no soldiers were to be seen, it was not so
+with their officers. Since the evening before, aides-decamp,
+leaving the governor's palace, galloped in every direction. An
+unusual movement was going forward which a serious state of
+affairs could alone account for.
+ There were innumerable couriers on the roads both to Wladimir
+and to the Ural Mountains. The exchange of telegraphic dispatches
+with Moscow was incessant.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff found himself in the central square when the
+report spread that the head of police had been summoned by a
+courier to the palace of the governor-general. An important
+dispatch from Moscow, it was said, was the cause of it.</p>
+
+<p>"The fair is to be closed," said one.</p>
+
+<p>"The regiment of Nijni-Novgorod has received the route,"
+declared another.</p>
+
+<p>"They say that the Tartars menace Tomsk!"</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the head of police!" was shouted on every side.
+ A loud clapping of hands was suddenly raised, which subsided by
+degrees, and finally was succeeded by absolute silence.
+ The head of police arrived in the middle of the central square,
+and it was seen by all that he held in his hand a dispatch.</p>
+
+<p>Then, in a loud voice, he read the following announcements:
+"By order of the Governor of Nijni-Novgorod.</p>
+
+<p>"1st. All Russian subjects are forbidden to quit the province
+upon any pretext whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p>"2nd. All strangers of Asiatic origin are commanded to leave
+the province within twenty-four hours."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI BROTHER AND SISTER</h2>
+
+<p>HOWEVER disastrous these measures might be to private
+interests, they were, under the circumstances, perfectly
+justifiable.</p>
+
+<p>"All Russian subjects are forbidden to leave the
+province;"
+ if Ivan Ogareff was still in the province, this would at any
+rate prevent him, unless with the greatest difficulty, from
+rejoining Feofar-Khan, and becoming a very formidable lieutenant
+to the Tartar chief.</p>
+
+<p>"All foreigners of Asiatic origin are ordered to leave the
+province in four-and-twenty hours;" this would send off in a body
+all the traders from Central Asia, as well as the bands of
+Bohemians, gipsies, etc., having more or less sympathy with the
+Tartars. So many heads, so many spies-- undoubtedly affairs
+required their expulsion.</p>
+
+<p>
+ It is easy to understand the effect produced by these two
+thunder-claps bursting over a town like Nijni-Novgorod, so
+densely crowded with visitors, and with a commerce so greatly
+surpassing that of all other places in Russia. The natives whom
+business called beyond the Siberian frontier could not leave the
+province for a time at least.
+ The tenor of the first article of the order was express; it
+admitted of no exception. All private interests must yield to the
+public weal.
+ As to the second article of the proclamation, the order of
+expulsion which it contained admitted of no evasion either.
+ It only concerned foreigners of Asiatic origin, but these could
+do nothing but pack up their merchandise and go back the way they
+came.
+ As to the mountebanks, of which there were a considerable
+number, they had nearly a thousand versts to go before they could
+reach the nearest frontier. For them it was simply misery.</p>
+
+<p>At first there rose against this unusual measure a murmur of
+protestation, a cry of despair, but this was quickly suppressed
+by the presence of the Cossacks and agents of police.
+ Immediately, what might be called the exodus from the immense
+plain began. The awnings in front of the stalls were folded up;
+the theaters were taken to pieces; the fires were put out; the
+acrobats' ropes were lowered; the old broken-winded horses of the
+traveling vans came back from their sheds.
+ Agents and soldiers with whip or stick stimulated the tardy
+ones, and made nothing of pulling down the tents even before the
+poor Bohemians had left them.</p>
+
+<p>Under these energetic measures the square of Nijni-Novgorod
+would, it was evident, be entirely evacuated before the evening,
+and to the tumult of the great fair would succeed the silence of
+the desert.</p>
+
+<p>It must again be repeated--for it was a necessary aggravation
+of these severe measures--that to all those nomads chiefly
+concerned in the order of expulsion even the steppes of Siberia
+were forbidden, and they would be obliged to hasten to the south
+of the Caspian Sea, either to Persia, Turkey, or the plains of
+Turkestan. The post of the Ural, and the mountains which form, as
+it were, a prolongation of the river along the Russian frontier,
+they were not allowed to pass.
+ They were therefore under the necessity of traveling six hundred
+miles before they could tread a free soil.</p>
+
+<p>Just as the reading of the proclamation by the head of the
+police came to an end, an idea darted instinctively into the mind
+of Michael Strogoff. "What a singular coincidence," thought he,
+"between this proclamation expelling all foreigners of Asiatic
+origin, and the words exchanged last evening between those two
+gipsies of the Zingari race. 'The Father himself sends us where
+we wish to go,' that old man said. But 'the Father' is the
+emperor!
+ He is never called anything else among the people. How could
+those gipsies have foreseen the measure taken against them? how
+could they have known it beforehand, and where do they wish to
+go?
+ Those are suspicious people, and it seems to me that to them the
+government proclamation must be more useful than injurious."</p>
+
+<p>But these reflections were completely dispelled by another
+which drove every other thought out of Michael's mind.
+ He forgot the Zingaris, their suspicious words, the strange
+coincidence which resulted from the proclamation.
+ The remembrance of the young Livonian girl suddenly rushed into
+his mind. "Poor child!" he thought to himself.
+ "She cannot now cross the frontier."</p>
+
+<p>In truth the young girl was from Riga; she was Livonian,
+consequently Russian, and now could not leave Russian
+territory!
+ The permit which had been given her before the new measures had
+been promulgated was no longer available.
+ All the routes to Siberia had just been pitilessly closed to
+her, and, whatever the motive taking her to Irkutsk, she was now
+forbidden to go there.</p>
+
+<p>This thought greatly occupied Michael Strogoff. He said to
+himself, vaguely at first, that, without neglecting anything of
+what was due to his important mission, it would perhaps be
+possible for him to be of some use to this brave girl; and this
+idea pleased him. Knowing how serious were the dangers which he,
+an energetic and vigorous man, would have personally to
+encounter, he could not conceal from himself how infinitely
+greater they would prove to a young unprotected girl.
+ As she was going to Irkutsk, she would be obliged to follow the
+same road as himself, she would have to pass through the bands of
+invaders, as he was about to attempt doing himself. If, moreover,
+she had at her disposal only the money necessary for a journey
+taken under ordinary circumstances, how could she manage to
+accomplish it under conditions which made it not only perilous
+but expensive?</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, "if she takes the route to Perm, it is nearly
+impossible but that I shall fall in with her.
+ Then, I will watch over her without her suspecting it; and as
+she appears to me as anxious as myself to reach Irkutsk, she will
+cause me no delay."</p>
+
+<p>But one thought leads to another. Michael Strogoff had till
+now thought only of doing a kind action; but now another idea
+flashed into his brain; the question presented itself under quite
+a new aspect.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," said he to himself, "that I have much more need
+of her than she can have of me. Her presence will be useful in
+drawing off suspicion from me. A man traveling alone across the
+steppe, may be easily guessed to be a courier of the Czar. If, on
+the contrary, this young girl accompanies me, I shall appear, in
+the eyes of all, the Nicholas Korpanoff of my podorojna.
+Therefore, she must accompany me. Therefore, I must find her
+again at any cost.
+ It is not probable that since yesterday evening she has been
+able to get a carriage and leave Nijni-Novgorod. I must look for
+her.
+ And may God guide me!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael left the great square of Nijni-Novgorod, where the
+tumult produced by the carrying out of the prescribed measures
+had now reached its height. Recriminations from the banished
+strangers, shouts from the agents and Cossacks who were using
+them so brutally, together made an indescribable uproar. The girl
+for whom he searched could not be there. It was now nine o'clock
+in the morning.
+ The steamboat did not start till twelve. Michael Strogoff had
+therefore nearly two hours to employ in searching for her whom he
+wished to make his traveling companion.</p>
+
+<p>He crossed the Volga again and hunted through the quarters on
+the other side, where the crowd was much less considerable.
+ He entered the churches, the natural refuge for all who weep,
+for all who suffer. Nowhere did he meet with the young
+Livonian.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet," he repeated, "she could not have left
+Nijni-Novgorod yet.
+ We'll have another look." He wandered about thus for two
+hours.
+ He went on without stopping, feeling no fatigue, obeying a
+potent instinct which allowed no room for thought. All was in
+vain.</p>
+
+<p>It then occurred to him that perhaps the girl had not heard of
+the order--though this was improbable enough, for such a
+thunder-clap could not have burst without being heard by all.
+ Evidently interested in knowing the smallest news from Siberia,
+how could she be ignorant of the measures taken by the governor,
+measures which concerned her so directly?</p>
+
+<p>But, if she was ignorant of it, she would come in an hour to
+the quay, and there some merciless agent would refuse her a
+passage!
+ At any cost, he must see her beforehand, and enable her to avoid
+such a repulse.</p>
+
+<p>But all his endeavors were in vain, and he at length almost
+despaired of finding her again. It was eleven o'clock, and
+Michael thought of presenting his podorojna at the office of the
+head of police.
+ The proclamation evidently did not concern him, since the
+emergency had been foreseen for him, but he wished to make sure
+that nothing would hinder his departure from the town.</p>
+
+<p>Michael then returned to the other side of the Volga, to the
+quarter in which was the office of the head of police.
+ An immense crowd was collected there; for though all foreigners
+were ordered to quit the province, they had notwithstanding to go
+through certain forms before they could depart.</p>
+
+<p>Without this precaution, some Russian more or less implicated
+in the Tartar movement would have been able, in a disguise, to
+pass the frontier--just those whom the order wished to prevent
+going.
+ The strangers were sent away, but still had to gain permission
+to go.</p>
+
+<p>Mountebanks, gypsies, Tsiganes, Zingaris, mingled with
+merchants from Persia, Turkey, India, Turkestan, China, filled
+the court and offices of the police station.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone was in a hurry, for the means of transport would be
+much sought after among this crowd of banished people, and those
+who did not set about it soon ran a great risk of not being able
+to leave the town in the prescribed time, which would expose them
+to some brutal treatment from the governor's agents.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to the strength of his elbows Michael was able to cross
+the court.
+ But to get into the office and up to the clerk's little window
+was a much more difficult business. However, a word into an
+inspector's ear and a few judiciously given roubles were powerful
+enough to gain him a passage.
+ The man, after taking him into the waiting-room, went to call an
+upper clerk. Michael Strogoff would not be long in making
+everything right with the police and being free in his
+movements.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst waiting, he looked about him, and what did he see?
+ There, fallen, rather than seated, on a bench, was a girl, prey
+to a silent despair, although her face could scarcely be seen,
+the profile alone being visible against the wall.
+ Michael Strogoff could not be mistaken. He instantly recognized
+the young Livonian.</p>
+
+<p>Not knowing the governor's orders, she had come to the police
+office to get her pass signed. They had refused to sign it. No
+doubt she was authorized to go to Irkutsk, but the order was
+peremptory-- it annulled all previous au-thorizations, and the
+routes to Siberia were closed to her. Michael, delighted at
+having found her again, approached the girl.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up for a moment and her face brightened on
+recognizing her traveling companion. She instinctively rose and,
+like a drowning man who clutches at a spar, she was about to ask
+his help.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the agent touched Michael on the shoulder, "The
+head of police will see you," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Good," returned Michael. And without saying a word to her for
+whom he had been searching all day, without reassuring her by
+even a gesture, which might compromise either her or himself, he
+followed the man.</p>
+
+<p>The young Livonian, seeing the only being to whom she could
+look for help disappear, fell back again on her bench.</p>
+
+<p>Three minutes had not passed before Michael Strogoff
+reappeared, accompanied by the agent. In his hand he held his
+podorojna, which threw open the roads to Siberia for him. He
+again approached the young Livonian, and holding out his hand:
+"Sister," said he.</p>
+
+<p>She understood. She rose as if some sudden inspiration
+prevented her from hesitating a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Sister," repeated Michael Strogoff, "we are authorized to
+continue our journey to Irkutsk. Will you come with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will follow you, brother," replied the girl, putting her
+hand into that of Michael Strogoff. And together they left the
+police station.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII GOING DOWN THE VOLGA</h2>
+
+<p>A LITTLE before midday, the steamboat's bell drew to the wharf
+on the Volga an unusually large concourse of people, for not only
+were those about to embark who had intended to go, but the many
+who were compelled to go contrary to their wishes.
+ The boilers of the Caucasus were under full pressure; a slight
+smoke issued from its funnel, whilst the end of the escape-pipe
+and the lids of the valves were crowned with white vapor.
+ It is needless to say that the police kept a close watch over
+the departure of the Caucasus, and showed themselves pitiless to
+those travelers who did not satisfactorily answer their
+questions.</p>
+
+<p>Numerous Cossacks came and went on the quay, ready to assist
+the agents, but they had not to interfere, as no one ventured to
+offer the slightest resistance to their orders.
+ Exactly at the hour the last clang of the bell sounded, the
+powerful wheels of the steamboat began to beat the water, and the
+Caucasus passed rapidly between the two towns of which
+Nijni-Novgorod is composed.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Michael Strogoff and the young Livonian had taken a passage on
+board the Caucasus. Their embarkation was made without any
+difficulty.
+ As is known, the podorojna, drawn up in the name of Nicholas
+Korpanoff, authorized this merchant to be accompanied on his
+journey to Siberia. They appeared, therefore, to be a brother and
+sister traveling under the protection of the imperial police.
+ Both, seated together at the stern, gazed at the receding town,
+so disturbed by the governor's order. Michael had as yet said
+nothing to the girl, he had not even questioned her.
+ He waited until she should speak to him, when that was
+necessary.
+ She had been anxious to leave that town, in which, but for the
+providential intervention of this unexpected protector, she would
+have remained imprisoned. She said nothing, but her looks spoke
+her thanks.</p>
+
+<p>The Volga, the Rha of the ancients, the largest river in all
+Europe, is almost three thousand miles in length.
+ Its waters, rather unwholesome in its upper part, are improved
+at Nijni-Novgorod by those of the Oka, a rapid affluent, issuing
+from the central provinces of Russia. The system of Russian
+canals and rivers has been justly compared to a gigantic tree
+whose branches spread over every part of the empire.
+ The Volga forms the trunk of this tree, and it has for roots
+seventy mouths opening into the Caspian Sea. It is navigable as
+far as Rjef, a town in the government of Tver, that is, along the
+greater part of its course.</p>
+
+<p>The steamboats plying between Perm and Nijni-Novgorod rapidly
+perform the two hundred and fifty miles which separate this town
+from the town of Kasan. It is true that these boats have only to
+descend the Volga, which adds nearly two miles of current per
+hour to their own speed; but on arriving at the confluence of the
+Kama, a little below Kasan, they are obliged to quit the Volga
+for the smaller river, up which they ascend to Perm. Powerful as
+were her machines, the Caucasus could not thus, after entering
+the Kama, make against the current more than ten miles an hour.
+Including an hour's stoppage at Kasan, the voyage from
+Nijni-Novgorod to Perm would take from between sixty to sixty-two
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>The steamer was very well arranged, and the passengers,
+according to their condition or resources, occupied three
+distinct classes on board.
+ Michael Strogoff had taken care to engage two first-class
+cabins, so that his young companion might retire into hers
+whenever she liked.</p>
+
+<p>The Caucasus was loaded with passengers of every
+description.
+ A number of Asiatic traders had thought it best to leave
+Nijni-Novgorod immediately. In that part of the steamer reserved
+for the first-class might be seen Armenians in long robes and a
+sort of miter on their heads; Jews, known by their conical caps;
+rich Chinese in their traditional costume, a very wide blue,
+violet, or black robe; Turks, wearing the national turban;
+Hindoos, with square caps, and a simple string for a girdle, some
+of whom, hold in their hands all the traffic of Central Asia;
+and, lastly, Tartars, wearing boots, ornamented with many-colored
+braid, and the breast a mass of embroidery.
+ All these merchants had been obliged to pile up their numerous
+bales and chests in the hold and on the deck; and the transport
+of their baggage would cost them dear, for, according to the
+regulations, each person had only a right to twenty pounds'
+weight.</p>
+
+<p>In the bows of the Caucasus were more numerous groups of
+passengers, not only foreigners, but also Russians, who were not
+forbidden by the order to go back to their towns in the
+province.
+ There were mujiks with caps on their heads, and wearing checked
+shirts under their wide pelisses; peasants of the Volga, with
+blue trousers stuffed into their boots, rose-colored cotton
+shirts, drawn in by a cord, felt caps; a few women, habited in
+flowery-patterned cotton dresses, gay-colored aprons, and bright
+handkerchiefs on their heads.
+ These were principally third-class passengers, who were,
+happily, not troubled by the prospect of a long return
+voyage.
+ The Caucasus passed numerous boats being towed up the stream,
+carrying all sorts of merchandise to Nijni-Novgorod. Then passed
+rafts of wood interminably long, and barges loaded to the
+gunwale, and nearly sinking under water. A bootless voyage they
+were making, since the fair had been abruptly broken up at its
+outset.</p>
+
+<p>The waves caused by the steamer splashed on the banks, covered
+with flocks of wild duck, who flew away uttering deafening
+cries.
+ A little farther, on the dry fields, bordered with willows, and
+aspens, were scattered a few cows, sheep, and herds of pigs.
+ Fields, sown with thin buckwheat and rye, stretched away to a
+background of half-cultivated hills, offering no remarkable
+prospect.
+ The pencil of an artist in quest of the picturesque would have
+found nothing to reproduce in this monotonous landscape.</p>
+
+<p>The Caucasus had been steaming on for almost two hours, when
+the young Livonian, addressing herself to Michael, said, "Are you
+going to Irkutsk, brother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sister," answered the young man. "We are going the same
+way.
+ Consequently, where I go, you shall go."</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow, brother, you shall know why I left the shores of
+the Baltic to go beyond the Ural Mountains."</p>
+
+<p>"I ask you nothing, sister."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall know all," replied the girl, with a faint
+smile.
+ "A sister should hide nothing from her brother. But I cannot
+to-day. Fatigue and sorrow have broken me."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you go and rest in your cabin?" asked Michael
+Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes--yes; and to-morrow--"</p>
+
+<p>"Come then--"</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated to finish his sentence, as if he had wished to
+end it by the name of his companion, of which he was still
+ignorant.</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia," said she, holding out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Nadia," answered Michael, "and make what use you like
+of your brother Nicholas Korpanoff." And he led the girl to the
+cabin engaged for her off the saloon.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff returned on deck, and eager for any news
+which might bear on his journey, he mingled in the groups of
+passengers, though without taking any part in the
+conversation.
+ Should he by any chance be questioned, and obliged to reply, he
+would announce himself as the merchant Nicholas Korpanoff, going
+back to the frontier, for he did not wish it to be suspected that
+a special permission authorized him to travel to Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>The foreigners in the steamer could evidently speak of nothing
+but the occurrences of the day, of the order and its
+consequences.
+ These poor people, scarcely recovered from the fatigue of a
+journey across Central Asia, found themselves obliged to return,
+and if they did not give loud vent to their anger and despair, it
+was because they dared not. Fear, mingled with respect,
+restrained them.
+ It was possible that inspectors of police, charged with watching
+the passengers, had secretly embarked on board the Caucasus, and
+it was just as well to keep silence; expulsion, after all, was a
+good deal preferable to imprisonment in a fortress.
+ Therefore the men were either silent, or spoke with so much
+caution that it was scarcely possible to get any useful
+information.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff thus could learn nothing here; but if mouths
+were often shut at his approach--for they did not know him-- his
+ears were soon struck by the sound of one voice, which cared
+little whether it was heard or not.</p>
+
+<p>The man with the hearty voice spoke Russian, but with a French
+accent; and another speaker answered him more reservedly. "What,"
+said the first, "are you on board this boat, too, my dear fellow;
+you whom I met at the imperial fete in Moscow, and just caught a
+glimpse of at Nijni-Novgorod?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it's I," answered the second drily.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, I didn't expect to be so closely followed."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not following you sir; I am preceding you."</p>
+
+<p>"Precede! precede! Let us march abreast, keeping step, like
+two soldiers on parade, and for the time, at least, let us agree,
+if you will, that one shall not pass the other."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, I shall pass you."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall see that, when we are at the seat of war; but till
+then, why, let us be traveling companions.
+ Later, we shall have both time and occasion to be rivals."</p>
+
+<p>"Enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"Enemies, if you like. There is a precision in your words, my
+dear fellow, particularly agreeable to me. One may always know
+what one has to look for, with you."</p>
+
+<p>"What is the harm?"</p>
+
+<p>"No harm at all. So, in my turn, I will ask your permission to
+state our respective situations."</p>
+
+<p>"State away."</p>
+
+<p>"You are going to Perm--like me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Like you."</p>
+
+<p>"And probably you will go from Perm to Ekaterenburg, since
+that is the best and safest route by which to cross the Ural
+Mountains?"</p>
+
+<p>"Probably."</p>
+
+<p>"Once past the frontier, we shall be in Siberia, that is to
+say in the midst of the invasion."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be there."</p>
+
+<p>"Well! then, and only then, will be the time to say, Each for
+himself, and God for--"</p>
+
+<p>"For me."</p>
+
+<p>"For you, all by yourself! Very well! But since we have a week
+of neutral days before us, and since it is very certain that news
+will not shower down upon us on the way, let us be friends until
+we become rivals again."</p>
+
+<p>"Enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; that's right, enemies. But till then, let us act
+together, and not try and ruin each other. All the same, I
+promise you to keep to myself all that I can see--"</p>
+
+<p>"And I, all that I can hear."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that agreed?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is agreed."</p>
+
+<p>"Your hand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Here it is." And the hand of the first speaker, that is to
+say, five wide-open fingers, vigorously shook the two fingers
+coolly extended by the other.</p>
+
+<p>"By the bye," said the first, "I was able this morning to
+telegraph the very words of the order to my cousin at seventeen
+minutes past ten."</p>
+
+<p>"And I sent it to the Daily Telegraph at thirteen minutes past
+ten."</p>
+
+<p>"Bravo, Mr. Blount!"</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, M. Jolivet."</p>
+
+<p>"I will try and match that!"</p>
+
+<p>"It will be difficult."</p>
+
+<p>"I can try, however."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, the French correspondent familiarly saluted the
+Englishman, who bowed stiffly. The governor's proclamation did
+not concern these two news-hunters, as they were neither Russians
+nor foreigners of Asiatic origin. However, being urged by the
+same instinct, they had left Nijni-Novgorod together.
+ It was natural that they should take the same means of
+transport, and that they should follow the same route to the
+Siberian steppes.
+ Traveling companions, whether enemies or friends, they had a
+week to pass together before "the hunt would be open."
+ And then success to the most expert! Alcide Jolivet had made the
+first advances, and Harry Blount had accepted them though he had
+done so coldly.</p>
+
+<p>That very day at dinner the Frenchman open as ever and even
+too loquacious, the Englishman still silent and grave, were seen
+hobnobbing at the same table, drinking genuine Cliquot, at six
+roubles the bottle, made from the fresh sap of the birch-trees of
+the country.
+ On hearing them chatting away together, Michael Strogoff said to
+himself: "Those are inquisitive and indiscreet fellows whom I
+shall probably meet again on the way. It will be prudent for me
+to keep them at a distance."</p>
+
+<p>The young Livonian did not come to dinner. She was asleep in
+her cabin, and Michael did not like to awaken her. It was evening
+before she reappeared on the deck of the Caucasus. The long
+twilight imparted a coolness to the atmosphere eagerly enjoyed by
+the passengers after the stifling heat of the day. As the evening
+advanced, the greater number never even thought of going into the
+saloon.
+ Stretched on the benches, they inhaled with delight the slight
+breeze caused by the speed of the steamer. At this time of year,
+and under this latitude, the sky scarcely darkened between sunset
+and dawn, and left the steersman light enough to guide his
+steamer among the numerous vessels going up or down the
+Volga.</p>
+
+<p>Between eleven and two, however, the moon being new, it was
+almost dark.
+ Nearly all the passengers were then asleep on the deck, and the
+silence was disturbed only by the noise of the paddles striking
+the water at regular intervals. Anxiety kept Michael Strogoff
+awake.
+ He walked up and down, but always in the stern of the
+steamer.
+ Once, however, he happened to pass the engine-room. He then
+found himself in the part reserved for second and third-class
+passengers.</p>
+
+<p>There, everyone was lying asleep, not only on the benches, but
+also on the bales, packages, and even the deck itself.
+ Some care was necessary not to tread on the sleepers, who were
+lying about everywhere. They were chiefly mujiks, accustomed to
+hard couches, and quite satisfied with the planks of the
+deck.
+ But no doubt they would, all the same, have soundly abused the
+clumsy fellow who roused them with an accidental kick.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff took care, therefore, not to disturb
+anyone.
+ By going thus to the end of the boat, he had no other idea but
+that of striving against sleep by a rather longer walk.
+ He reached the forward deck, and was already climbing the
+forecastle ladder, when he heard someone speaking near him.
+ He stopped. The voices appeared to come from a group of
+passengers enveloped in cloaks and wraps. It was impossible to
+recognize them in the dark, though it sometimes happened that,
+when the steamer's chimney sent forth a plume of ruddy flames,
+the sparks seemed to fall amongst the group as though thousands
+of spangles had been suddenly illuminated.</p>
+
+<p>Michael was about to step up the ladder, when a few words
+reached his ear, uttered in that strange tongue which he had
+heard during the night at the fair. Instinctively he stopped to
+listen. Protected by the shadow of the forecastle, he could not
+be perceived himself.
+ As to seeing the passengers who were talking, that was
+impossible.
+ He must confine himself to listening.</p>
+
+<p>The first words exchanged were of no importance--to him at
+least--but they allowed him to recognize the voices of the man
+and woman whom he had heard at Nijni-Novgorod. This, of course,
+made him redouble his attention.
+ It was, indeed, not at all impossible that these same Tsiganes,
+now banished, should be on board the Caucasus.</p>
+
+<p>And it was well for him that he listened, for he distinctly
+heard this question and answer made in the Tartar idiom: "It is
+said that a courier has set out from Moscow for Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"It is so said, Sangarre; but either this courier will arrive
+too late, or he will not arrive at all."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff started involuntarily at this reply, which
+concerned him so directly. He tried to see if the man and woman
+who had just spoken were really those whom he suspected, but he
+could not succeed.</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments Michael Strogoff had regained the stern of
+the vessel without having been perceived, and, taking a seat by
+himself, he buried his face in his hands. It might have been
+supposed that he was asleep.</p>
+
+<p>He was not asleep, however, and did not even think of
+sleeping.
+ He was reflecting, not without a lively apprehension: "Who is it
+knows of my departure, and who can have any interest in knowing
+it?"</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII GOING UP THE KAMA</h2>
+
+<p>THE next day, the 18th of July, at twenty minutes to seven in
+the morning, the Caucasus reached the Kasan quay, seven versts
+from the town.</p>
+
+<p>Kasan is situated at the confluence of the Volga and Kasanka.
+It is an important chief town of the government, and a Greek
+archbishopric, as well as the seat of a university.
+ The varied population preserves an Asiatic character.
+ Although the town was so far from the landing-place, a large
+crowd was collected on the quay. They had come for news.
+ The governor of the province had published an order identical
+with that of Nijni-Novgorod. Police officers and a few Cossacks
+kept order among the crowd, and cleared the way both for the
+passengers who were disembarking and also for those who were
+embarking on board the Caucasus, minutely examining both classes
+of travelers.
+ The one were the Asiatics who were being expelled; the other,
+mujiks stopping at Kasan.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Michael Strogoff unconcernedly watched the bustle which occurs
+at all quays on the arrival of a steam vessel. The Caucasus would
+stay for an hour to renew her fuel. Michael did not even think of
+landing.
+ He was unwilling to leave the young Livonian girl alone on
+board, as she had not yet reappeared on deck.</p>
+
+<p>The two journalists had risen at dawn, as all good huntsmen
+should do.
+ They went on shore and mingled with the crowd, each keeping to
+his own peculiar mode of proceeding; Harry Blount, sketching
+different types, or noting some observation; Alcide Jolivet
+contenting himself with asking questions, confiding in his
+memory, which never failed him.</p>
+
+<p>There was a report along all the frontier that the
+insurrection and invasion had reached considerable proportions.
+Communication between Siberia and the empire was already
+extremely difficult.
+ All this Michael Strogoff heard from the new arrivals.
+ This information could not but cause him great uneasiness, and
+increase his wish of being beyond the Ural Mountains, so as to
+judge for himself of the truth of these rumors, and enable him to
+guard against any possible contingency.
+ He was thinking of seeking more direct intelligence from some
+native of Kasan, when his attention was suddenly diverted.</p>
+
+<p>Among the passengers who were leaving the Caucasus, Michael
+recognized the troop of Tsiganes who, the day before, had
+appeared in the Nijni-Novgorod fair. There, on the deck of the
+steamboat were the old Bohemian and the woman.
+ With them, and no doubt under their direction, landed about
+twenty dancers and singers, from fifteen to twenty years of age,
+wrapped in old cloaks, which covered their spangled dresses.
+ These dresses, just then glancing in the first rays of the sun,
+reminded Michael of the curious appearance which he had observed
+during the night. It must have been the glitter of those spangles
+in the bright flames issuing from the steamboat's funnel which
+had attracted his attention.</p>
+
+<p>"Evidently," said Michael to himself, "this troop of Tsiganes,
+after remaining below all day, crouched under the forecastle
+during the night.
+ Were these gipsies trying to show themselves as little as
+possible?
+ Such is not according to the usual custom of their race."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff no longer doubted that the expressions he had
+heard, had proceeded from this tawny group, and had been
+exchanged between the old gypsy and the woman to whom he gave the
+Mongolian name of Sangarre. Michael involuntarily moved towards
+the gangway, as the Bohemian troop was leaving the steamboat.</p>
+
+<p>The old Bohemian was there, in a humble attitude, little
+conformable with the effrontery natural to his race.
+ One would have said that he was endeavoring rather to avoid
+attention than to attract it. His battered hat, browned by the
+suns of every clime, was pulled forward over his wrinkled
+face.
+ His arched back was bent under an old cloak, wrapped closely
+round him, notwithstanding the heat. It would have been
+difficult, in this miserable dress, to judge of either his size
+or face.
+ Near him was the Tsigane, Sangarre, a woman about thirty years
+old.
+ She was tall and well made, with olive complexion, magnificent
+eyes, and golden hair.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the young dancers were remarkably pretty, all
+possessing the clear-cut features of their race. These Tsiganes
+are generally very attractive, and more than one of the great
+Russian nobles, who try to vie with the English in eccentricity,
+has not hesitated to choose his wife from among these gypsy
+girls.
+ One of them was humming a song of strange rhythm, which might be
+thus rendered:</p>
+
+<p>"Glitters brightly the gold In my raven locks streaming Rich
+coral around My graceful neck gleaming; Like a bird of the air,
+Through the wide world I roam."</p>
+
+<p>The laughing girl continued her song, but Michael Strogoff
+ceased to listen. It struck him just then that the Tsigane,
+Sangarre, was regarding him with a peculiar gaze, as if to fix
+his features indelibly in her memory.</p>
+
+<p>It was but for a few moments, when Sangarre herself followed
+the old man and his troop, who had already left the vessel.
+ "That's a bold gypsy," said Michael to himself.
+ "Could she have recognized me as the man whom she saw at
+Nijni-Novgorod? These confounded Tsiganes have the eyes of a
+cat!
+ They can see in the dark; and that woman there might well
+know--"</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff was on the point of following Sangarre and
+the gypsy band, but he stopped. "No," thought he, "no unguarded
+proceedings. If I were to stop that old fortune teller and his
+companions my incognito would run a risk of being discovered.
+Besides, now they have landed, before they can pass the frontier
+I shall be far beyond it.
+ They may take the route from Kasan to Ishim, but that affords no
+resources to travelers. Besides a tarantass, drawn by good
+Siberian horses, will always go faster than a gypsy cart!
+ Come, friend Korpanoff, be easy."</p>
+
+<p>By this time the man and Sangarre had disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Kasan is justly called the "Gate of Asia" and considered as
+the center of Siberian and Bokharian commerce; for two roads
+begin here and lead across the Ural Mountains. Michael Strogoff
+had very judiciously chosen the one by Perm and Ekaterenburg. It
+is the great stage road, well supplied with relays kept at the
+expense of the government, and is prolonged from Ishim to
+Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that a second route--the one of which Michael had
+just spoken-- avoiding the slight detour by Perm, also connects
+Kasan with Ishim. It is perhaps shorter than the other, but this
+advantage is much diminished by the absence of post-houses, the
+bad roads, and lack of villages.
+ Michael Strogoff was right in the choice he had made, and if, as
+appeared probable, the gipsies should follow the second route
+from Kasan to Ishim, he had every chance of arriving before
+them.</p>
+
+<p>An hour afterwards the bell rang on board the Caucasus,
+calling the new passengers, and recalling the former ones.
+ It was now seven o'clock in the morning. The requisite fuel had
+been received on board. The whole vessel began to vibrate from
+the effects of the steam. She was ready to start.
+ Passengers going from Kasan to Perm were crowding on the
+deck.</p>
+
+<p>Michael noticed that of the two reporters Blount alone had
+rejoined the steamer. Was Alcide Jolivet about to miss his
+passage?</p>
+
+<p>But just as the ropes were being cast off, Jolivet appeared,
+tearing along. The steamer was already sheering off, the gangway
+had been drawn onto the quay, but Alcide Jolivet would not stick
+at such a little thing as that, so, with a bound like a
+harlequin, he alighted on the deck of the Caucasus almost in his
+rival's arms.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought the Caucasus was going without you," said the
+latter.</p>
+
+<p>"Bah!" answered Jolivet, "I should soon have caught you up
+again, by chartering a boat at my cousin's expense, or by
+traveling post at twenty copecks a verst, and on horseback. What
+could I do?
+ It was so long a way from the quay to the telegraph office."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been to the telegraph office?" asked Harry Blount,
+biting his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"That's exactly where I have been!" answered Jolivet, with his
+most amiable smile.</p>
+
+<p>"And is it still working to Kolyvan?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I don't know, but I can assure you, for instance, that
+it is working from Kasan to Paris."</p>
+
+<p>"You sent a dispatch to your cousin?"</p>
+
+<p>"With enthusiasm."</p>
+
+<p>"You had learnt then--?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, little father, as the Russians say," replied
+Alcide Jolivet, "I'm a good fellow, and I don't wish to keep
+anything from you.
+ The Tartars, and Feofar-Khan at their head, have passed
+Semipolatinsk, and are descending the Irtish. Do what you like
+with that!"</p>
+
+<p>What! such important news, and Harry Blount had not known it;
+and his rival, who had probably learned it from some inhabitant
+of Kasan, had already transmitted it to Paris. The English paper
+was distanced!
+ Harry Blount, crossing his hands behind him, walked off and
+seated himself in the stern without uttering a word.</p>
+
+<p>About ten o'clock in the morning, the young Livonian, leaving
+her cabin, appeared on deck. Michael Strogoff went forward and
+took her hand.
+ "Look, sister!" said he, leading her to the bows of the
+Caucasus.</p>
+
+<p>The view was indeed well worth seeing. The Caucasus had
+reached the confluence of the Volga and the Kama. There she would
+leave the former river, after having descended it for nearly
+three hundred miles, to ascend the latter for a full three
+hundred.</p>
+
+<p>The Kama was here very wide, and its wooded banks lovely.
+ A few white sails enlivened the sparkling water.
+ The horizon was closed by a line of hills covered with aspens,
+alders, and sometimes large oaks.</p>
+
+<p>But these beauties of nature could not distract the thoughts
+of the young Livonian even for an instant. She had left her hand
+in that of her companion, and turning to him, "At what distance
+are we from Moscow?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Nine hundred versts," answered Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Nine hundred, out of seven thousand!" murmured the girl.</p>
+
+<p>The bell now announced the breakfast hour. Nadia followed
+Michael Strogoff to the restaurant. She ate little, and as a poor
+girl whose means are small would do. Michael thought it best to
+content himself with the fare which satisfied his companion; and
+in less than twenty minutes he and Nadia returned on deck.
+ There they seated themselves in the stern, and without preamble,
+Nadia, lowering her voice to be heard by him alone, began:</p>
+
+<p>"Brother, I am the daughter of an exile. My name is Nadia
+Fedor. My mother died at Riga scarcely a month ago, and I am
+going to Irkutsk to rejoin my father and share his exile."</p>
+
+<p>"I, too, am going to Irkutsk," answered Michael, "and I shall
+thank Heaven if it enables me to give Nadia Fedor safe and sound
+into her father's hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, brother," replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff then added that he had obtained a special
+podorojna for Siberia, and that the Russian authorities could in
+no way hinder his progress.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia asked nothing more. She saw in this fortunate meeting
+with Michael a means only of accelerating her journey to her
+father.</p>
+
+<p>"I had," said she, "a permit which authorized me to go to
+Irkutsk, but the new order annulled that; and but for you,
+brother, I should have been unable to leave the town, in which,
+without doubt, I should have perished."</p>
+
+<p>"And dared you, alone, Nadia," said Michael, "attempt to cross
+the steppes of Siberia?"</p>
+
+<p>"The Tartar invasion was not known when I left Riga. It was
+only at Moscow that I learnt the news."</p>
+
+<p>"And despite it, you continued your journey?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was my duty."</p>
+
+<p>The words showed the character of the brave girl.</p>
+
+<p>She then spoke of her father, Wassili Fedor. He was a
+much-esteemed physician at Riga. But his connection with some
+secret society having been asserted, he received orders to start
+for Irkutsk. The police who brought the order conducted him
+without delay beyond the frontier.</p>
+
+<p>Wassili Fedor had but time to embrace his sick wife and his
+daughter, so soon to be left alone, when, shedding bitter tears,
+he was led away.
+ A year and a half after her husband's departure, Madame Fedor
+died in the arms of her daughter, who was thus left alone and
+almost penniless.
+ Nadia Fedor then asked, and easily obtained from the Russian
+government, an authorization to join her father at Irkutsk. She
+wrote and told him she was starting. She had barely enough money
+for this long journey, and yet she did not hesitate to undertake
+it. She would do what she could.
+ God would do the rest.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IX DAY AND NIGHT IN A TARANTASS</h2>
+
+<p>THE next day, the 19th of July, the Caucasus reached Perm, the
+last place at which she touched on the Kama.</p>
+
+<p>The government of which Perm is the capital is one of the
+largest in the Russian Empire, and, extending over the Ural
+Mountains, encroaches on Siberian territory. Marble quarries,
+mines of salt, platina, gold, and coal are worked here on a large
+scale.
+ Although Perm, by its situation, has become an important town,
+it is by no means attractive, being extremely dirty, and without
+resources.
+ This want of comfort is of no consequence to those going to
+Siberia, for they come from the more civilized districts, and are
+supplied with all necessaries.</p>
+
+<p>At Perm travelers from Siberia resell their vehicles, more or
+less damaged by the long journey across the plains.
+ There, too, those passing from Europe to Asia purchase
+carriages, or sleighs in the winter season.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff had already sketched out his programme.
+ A vehicle carrying the mail usually runs across the Ural
+Mountains, but this, of course, was discontinued. Even if it had
+not been so, he would not have taken it, as he wished to travel
+as fast as possible, without depending on anyone. He wisely
+preferred to buy a carriage, and journey by stages, stimulating
+the zeal of the postillions by well-applied "na vodkou," or
+tips.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Unfortunately, in consequence of the measures taken against
+foreigners of Asiatic origin, a large number of travelers had
+already left Perm, and therefore conveyances were extremely rare.
+Michael was obliged to content himself with what had been
+rejected by others.
+ As to horses, as long as the Czar's courier was not in Siberia,
+he could exhibit his podorojna, and the postmasters would give
+him the preference. But, once out of Europe, he had to depend
+alone on the power of his roubles.</p>
+
+<p>But to what sort of a vehicle should he harness his
+horses?
+ To a telga or to a tarantass? The telga is nothing but an open
+four-wheeled cart, made entirely of wood, the pieces fastened
+together by means of strong rope.
+ Nothing could be more primitive, nothing could be less
+comfortable; but, on the other hand, should any accident happen
+on the way, nothing could be more easily repaired. There is no
+want of firs on the Russian frontier, and axle-trees grow
+naturally in forests.
+ The post extraordinary, known by the name of "perck-ladnoi,"
+ is carried by the telga, as any road is good enough for it.
+ It must be confessed that sometimes the ropes which fasten the
+concern together break, and whilst the hinder part remains stuck
+in some bog, the fore-part arrives at the post-house on two
+wheels; but this result is considered quite satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff would have been obliged to employ a telga, if
+he had not been lucky enough to discover a tarantass.
+ It is to be hoped that the invention of Russian coach-builders
+will devise some improvement in this last-named vehicle.
+ Springs are wanting in it as well as in the telga; in the
+absence of iron, wood is not spared; but its four wheels, with
+eight or nine feet between them, assure a certain equilibrium
+over the jolting rough roads. A splash-board protects the
+travelers from the mud, and a strong leathern hood, which may be
+pulled quite over the occupiers, shelters them from the great
+heat and violent storms of the summer.
+ The tarantass is as solid and as easy to repair as the telga,
+and is, moreover, less addicted to leaving its hinder part in the
+middle of the road.</p>
+
+<p>It was not without careful search that Michael managed to
+discover this tarantass, and there was probably not a second to
+be found in all Perm. He haggled long about the price, for form's
+sake, to act up to his part as Nicholas Korpanoff, a plain
+merchant of Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia had followed her companion in his search after a
+suitable vehicle.
+ Although the object of each was different, both were equally
+anxious to arrive at their goal. One would have said the same
+will animated them both.</p>
+
+<p>"Sister," said Michael, "I wish I could have found a more
+comfortable conveyance for you."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you say that to me, brother, when I would have gone on
+foot, if need were, to rejoin my father?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not doubt your courage, Nadia, but there are physical
+fatigues a woman may be unable to endure."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall endure them, whatever they be," replied the girl.
+ "If you ever hear a complaint from me you may leave me in the
+road, and continue your journey alone."</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later, the podorojna being presented by Michael,
+three post-horses were harnessed to the tarantass. These animals,
+covered with long hair, were very like long-legged bears.
+ They were small but spirited, being of Siberian breed.
+ The way in which the iemschik harnessed them was thus: one, the
+largest, was secured between two long shafts, on whose farther
+end was a hoop carrying tassels and bells; the two others were
+simply fastened by ropes to the steps of the tarantass.
+ This was the complete harness, with mere strings for reins.</p>
+
+<p>Neither Michael Strogoff nor the young Livonian girl had any
+baggage.
+ The rapidity with which one wished to make the journey, and the
+more than modest resources of the other, prevented them from
+embarrassing themselves with packages. It was a fortunate thing,
+under the circumstances, for the tarantass could not have carried
+both baggage and travelers.
+ It was only made for two persons, without counting the iemschik,
+who kept his equilibrium on his narrow seat in a marvelous
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>The iemschik is changed at every relay. The man who drove the
+tarantass during the first stage was, like his horses, a
+Siberian, and no less shaggy than they; long hair, cut square on
+the forehead, hat with a turned-up brim, red belt, coat with
+crossed facings and buttons stamped with the imperial cipher.
+ The iemschik, on coming up with his team, threw an inquisitive
+glance at the passengers of the tarantass. No luggage!-- and had
+there been, where in the world could he have stowed it?
+ Rather shabby in appearance too. He looked contemptuous.</p>
+
+<p>"Crows," said he, without caring whether he was overheard or
+not; "crows, at six copecks a verst!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, eagles!" said Michael, who understood the iemschik's
+slang perfectly; "eagles, do you hear, at nine copecks a verst,
+and a tip besides."</p>
+
+<p>He was answered by a merry crack of the whip.</p>
+
+<p>In the language of the Russian postillions the "crow" is the
+stingy or poor traveler, who at the post-houses only pays two or
+three copecks a verst for the horses. The "eagle" is the traveler
+who does not mind expense, to say nothing of liberal tips.
+ Therefore the crow could not claim to fly as rapidly as the
+imperial bird.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia and Michael immediately took their places in the
+tarantass.
+ A small store of provisions was put in the box, in case at any
+time they were delayed in reaching the post-houses, which are
+very comfortably provided under direction of the State. The hood
+was pulled up, as it was insupport-ably hot, and at twelve
+o'clock the tarantass left Perm in a cloud of dust.</p>
+
+<p>The way in which the iemschik kept up the pace of his team
+would have certainly astonished travelers who, being neither
+Russians nor Siberians, were not accustomed to this sort of
+thing.
+ The leader, rather larger than the others, kept to a steady long
+trot, perfectly regular, whether up or down hill.
+ The two other horses seemed to know no other pace than the
+gallop, though they performed many an eccentric curvette as they
+went along.
+ The iemschik, however, never touched them, only urging them on
+by startling cracks of his whip. But what epithets he lavished on
+them, including the names of all the saints in the calendar, when
+they behaved like docile and conscientious animals!
+ The string which served as reins would have had no influence on
+the spirited beasts, but the words "na pravo," to the right, "na
+levo," to the left, pronounced in a guttural tone, were more
+effectual than either bridle or snaffle.</p>
+
+<p>And what amiable expressions! "Go on, my doves!" the iemschik
+would say. "Go on, pretty swallows! Fly, my little pigeons!
+ Hold up, my cousin on the left! Gee up, my little father on the
+right!"</p>
+
+<p>But when the pace slackened, what insulting expressions,
+instantly understood by the sensitive animals!
+ "Go on, you wretched snail! Confound you, you slug!
+ I'll roast you alive, you tortoise, you!"</p>
+
+<p>Whether or not it was from this way of driving, which requires
+the iemschiks to possess strong throats more than muscular arms,
+the tarantass flew along at a rate of from twelve to fourteen
+miles an hour. Michael Strogoff was accustomed both to the sort
+of vehicle and the mode of traveling. Neither jerks nor jolts
+incommoded him. He knew that a Russian driver never even tries to
+avoid either stones, ruts, bogs, fallen trees, or trenches, which
+may happen to be in the road. He was used to all that.
+ His companion ran a risk of being hurt by the violent jolts of
+the tarantass, but she would not complain.</p>
+
+<p>For a little while Nadia did not speak. Then possessed with
+the one thought, that of reaching her journey's end, "I have
+calculated that there are three hundred versts between Perm and
+Ekaterenburg, brother," said she.
+ "Am I right?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right, Nadia," answered Michael; "and when we
+have reached Ekaterenburg, we shall be at the foot of the Ural
+Mountains on the opposite side."</p>
+
+<p>"How long will it take to get across the mountains?"</p>
+
+<p>"Forty-eight hours, for we shall travel day and night.
+ I say day and night, Nadia," added he, "for I cannot stop even
+for a moment; I go on without rest to Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not delay you, brother; no, not even for an hour, and
+we will travel day and night."</p>
+
+<p>"Well then, Nadia, if the Tartar invasion has only left the
+road open, we shall arrive in twenty days."</p>
+
+<p>"You have made this journey before?" asked Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Many times."</p>
+
+<p>"During winter we should have gone more rapidly and surely,
+should we not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, especially with more rapidity, but you would have
+suffered much from the frost and snow."</p>
+
+<p>"What matter! Winter is the friend of Russia."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Nadia, but what a constitution anyone must have to
+endure such friendship! I have often seen the temperature in the
+Siberian steppes fall to more than forty degrees below freezing
+point!
+ I have felt, notwithstanding my reindeer coat, my heart growing
+chill, my limbs stiffening, my feet freezing in triple woolen
+socks; I have seen my sleigh horses covered with a coating of
+ice, their breath congealed at their nostrils.
+ I have seen the brandy in my flask change into hard stone, on
+which not even my knife could make an impression.
+ But my sleigh flew like the wind. Not an obstacle on the plain,
+white and level farther than the eye could reach! No rivers to
+stop one! Hard ice everywhere, the route open, the road sure!
+ But at the price of what suffering, Nadia, those alone could
+say, who have never returned, but whose bodies have been covered
+up by the snow storm."</p>
+
+<p>"However, you have returned, brother," said Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but I am a Siberian, and, when quite a child, I used to
+follow my father to the chase, and so became inured to these
+hardships.
+ But when you said to me, Nadia, that winter would not have
+stopped you, that you would have gone alone, ready to struggle
+against the frightful Siberian climate, I seemed to see you lost
+in the snow and falling, never to rise again."</p>
+
+<p>"How many times have you crossed the steppe in winter?"
+ asked the young Livonian.</p>
+
+<p>"Three times, Nadia, when I was going to Omsk."</p>
+
+<p>"And what were you going to do at Omsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"See my mother, who was expecting me."</p>
+
+<p>"And I am going to Irkutsk, where my father expects me.
+ I am taking him my mother's last words. That is as much as to
+tell you, brother, that nothing would have prevented me from
+setting out."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a brave girl, Nadia," replied Michael. "God Himself
+would have led you."</p>
+
+<p>All day the tarantass was driven rapidly by the iemschiks, who
+succeeded each other at every stage. The eagles of the mountain
+would not have found their name dishonored by these "eagles"
+ of the highway. The high price paid for each horse, and the tips
+dealt out so freely, recommended the travelers in a special
+way.
+ Perhaps the postmasters thought it singular that, after the
+publication of the order, a young man and his sister, evidently
+both Russians, could travel freely across Siberia, which was
+closed to everyone else, but their papers were all en regle and
+they had the right to pass.</p>
+
+<p>However, Michael Strogoff and Nadia were not the only
+travelers on their way from Perm to Ekaterenburg. At the first
+stages, the courier of the Czar had learnt that a carriage
+preceded them, but, as there was no want of horses, he did not
+trouble himself about that.</p>
+
+<p>During the day, halts were made for food alone.
+ At the post-houses could be found lodging and provision.
+ Besides, if there was not an inn, the house of the Russian
+peasant would have been no less hospitable. In the villages,
+which are almost all alike, with their white-walled, green-roofed
+chapels, the traveler might knock at any door, and it would be
+opened to him.
+ The moujik would come out, smiling and extending his hand to his
+guest.
+ He would offer him bread and salt, the burning charcoal would be
+put into the "samovar," and he would be made quite at home.
+ The family would turn out themselves rather than that he should
+not have room. The stranger is the relation of all.
+ He is "one sent by God."</p>
+
+<p>On arriving that evening Michael instinctively asked the
+postmaster how many hours ago the carriage which preceded them
+had passed that stage.</p>
+
+<p>"Two hours ago, little father," replied the postmaster.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a berlin?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, a telga."</p>
+
+<p>"How many travelers?"</p>
+
+<p>"Two."</p>
+
+<p>"And they are going fast?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eagles!"</p>
+
+<p>"Let them put the horses to as soon as possible."</p>
+
+<p>Michael and Nadia, resolved not to stop even for an hour,
+traveled all night. The weather continued fine, though the
+atmosphere was heavy and becoming charged with electricity.
+ It was to be hoped that a storm would not burst whilst they were
+among the mountains, for there it would be terrible.
+ Being accustomed to read atmospheric signs, Michael Strogoff
+knew that a struggle of the elements was approaching.</p>
+
+<p>The night passed without incident. Notwithstanding the jolting
+of the tarantass, Nadia was able to sleep for some hours.
+ The hood was partly raised so as to give as much air as there
+was in the stifling atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>Michael kept awake all night, mistrusting the iemschiks, who
+are apt to sleep at their posts. Not an hour was lost at the
+relays, not an hour on the road.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, the 20th of July, at about eight o'clock in the
+morning, they caught the first glimpse of the Ural Mountains in
+the east.
+ This important chain which separates Russia from Siberia was
+still at a great distance, and they could not hope to reach it
+until the end of the day. The passage of the mountains must
+necessarily be performed during the next night. The sky was
+cloudy all day, and the temperature was therefore more bearable,
+but the weather was very threatening.</p>
+
+<p>It would perhaps have been more prudent not to have ascended
+the mountains during the night, and Michael would not have done
+so, had he been permitted to wait; but when, at the last stage,
+the iemschik drew his attention to a peal of thunder
+reverberating among the rocks, he merely said:</p>
+
+<p>"Is a telga still before us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"How long is it in advance?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nearly an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Forward, and a triple tip if we are at Ekaterenburg to-morrow
+morning."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER X A STORM IN THE URAL MOUNTAINS</h2>
+
+<p>THE Ural Mountains extend in a length of over two thousand
+miles between Europe and Asia. Whether they are called the Urals,
+which is the Tartar, or the Poyas, which is the Russian name,
+they are correctly so termed; for these names signify "belt"
+ in both languages. Rising on the shores of the Arctic Sea, they
+reach the borders of the Caspian. This was the barrier to be
+crossed by Michael Strogoff before he could enter Siberian
+Russia. The mountains could be crossed in one night, if no
+accident happened. Unfortunately, thunder muttering in the
+distance announced that a storm was at hand.
+ The electric tension was such that it could not be dispersed
+without a tremendous explosion, which in the peculiar state of
+the atmosphere would be very terrible.</p>
+
+<p>Michael took care that his young companion should be as well
+protected as possible. The hood, which might have been easily
+blown away, was fastened more securely with ropes, crossed above
+and at the back.
+ The traces were doubled, and, as an additional precaution, the
+nave-boxes were stuffed with straw, as much to increase the
+strength of the wheels as to lessen the jolting, unavoidable on a
+dark night.
+ Lastly, the fore and hinder parts, connected simply by the axles
+to the body of the tarantass, were joined one to the other by a
+crossbar, fixed by means of pins and screws.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Nadia resumed her place in the cart, and Michael took his seat
+beside her. Before the lowered hood hung two leathern curtains,
+which would in some degree protect the travelers against the wind
+and rain. Two great lanterns, suspended from the iemschik's seat,
+threw a pale glimmer scarcely sufficient to light the way, but
+serving as warning lights to prevent any other carriage from
+running into them.</p>
+
+<p>It was well that all these precautions were taken, in
+expectation of a rough night. The road led them up towards dense
+masses of clouds, and should the clouds not soon resolve into
+rain, the fog would be such that the tarantass would be unable to
+advance without danger of falling over some precipice.</p>
+
+<p>The Ural chain does not attain any very great height, the
+highest summit not being more than five thousand feet.
+ Eternal snow is there unknown, and what is piled up by the
+Siberian winter is soon melted by the summer sun.
+ Shrubs and trees grow to a considerable height.
+ The iron and copper mines, as well as those of precious stones,
+draw a considerable number of workmen to that region.
+ Also, those villages termed "gavody" are there met with pretty
+frequently, and the road through the great passes is easily
+practicable for post-carriages.</p>
+
+<p>But what is easy enough in fine weather and broad daylight,
+offers difficulties and perils when the elements are engaged in
+fierce warfare, and the traveler is in the midst of it.
+ Michael Strogoff knew from former experience what a storm in the
+mountains was, and perhaps this would be as terrible as the
+snowstorms which burst forth with such vehemence in the
+winter.</p>
+
+<p>Rain was not yet falling, so Michael raised the leathern
+curtains which protected the interior of the tarantass and looked
+out, watching the sides of the road, peopled with fantastic
+shadows, caused by the wavering light of the lanterns. Nadia,
+motionless, her arms folded, gazed forth also, though without
+leaning forward, whilst her companion, his body half out of the
+carriage, examined both sky and earth.</p>
+
+<p>The calmness of the atmosphere was very threatening, the air
+being perfectly still. It was just as if Nature were half
+stifled, and could no longer breathe; her lungs, that is to say
+those gloomy, dense clouds, not being able to perform their
+functions.
+ The silence would have been complete but for the grindings of
+the wheels of the tarantass over the road, the creaking of the
+axles, the snorting of the horses, and the clattering of their
+iron hoofs among the pebbles, sparks flying out on every
+side.</p>
+
+<p>The road was perfectly deserted. The tarantass encountered
+neither pedestrians nor horsemen, nor a vehicle of any
+description, in the narrow defiles of the Ural, on this
+threatening night.
+ Not even the fire of a charcoal-burner was visible in the woods,
+not an encampment of miners near the mines, not a hut among the
+brushwood.</p>
+
+<p>Under these peculiar circumstances it might have been
+allowable to postpone the journey till the morning.
+ Michael Strogoff, however, had not hesitated, he had no right to
+stop, but then--and it began to cause him some anxiety-- what
+possible reason could those travelers in the telga ahead have for
+being so imprudent?</p>
+
+<p>Michael remained thus on the look-out for some time.
+ About eleven o'clock lightning began to blaze continuously in
+the sky.
+ The shadows of huge pines appeared and disappeared in the rapid
+light.
+ Sometimes when the tarantass neared the side of the road, deep
+gulfs, lit up by the flashes, could be seen yawning beneath
+them.
+ From time to time, on their vehicle giving a worse lurch than
+usual, they knew that they were crossing a bridge of roughly-hewn
+planks thrown over some chasm, thunder appearing actually to be
+rumbling below them. Besides this, a booming sound filled the
+air, which increased as they mounted higher. With these different
+noises rose the shouts of the iemschik, sometimes scolding,
+sometimes coaxing his poor beasts, who were suffering more from
+the oppression of the air than the roughness of the roads.
+ Even the bells on the shafts could no longer rouse them, and
+they stumbled every instant.</p>
+
+<p>"At what time shall we reach the top of the ridge?" asked
+Michael of the iemschik.</p>
+
+<p>"At one o'clock in the morning if we ever get there at
+all,"
+ replied he, with a shake of his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, my friend, this will not be your first storm in the
+mountains, will it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, and pray God it may not be my last!"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you afraid?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I'm not afraid, but I repeat that I think you were wrong
+in starting."</p>
+
+<p>"I should have been still more wrong had I stayed."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold up, my pigeons!" cried the iemschik; it was his business
+to obey, not to question.</p>
+
+<p>Just then a distant noise was heard, shrill whistling through
+the atmosphere, so calm a minute before.
+ By the light of a dazzling flash, almost immediately followed by
+a tremendous clap of thunder, Michael could see huge pines on a
+high peak, bending before the blast. The wind was unchained, but
+as yet it was the upper air alone which was disturbed.
+ Successive crashes showed that many of the trees had been unable
+to resist the burst of the hurricane. An avalanche of shattered
+trunks swept across the road and dashed over the precipice on the
+left, two hundred feet in front of the tarantass.</p>
+
+<p>The horses stopped short.</p>
+
+<p>"Get up, my pretty doves!" cried the iemschik, adding the
+cracking of his whip to the rumbling of the thunder.</p>
+
+<p>Michael took Nadia's hand. "Are you asleep, sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, brother."</p>
+
+<p>"Be ready for anything; here comes the storm!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am ready."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff had only just time to draw the leathern
+curtains, when the storm was upon them.</p>
+
+<p>The iemschik leapt from his seat and seized the horses' heads,
+for terrible danger threatened the whole party.</p>
+
+<p>The tarantass was at a standstill at a turning of the road,
+down which swept the hurricane; it was absolutely necessary to
+hold the animals' heads to the wind, for if the carriage was
+taken broadside it must infallibly capsize and be dashed over the
+precipice. The frightened horses reared, and their driver could
+not manage to quiet them. His friendly expressions had been
+succeeded by the most insulting epithets.
+ Nothing was of any use. The unfortunate animals, blinded by the
+lightning, terrified by the incessant peals of thunder,
+threatened every instant to break their traces and flee.
+ The iemschik had no longer any control over his team.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Michael Strogoff threw himself from the
+tarantass and rushed to his assistance. Endowed with more than
+common strength, he managed, though not without difficulty, to
+master the horses.</p>
+
+<p>The storm now raged with redoubled fury. A perfect avalanche
+of stones and trunks of trees began to roll down the slope above
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot stop here," said Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot stop anywhere," returned the iemschik, all his
+energies apparently overcome by terror. "The storm will soon send
+us to the bottom of the mountain, and that by the shortest
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"Take you that horse, coward," returned Michael, "I'll look
+after this one."</p>
+
+<p>A fresh burst of the storm interrupted him. The driver and he
+were obliged to crouch upon the ground to avoid being blown
+down.
+ The carriage, notwithstanding their efforts and those of the
+horses, was gradually blown back, and had it not been stopped by
+the trunk of a tree, it would have gone over the edge of the
+precipice.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be afraid, Nadia!" cried Michael Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not afraid," replied the young Livonian, her voice not
+betraying the slightest emotion.</p>
+
+<p>The rumbling of the thunder ceased for an instant, the
+terrible blast had swept past into the gorge below.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you go back?" said the iemschik.</p>
+
+<p>"No, we must go on! Once past this turning, we shall have the
+shelter of the slope."</p>
+
+<p>"But the horses won't move!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do as I do, and drag them on."</p>
+
+<p>"The storm will come back!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to obey?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you order it?"</p>
+
+<p>"The Father orders it!" answered Michael, for the first time
+invoking the all-powerful name of the Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>"Forward, my swallows!" cried the iemschik, seizing one horse,
+while Michael did the same to the other.</p>
+
+<p>Thus urged, the horses began to struggle onward.
+ They could no longer rear, and the middle horse not being
+hampered by the others, could keep in the center of the road.
+ It was with the greatest difficulty that either man or beasts
+could stand against the wind, and for every three steps they took
+in advance, they lost one, and even two, by being forced
+backwards.
+ They slipped, they fell, they got up again. The vehicle ran a
+great risk of being smashed. If the hood had not been securely
+fastened, it would have been blown away long before.
+ Michael Strogoff and the iemschik took more than two hours in
+getting up this bit of road, only half a verst in length, so
+directly exposed was it to the lashing of the storm.
+ The danger was not only from the wind which battered against the
+travelers, but from the avalanche of stones and broken trunks
+which were hurtling through the air.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, during a flash of lightning, one of these masses was
+seen crashing and rolling down the mountain towards the
+tarantass.
+ The iemschik uttered a cry.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff in vain brought his whip down on the team,
+they refused to move.</p>
+
+<p>A few feet farther on, and the mass would pass behind
+them!
+ Michael saw the tarantass struck, his companion crushed; he saw
+there was no time to drag her from the vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>Then, possessed in this hour of peril with superhuman
+strength, he threw himself behind it, and planting his feet on
+the ground, by main force placed it out of danger.</p>
+
+<p>The enormous mass as it passed grazed his chest, taking away
+his breath as though it had been a cannon-ball, then crushing to
+powder the flints on the road, it bounded into the abyss
+below.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, brother!" cried Nadia, who had seen it all by the light
+of the flashes.</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia!" replied Michael, "fear nothing!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not on my own account that I fear!"</p>
+
+<p>"God is with us, sister!"</p>
+
+<p>"With me truly, brother, since He has sent thee in my
+way!"
+ murmured the young girl.</p>
+
+<p>The impetus the tarantass had received was not to be lost, and
+the tired horses once more moved forward. Dragged, so to speak,
+by Michael and the iemschik, they toiled on towards a narrow
+pass, lying north and south, where they would be protected from
+the direct sweep of the tempest.
+ At one end a huge rock jutted out, round the summit of which
+whirled an eddy. Behind the shelter of the rock there was a
+comparative calm; yet once within the circumference of the
+cyclone, neither man nor beast could resist its power.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, some firs which towered above this protection were in
+a trice shorn of their tops, as though a gigantic scythe had
+swept across them.
+ The storm was now at its height. The lightning filled the
+defile, and the thunderclaps had become one continued peal. The
+ground, struck by the concussion, trembled as though the whole
+Ural chain was shaken to its foundations.</p>
+
+<p>Happily, the tarantass could be so placed that the storm might
+strike it obliquely. But the counter-currents, directed towards
+it by the slope, could not be so well avoided, and so violent
+were they that every instant it seemed as though it would be
+dashed to pieces.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia was obliged to leave her seat, and Michael, by the light
+of one of the lanterns, discovered an excavation bearing the
+marks of a miner's pick, where the young girl could rest in
+safety until they could once more start.</p>
+
+<p>Just then--it was one o'clock in the morning--the rain began
+to fall in torrents, and this in addition to the wind and
+lightning, made the storm truly frightful. To continue the
+journey at present was utterly impossible. Besides, having
+reached this pass, they had only to descend the slopes of the
+Ural Mountains, and to descend now, with the road torn up by a
+thousand mountain torrents, in these eddies of wind and rain, was
+utter madness.</p>
+
+<p>"To wait is indeed serious," said Michael, "but it must
+certainly be done, to avoid still longer detentions. The very
+violence of the storm makes me hope that it will not last
+long.
+ About three o'clock the day will begin to break, and the
+descent, which we cannot risk in the dark, we shall be able, if
+not with ease, at least without such danger, to attempt after
+sunrise."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us wait, brother," replied Nadia; "but if you delay, let
+it not be to spare me fatigue or danger."</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia, I know that you are ready to brave everything, but, in
+exposing both of us, I risk more than my life, more than yours, I
+am not fulfilling my task, that duty which before everything else
+I must accomplish."</p>
+
+<p>"A duty!" murmured Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>Just then a bright flash lit up the sky; a loud clap
+followed.
+ The air was filled with sulphurous suffocating vapor, and a
+clump of huge pines, struck by the electric fluid, scarcely
+twenty feet from the tarantass, flared up like a gigantic
+torch.</p>
+
+<p>The iemschik was struck to the ground by a counter-shock, but,
+regaining his feet, found himself happily unhurt.</p>
+
+<p>Just as the last growlings of the thunder were lost in the
+recesses of the mountain, Michael felt Nadia's hand pressing his,
+and he heard her whisper these words in his ear: "Cries, brother!
+Listen!"</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XI TRAVELERS IN DISTRESS</h2>
+
+<p>DURING the momentary lull which followed, shouts could be
+distinctly heard from farther on, at no great distance from the
+tarantass.
+ It was an earnest appeal, evidently from some traveler in
+distress.</p>
+
+<p>Michael listened attentively. The iemschik also listened, but
+shook his head, as though it was impossible to help.</p>
+
+<p>"They are travelers calling for aid," cried Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"They can expect nothing," replied the iemschik.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" cried Michael. "Ought not we do for them what they
+would for us under similar circumstances?"</p>
+
+<p>
+ "Surely you will not risk the carriage and horses!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will go on foot," replied Michael, interrupting the
+iemschik.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go, too, brother," said the young girl.</p>
+
+<p>"No, remain here, Nadia. The iemschik will stay with you.
+ I do not wish to leave him alone."</p>
+
+<p>"I will stay," replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever happens, do not leave this spot."</p>
+
+<p>"You will find me where I now am."</p>
+
+<p>Michael pressed her hand, and, turning the corner of the
+slope, disappeared in the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"Your brother is wrong," said the iemschik.</p>
+
+<p>"He is right," replied Nadia simply.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Strogoff strode rapidly on. If he was in a great
+hurry to aid the travelers, he was also very anxious to know who
+it was that had not been hindered from starting by the storm; for
+he had no doubt that the cries came from the telga, which had so
+long preceded him.</p>
+
+<p>The rain had stopped, but the storm was raging with redoubled
+fury.
+ The shouts, borne on the air, became more distinct.
+ Nothing was to be seen of the pass in which Nadia remained.
+ The road wound along, and the squalls, checked by the corners,
+formed eddies highly dangerous, to pass which, without being
+taken off his legs, Michael had to use his utmost strength.</p>
+
+<p>He soon perceived that the travelers whose shouts he had heard
+were at no great distance. Even then, on account of the darkness,
+Michael could not see them, yet he heard distinctly their
+words.</p>
+
+<p>This is what he heard, and what caused him some surprise: "Are
+you coming back, blockhead?"</p>
+
+<p>"You shall have a taste of the knout at the next stage."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you hear, you devil's postillion! Hullo! Below!"</p>
+
+<p>"This is how a carriage takes you in this country!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, this is what you call a telga!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that abominable driver! He goes on and does not appear to
+have discovered that he has left us behind!"</p>
+
+<p>"To deceive me, too! Me, an honorable Englishman! I will make
+a complaint at the chancellor's office and have the fellow
+hanged."</p>
+
+<p>This was said in a very angry tone, but was suddenly
+interrupted by a burst of laughter from his companion, who
+exclaimed, "Well! this is a good joke, I must say."</p>
+
+<p>"You venture to laugh!" said the Briton angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, my dear confrere, and that most heartily.
+ 'Pon my word I never saw anything to come up to it."</p>
+
+<p>Just then a crashing clap of thunder re-echoed through the
+defile, and then died away among the distant peaks. When the
+sound of the last growl had ceased, the merry voice went on:
+"Yes, it undoubtedly is a good joke. This machine certainly never
+came from France."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor from England," replied the other.</p>
+
+<p>On the road, by the light of the flashes, Michael saw, twenty
+yards from him, two travelers, seated side by side in a most
+peculiar vehicle, the wheels of which were deeply imbedded in the
+ruts formed in the road.</p>
+
+<p>He approached them, the one grinning from ear to ear, and the
+other gloomily contemplating his situation, and recognized them
+as the two reporters who had been his companions on board the
+Caucasus.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-morning to you, sir," cried the Frenchman. "Delighted to
+see you here. Let me introduce you to my intimate enemy, Mr.
+Blount."</p>
+
+<p>The English reporter bowed, and was about to introduce in his
+turn his companion, Alcide Jolivet, in accordance with the rules
+of society, when Michael interrupted him.</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly unnecessary, sir; we already know each other, for
+we traveled together on the Volga."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, yes! exactly so! Mr.--"</p>
+
+<p>"Nicholas Korpanoff, merchant, of Irkutsk. But may I know what
+has happened which, though a misfortune to your companion, amuses
+you so much?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, Mr. Korpanoff," replied Alcide. "Fancy! our driver
+has gone off with the front part of this confounded carriage, and
+left us quietly seated in the back part! So here we are in the
+worse half of a telga; no driver, no horses.
+ Is it not a joke?"</p>
+
+<p>"No joke at all," said the Englishman.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed it is, my dear fellow. You do not know how to look at
+the bright side of things."</p>
+
+<p>"How, pray, are we to go on?" asked Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"That is the easiest thing in the world," replied Alcide. "Go
+and harness yourself to what remains of our cart; I will take the
+reins, and call you my little pigeon, like a true iemschik, and
+you will trot off like a real post-horse."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Jolivet," replied the Englishman, "this joking is going
+too far, it passes all limits and--"</p>
+
+<p>"Now do be quiet, my dear sir. When you are done up, I will
+take your place; and call me a broken-winded snail and
+faint-hearted tortoise if I don't take you over the ground at a
+rattling pace."</p>
+
+<p>Alcide said all this with such perfect good-humor that Michael
+could not help smiling. "Gentlemen," said he, "here is a better
+plan.
+ We have now reached the highest ridge of the Ural chain, and
+thus have merely to descend the slopes of the mountain.
+ My carriage is close by, only two hundred yards behind.
+ I will lend you one of my horses, harness it to the remains of
+the telga, and to-mor-how, if no accident befalls us, we will
+arrive together at Ekaterenburg."</p>
+
+<p>"That, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide, "is indeed a generous
+proposal."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, sir," replied Michael, "I would willingly offer you
+places in my tarantass, but it will only hold two, and my sister
+and I already fill it."</p>
+
+<p>"Really, sir," answered Alcide, "with your horse and our
+demi-telga we will go to the world's end."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said Harry Blount, "we most willingly accept your kind
+offer.
+ And, as to that iemschik--"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I assure you that you are not the first travelers who
+have met with a similar misfortune," replied Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"But why should not our driver come back? He knows perfectly
+well that he has left us behind, wretch that he is!"</p>
+
+<p>"He! He never suspected such a thing."</p>
+
+<p>"What! the fellow not know that he was leaving the better half
+of his telga behind?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit, and in all good faith is driving the fore part
+into Ekaterenburg."</p>
+
+<p>"Did I not tell you that it was a good joke, confrere?" cried
+Alcide.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, gentlemen, if you will follow me," said Michael, "we
+will return to my carriage, and--"</p>
+
+<p>"But the telga," observed the Englishman.</p>
+
+<p>"There is not the slightest fear that it will fly away, my
+dear Blount!"
+ exclaimed Alcide; "it has taken such good root in the ground,
+that if it were left here until next spring it would begin to
+bud."</p>
+
+<p>"Come then, gentlemen," said Michael Strogoff, "and we will
+bring up the tarantass."</p>
+
+<p>The Frenchman and the Englishman, descending from their seats,
+no longer the hinder one, since the front had taken its
+departure, followed Michael.</p>
+
+<p>Walking along, Alcide Jolivet chattered away as usual, with
+his invariable good-humor. "Faith, Mr. Korpanoff,"
+ said he, "you have indeed got us out of a bad scrape."</p>
+
+<p>"I have only done, sir," replied Michael, "what anyone would
+have done in my place."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, you have done us a good turn, and if you are going
+farther we may possibly meet again, and--"</p>
+
+<p>Alcide Jolivet did not put any direct question to Michael as
+to where he was going, but the latter, not wishing it to be
+suspected that he had anything to conceal, at once replied, "I am
+bound for Omsk, gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Blount and I," replied Alcide, "go where danger is
+certainly to be found, and without doubt news also."</p>
+
+<p>"To the invaded provinces?" asked Michael with some
+earnestness.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly so, Mr. Korpanoff; and we may possibly meet
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, sir," replied Michael, "I have little love for
+cannon-balls or lance points, and am by nature too great a lover
+of peace to venture where fighting is going on."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, sir, extremely sorry; we must only regret that we
+shall separate so soon! But on leaving Ekaterenburg it may be our
+fortunate fate to travel together, if only for a few days?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you go on to Omsk?" asked Michael, after a moment's
+reflection.</p>
+
+<p>"We know nothing as yet," replied Alcide; "but we shall
+certainly go as far as Ishim, and once there, our movements must
+depend on circumstances."</p>
+
+<p>"Well then, gentlemen," said Michael, "we will be
+fellow-travelers as far as Ishim."</p>
+
+<p>Michael would certainly have preferred to travel alone, but he
+could not, without appearing at least singular, seek to separate
+himself from the two reporters, who were taking the same road
+that he was.
+ Besides, since Alcide and his companion intended to make some
+stay at Ishim, he thought it rather convenient than otherwise to
+make that part of the journey in their company.</p>
+
+<p>Then in an indifferent tone he asked, "Do you know, with any
+certainty, where this Tartar invasion is?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, sir," replied Alcide, "we only know what they said at
+Perm. Feofar-Khan's Tartars have invaded the whole province of
+Semipolatinsk, and for some days, by forced marches, have been
+descending the Irtish. You must hurry if you wish to get to Omsk
+before them."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I must," replied Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"It is reported also that Colonel Ogareff has succeeded in
+passing the frontier in disguise, and that he will not be slow in
+joining the Tartar chief in the revolted country."</p>
+
+<p>"But how do they know it?" asked Michael, whom this news, more
+or less true, so directly concerned.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! as these things are always known," replied Alcide; "it is
+in the air."</p>
+
+<p>"Then have you really reason to think that Colonel Ogareff is
+in Siberia?"</p>
+
+<p>"I myself have heard it said that he was to take the road from
+Kasan to Ekaterenburg."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you know that, Mr. Jolivet?" said Harry Blount, roused
+from his silence.</p>
+
+<p>"I knew it," replied Alcide.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you know that he went disguised as a gypsy!" asked
+Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"As a gypsy!" exclaimed Michael, almost involuntarily, and he
+suddenly remembered the look of the old Bohemian at
+Nijni-Novgorod, his voyage on board the Caucasus, and his
+disembarking at Kasan.</p>
+
+<p>"Just well enough to make a few remarks on the subject in a
+letter to my cousin," replied Alcide, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"You lost no time at Kasan," dryly observed the
+Englishman.</p>
+
+<p>"No, my dear fellow! and while the Caucasus was laying in her
+supply of fuel, I was employed in obtaining a store of
+information."</p>
+
+<p>Michael no longer listened to the repartee which Harry Blount
+and Alcide exchanged. He was thinking of the gypsy troupe, of the
+old Tsigane, whose face he had not been able to see, and of the
+strange woman who accompanied him, and then of the peculiar
+glance which she had cast at him. Suddenly, close by he heard a
+pistol-shot.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! forward, sirs!" cried he.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo!" said Alcide to himself, "this quiet merchant who
+always avoids bullets is in a great hurry to go where they are
+flying about just now!"</p>
+
+<p>Quickly followed by Harry Blount, who was not a man to be
+behind in danger, he dashed after Michael. In another instant the
+three were opposite the projecting rock which protected the
+tarantass at the turning of the road.</p>
+
+<p>The clump of pines struck by the lightning was still
+burning.
+ There was no one to be seen. However, Michael was not
+mistaken.
+ Suddenly a dreadful growling was heard, and then another
+report.</p>
+
+<p>"A bear;" cried Michael, who could not mistake the
+growling.
+ "Nadia; Nadia!" And drawing his cutlass from his belt, Michael
+bounded round the buttress behind which the young girl had
+promised to wait.</p>
+
+<p>The pines, completely enveloped in flames, threw a wild glare
+on the scene. As Michael reached the tarantass, a huge animal
+retreated towards him.</p>
+
+<p>It was a monstrous bear. The tempest had driven it from the
+woods, and it had come to seek refuge in this cave, doubtless its
+habitual retreat, which Nadia then occupied.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the horses, terrified at the presence of the enormous
+creature, breaking their traces, had escaped, and the iemschik,
+thinking only of his beasts, leaving Nadia face to face with the
+bear, had gone in pursuit of them.</p>
+
+<p>But the brave girl had not lost her presence of mind.
+ The animal, which had not at first seen her, was attacking the
+remaining horse. Nadia, leaving the shelter in which she had been
+crouching, had run to the carriage, taken one of Michael's
+revolvers, and, advancing resolutely towards the bear, had fired
+close to it.</p>
+
+<p>The animal, slightly wounded in the shoulder, turned on the
+girl, who rushed for protection behind the tarantass, but then,
+seeing that the horse was attempting to break its traces, and
+knowing that if it did so, and the others were not recovered,
+their journey could not be continued, with the most perfect
+coolness she again approached the bear, and, as it raised its
+paws to strike her down, gave it the contents of the second
+barrel.</p>
+
+<p>This was the report which Michael had just heard. In an
+instant he was on the spot. Another bound and he was between the
+bear and the girl.
+ His arm made one movement upwards, and the enormous beast,
+ripped up by that terrible knife, fell to the ground a lifeless
+mass.
+ He had executed in splendid style the famous blow of the
+Siberian hunters, who endeavor not to damage the precious fur of
+the bear, which fetches a high price.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not wounded, sister?" said Michael, springing to the
+side of the young girl.</p>
+
+<p>"No, brother," replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the two journalists came up. Alcide seized the
+horse's head, and, in an instant, his strong wrist mastered
+it.
+ His companion and he had seen Michael's rapid stroke.
+ "Bravo!" cried Alcide; "for a simple merchant, Mr. Korpanoff,
+you handle the hunter's knife in a most masterly fashion."</p>
+
+<p>"Most masterly, indeed," added Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"In Siberia," replied Michael, "we are obliged to do a little
+of everything."</p>
+
+<p>Alcide regarded him attentively. Seen in the bright glare, his
+knife dripping with blood, his tall figure, his foot firm on the
+huge carcass, he was indeed worth looking at.</p>
+
+<p>"A formidable fellow," said Alcide to himself.
+ Then advancing respectfully, he saluted the young girl.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia bowed slightly.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide turned towards his companion. "The sister worthy of the
+brother!"
+ said he. "Now, were I a bear, I should not meddle with two so
+brave and so charming."</p>
+
+<p>Harry Blount, perfectly upright, stood, hat in hand, at some
+distance.
+ His companion's easy manners only increased his usual
+stiffness.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the iemschik, who had succeeded in recapturing
+his two horses, reappeared. He cast a regretful glance at the
+magnificent animal lying on the ground, loth to leave it to the
+birds of prey, and then proceeded once more to harness his
+team.</p>
+
+<p>Michael acquainted him with the travelers' situation, and his
+intention of loaning one of the horses.</p>
+
+<p>"As you please," replied the iemschik. "Only, you know, two
+carriages instead of one."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, my friend," said Alcide, who understood the
+insinuation, "we will pay double."</p>
+
+<p>"Then gee up, my turtle-doves!" cried the iemschik.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia again took her place in the tarantass. Michael and his
+companions followed on foot. It was three o'clock. The storm
+still swept with terrific violence across the defile. When the
+first streaks of daybreak appeared the tarantass had reached the
+telga, which was still conscientiously imbedded as far as the
+center of the wheel. Such being the case, it can be easily
+understood how a sudden jerk would separate the front from the
+hinder part.
+ One of the horses was now harnessed by means of cords to the
+remains of the telga, the reporters took their place on the
+singular equipage, and the two carriages started off.
+ They had now only to descend the Ural slopes, in doing which
+there was not the slightest difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>Six hours afterwards the two vehicles, the tarantass preceding
+the telga, arrived at Ekaterenburg, nothing worthy of note having
+happened in the descent.</p>
+
+<p>The first person the reporters perceived at the door of the
+post-house was their iemschik, who appeared to be waiting for
+them.
+ This worthy Russian had a fine open countenance, and he
+smilingly approached the travelers, and, holding out his hand, in
+a quiet tone he demanded the usual "pour-boire."</p>
+
+<p>This very cool request roused Blount's ire to its highest
+pitch, and had not the iemschik prudently retreated, a
+straight-out blow of the fist, in true British boxing style,
+would have paid his claim of "na vodkou."</p>
+
+<p>Alcide Jolivet, at this burst of anger, laughed as he had
+never laughed before.</p>
+
+<p>"But the poor devil is quite right!" he cried.
+ "He is perfectly right, my dear fellow. It is not his fault if
+we did not know how to follow him!"</p>
+
+<p>Then drawing several copecks from his pocket, "Here my
+friend,"
+ said he, handing them to the iemschik; "take them.
+ If you have not earned them, that is not your fault."</p>
+
+<p>This redoubled Mr. Blount's irritation. He even began to speak
+of a lawsuit against the owner of the telga.</p>
+
+<p>"A lawsuit in Russia, my dear fellow!" cried Alcide. "Things
+must indeed change should it ever be brought to a conclusion!
+ Did you never hear the story of the wet-nurse who claimed
+payment of twelve months' nursing of some poor little
+infant?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never heard it," replied Harry Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you do not know what that suckling had become by the
+time judgment was given in favor of the nurse?"</p>
+
+<p>"What was he, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel of the Imperial Guard!"</p>
+
+<p>At this reply all burst into a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide, enchanted with his own joke, drew out his notebook,
+and in it wrote the following memorandum, destined to figure in a
+forthcoming French and Russian dictionary: "Telga, a Russian
+carriage with four wheels, that is when it starts; with two
+wheels, when it arrives at its destination."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XII PROVOCATION</h2>
+
+<p>EKATERENBURG, geographically, is an Asiatic city; for it is
+situated beyond the Ural Mountains, on the farthest eastern
+slopes of the chain.
+ Nevertheless, it belongs to the government of Perm; and,
+consequently, is included in one of the great divisions of
+European Russia. It is as though a morsel of Siberia lay in
+Russian jaws.</p>
+
+<p>Neither Michael nor his companions were likely to experience
+the slightest difficulty in obtaining means of continuing their
+journey in so large a town as Ekaterenburg. It was founded in
+1723, and has since become a place of considerable size, for in
+it is the chief mint of the empire. There also are the
+headquarters of the officials employed in the management of the
+mines.
+ Thus the town is the center of an important district, abounding
+in manufactories principally for the working and refining of gold
+and platina.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Just now the population of Ekaterenburg had greatly increased;
+many Russians and Siberians, menaced by the Tartar invasion,
+having collected there. Thus, though it had been so troublesome a
+matter to find horses and vehicles when going to Ekaterenburg,
+there was no difficulty in leaving it; for under present
+circumstances few travelers cared to venture on the Siberian
+roads.</p>
+
+<p>So it happened that Blount and Alcide had not the slightest
+trouble in replacing, by a sound telga, the famous demi-carriage
+which had managed to take them to Ekaterenburg. As to Michael, he
+retained his tarantass, which was not much the worse for its
+journey across the Urals; and he had only to harness three good
+horses to it to take him swiftly over the road to Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>As far as Tioumen, and even up to Novo-Zaimskoe, this road has
+slight inclines, which gentle undulations are the first signs of
+the slopes of the Ural Mountains. But after Novo-Zaimskoe begins
+the immense steppe.</p>
+
+<p>At Ichim, as we have said, the reporters intended to stop,
+that is at about four hundred and twenty miles from Ekaterenburg.
+There they intended to be guided by circumstances as to their
+route across the invaded country, either together or separately,
+according as their news-hunting instinct set them on one track or
+another.</p>
+
+<p>This road from Ekaterenburg to Ichim--which passes through
+Irkutsk-- was the only one which Michael could take. But, as he
+did not run after news, and wished, on the contrary, to avoid the
+country devastated by the invaders, he determined to stop
+nowhere.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very happy to make part of my journey in your
+company,"
+ said he to his new companions, "but I must tell you that I am
+most anxious to reach Omsk; for my sister and I are going to
+rejoin our mother.
+ Who can say whether we shall arrive before the Tartars reach the
+town!
+ I must therefore stop at the post-houses only long enough to
+change horses, and must travel day and night."</p>
+
+<p>"That is exactly what we intend doing," replied Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"Good," replied Michael; "but do not lose an instant.
+ Buy or hire a carriage whose--"</p>
+
+<p>"Whose hind wheels," added Alcide, "are warranted to arrive at
+the same time as its front wheels."</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour afterwards the energetic Frenchman had found a
+tarantass in which he and his companion at once seated
+themselves.
+ Michael and Nadia once more entered their own carriage, and at
+twelve o'clock the two vehicles left the town of Ekaterenburg
+together.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia was at last in Siberia, on that long road which led to
+Irkutsk. What must then have been the thoughts of the young
+girl?
+ Three strong swift horses were taking her across that land of
+exile where her parent was condemned to live, for how long she
+knew not, and so far from his native land. But she scarcely
+noticed those long steppes over which the tarantass was rolling,
+and which at one time she had despaired of ever seeing, for her
+eyes were gazing at the horizon, beyond which she knew her
+banished father was. She saw nothing of the country across which
+she was traveling at the rate of fifteen versts an hour; nothing
+of these regions of Western Siberia, so different from those of
+the east. Here, indeed, were few cultivated fields; the soil was
+poor, at least at the surface, but in its bowels lay hid
+quantities of iron, copper, platina, and gold.
+ How can hands be found to cultivate the land, when it pays
+better to burrow beneath the earth? The pickaxe is everywhere at
+work; the spade nowhere.</p>
+
+<p>However, Nadia's thoughts sometimes left the provinces of Lake
+Baikal, and returned to her present situation.
+ Her father's image faded away, and was replaced by that of her
+generous companion as he first appeared on the Vladimir
+railroad.
+ She recalled his attentions during that journey, his arrival at
+the police-station, the hearty simplicity with which he had
+called her sister, his kindness to her in the descent of the
+Volga, and then all that he did for her on that terrible night of
+the storm in the Urals, when he saved her life at the peril of
+his own.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Nadia thought of Michael. She thanked God for having
+given her such a gallant protector, a friend so generous and
+wise.
+ She knew that she was safe with him, under his protection.
+ No brother could have done more than he. All obstacles seemed
+cleared away; the performance of her journey was but a matter of
+time.</p>
+
+<p>Michael remained buried in thought. He also thanked God for
+having brought about this meeting with Nadia, which at the same
+time enabled him to do a good action, and afforded him additional
+means for concealing his true character.
+ He delighted in the young girl's calm intrepidity.
+ Was she not indeed his sister? His feeling towards his beautiful
+and brave companion was rather respect than affection.
+ He felt that hers was one of those pure and rare hearts which
+are held by all in high esteem.</p>
+
+<p>However, Michael's dangers were now beginning, since he had
+reached Siberian ground. If the reporters were not mistaken, if
+Ivan Ogareff had really passed the frontier, all his actions must
+be made with extreme caution. Things were now altered; Tartar
+spies swarmed in the Siberian provinces. His incognito once
+discovered, his character as courier of the Czar known, there was
+an end of his journey, and probably of his life.
+ Michael felt now more than ever the weight of his
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>While such were the thoughts of those occupying the first
+carriage, what was happening in the second? Nothing out of the
+way.
+ Alcide spoke in sentences; Blount replied by monosyllables.
+ Each looked at everything in his own light, and made notes of
+such incidents as occurred on the journey--few and but slightly
+varied-- while they crossed the provinces of Western Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>At each relay the reporters descended from their carriage and
+found themselves with Michael. Except when meals were to be taken
+at the post-houses, Nadia did not leave the tarantass.
+ When obliged to breakfast or dine, she sat at table, but was
+always very reserved, and seldom joined in conversation.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide, without going beyond the limits of strict propriety,
+showed that he was greatly struck by the young girl.
+ He admired the silent energy which she showed in bearing all the
+fatigues of so difficult a journey.</p>
+
+<p>The forced stoppages were anything but agreeable to Michael;
+so he hastened the departure at each relay, roused the
+innkeepers, urged on the iemschiks, and expedited the harnessing
+of the tarantass.
+ Then the hurried meal over--always much too hurried to agree
+with Blount, who was a methodical eater--they started, and were
+driven as eagles, for they paid like princes.</p>
+
+<p>It need scarcely be said that Blount did not trouble himself
+about the girl at table. That gentleman was not in the habit of
+doing two things at once. She was also one of the few subjects of
+conversation which he did not care to discuss with his
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide having asked him, on one occasion, how old he thought
+the girl, "What girl?" he replied, quite seriously.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Nicholas Korpanoff's sister."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she his sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; his grandmother!" replied Alcide, angry at his
+indifference.
+ "What age should you consider her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Had I been present at her birth I might have known."</p>
+
+<p>Very few of the Siberian peasants were to be seen in the
+fields.
+ These peasants are remarkable for their pale, grave faces, which
+a celebrated traveler has compared to those of the Castilians,
+without the haughtiness of the latter. Here and there some
+villages already deserted indicated the approach of the Tartar
+hordes.
+ The inhabitants, having driven off their flocks of sheep, their
+camels, and their horses, were taking refuge in the plains of the
+north.
+ Some tribes of the wandering Kirghiz, who remained faithful, had
+transported their tents beyond the Irtych, to escape the
+depredations of the invaders.</p>
+
+<p>Happily, post traveling was as yet uninterrupted; and
+telegraphic communication could still be effected between places
+connected with the wire. At each relay horses were to be had on
+the usual conditions.
+ At each telegraphic station the clerks transmitted messages
+delivered to them, delaying for State dispatches alone.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far, then, Michael's journey had been accomplished
+satisfactorily.
+ The courier of the Czar had in no way been impeded; and, if he
+could only get on to Krasnoiarsk, which seemed the farthest point
+attained by Feofar-Khan's Tartars, he knew that he could arrive
+at Irkutsk, before them. The day after the two carriages had left
+Ekaterenburg they reached the small town of Toulouguisk at seven
+o'clock in the morning, having covered two hundred and twenty
+versts, no event worthy of mention having occurred. The same
+evening, the 22d of July, they arrived at Tioumen.</p>
+
+<p>Tioumen, whose population is usually ten thousand inhabitants,
+then contained double that number. This, the first industrial
+town established by the Russians in Siberia, in which may be seen
+a fine metal-refining factory and a bell foundry, had never
+before presented such an animated appearance.
+ The correspondents immediately went off after news.
+ That brought by Siberian fugitives from the seat of war was far
+from reassuring. They said, amongst other things, that
+Feofar-Khan's army was rapidly approaching the valley of the
+Ichim, and they confirmed the report that the Tartar chief was
+soon to be joined by Colonel Ogareff, if he had not been so
+already. Hence the conclusion was that operations would be pushed
+in Eastern Siberia with the greatest activity.
+ However, the loyal Cossacks of the government of Tobolsk were
+advancing by forced marches towards Tomsk, in the hope of cutting
+off the Tartar columns.</p>
+
+<p>At midnight the town of Novo-Saimsk was reached; and the
+travelers now left behind them the country broken by tree-covered
+hills, the last remains of the Urals.</p>
+
+<p>Here began the regular Siberian steppe which extends to the
+neighborhood of Krasnoiarsk. It is a boundless plain, a vast
+grassy desert; earth and sky here form a circle as distinct as
+that traced by a sweep of the compasses. The steppe presents
+nothing to attract notice but the long line of the telegraph
+posts, their wires vibrating in the breeze like the strings of a
+harp.
+ The road could be distinguished from the rest of the plain only
+by the clouds of fine dust which rose under the wheels of the
+tarantass.
+ Had it not been for this white riband, which stretched away as
+far as the eye could reach, the travelers might have thought
+themselves in a desert.</p>
+
+<p>Michael and his companions again pressed rapidly forward.
+ The horses, urged on by the iemschik, seemed to fly over the
+ground, for there was not the slightest obstacle to impede
+them.
+ The tarantass was going straight for Ichim, where the two
+correspondents intended to stop, if nothing happened to make them
+alter their plans.</p>
+
+<p>A hundred and twenty miles separated Novo-Saimsk from the town
+of Ichim, and before eight o'clock the next evening the distance
+could and should be accomplished if no time was lost.
+ In the opinion of the iemschiks, should the travelers not be
+great lords or high functionaries, they were worthy of being so,
+if it was only for their generosity in the matter of "na
+vodkou."</p>
+
+<p>On the afternoon of the next day, the 23rd of July, the two
+carriages were not more than thirty versts from Ichim. Suddenly
+Michael caught sight of a carriage--scarcely visible among the
+clouds of dust-- preceding them along the road. As his horses
+were evidently less fatigued than those of the other traveler, he
+would not be long in overtaking it. This was neither a tarantass
+nor a telga, but a post-berlin, which looked as if it had made a
+long journey.
+ The postillion was thrashing his horses with all his might, and
+only kept them at a gallop by dint of abuse and blows.
+ The berlin had certainly not passed through Novo-Saimsk, and
+could only have struck the Irkutsk road by some less frequented
+route across the steppe.</p>
+
+<p>Our travelers' first thought, on seeing this berlin, was to
+get in front of it, and arrive first at the relay, so as to make
+sure of fresh horses.
+ They said a word to their iemschiks, who soon brought them up
+with the berlin.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff came up first. As he passed, a head was
+thrust out of the window of the berlin.</p>
+
+<p>He had not time to see what it was like, but as he dashed by
+he distinctly heard this word, uttered in an imperious tone:
+"Stop!"</p>
+
+<p>But they did not stop; on the contrary, the berlin was soon
+distanced by the two tarantasses.</p>
+
+<p>It now became a regular race; for the horses of the berlin--
+no doubt excited by the sight and pace of the others-- recovered
+their strength and kept up for some minutes.
+ The three carriages were hidden in a cloud of dust.
+ From this cloud issued the cracking of whips mingled with
+excited shouts and exclamations of anger.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the advantage remained with Michael and his
+companions, which might be very important to them if the relay
+was poorly provided with horses. Two carriages were perhaps more
+than the postmaster could provide for, at least in a short space
+of time.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour after the berlin was left far behind, looking
+only a speck on the horizon of the steppe.</p>
+
+<p>It was eight o'clock in the evening when the two carriages
+reached Ichim. The news was worse and worse with regard to the
+invasion. The town itself was menaced by the Tartar vanguard; and
+two days before the authorities had been obliged to retreat to
+Tobolsk. There was not an officer nor a soldier left in
+Ichim.</p>
+
+<p>On arriving at the relay, Michael Strogoff immediately asked
+for horses. He had been fortunate in distancing the berlin.
+ Only three horses were fit to be harnessed. The others had just
+come in worn out from a long stage.</p>
+
+<p>As the two correspondents intended to stop at Ichim, they had
+not to trouble themselves to find transport, and had their
+carriage put away.
+ In ten minutes Michael was told that his tarantass was ready to
+start.</p>
+
+<p>"Good," said he.</p>
+
+<p>Then turning to the two reporters: "Well, gentlemen, the time
+is come for us to separate."</p>
+
+<p>"What, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide Jolivet, "shall you not
+stop even for an hour at Ichim?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; and I also wish to leave the post-house before the
+arrival of the berlin which we distanced."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you afraid that the traveler will dispute the horses with
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I particularly wish to avoid any difficulty."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Mr. Korpanoff," said Jolivet, "it only remains for us
+to thank you once more for the service you rendered us, and the
+pleasure we have had in traveling with you."</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible that we shall meet you again in a few days at
+Omsk," added Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible," answered Michael, "since I am going straight
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I wish you a safe journey, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide,
+"and Heaven preserve you from telgas."</p>
+
+<p>The two reporters held out their hands to Michael with the
+intention of cordially shaking his, when the sound of a carriage
+was heard outside.
+ Almost immediately the door was flung open and a man
+appeared.</p>
+
+<p>It was the traveler of the berlin, a military-looking man,
+apparently about forty years of age, tall, robust in figure,
+broad-shouldered, with a strongly-set head, and thick mus-taches
+meeting red whiskers. He wore a plain uniform.
+ A cavalry saber hung at his side, and in his hand he held a
+short-handled whip.</p>
+
+<p>"Horses," he demanded, with the air of a man accustomed to
+command.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no more disposable horses," answered the postmaster,
+bowing.</p>
+
+<p>"I must have some this moment."</p>
+
+<p>"It is impossible."</p>
+
+<p>"What are those horses which have just been harnessed to the
+tarantass I saw at the door?"</p>
+
+<p>"They belong to this traveler," answered the postmaster,
+pointing to Michael Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>"Take them out!" said the traveler in a tone which admitted of
+no reply.</p>
+
+<p>Michael then advanced.</p>
+
+<p>"These horses are engaged by me," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What does that matter? I must have them. Come, be quick; I
+have no time to lose."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no time to lose either," replied Michael, restraining
+himself with difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia was near him, calm also, but secretly uneasy at a scene
+which it would have been better to avoid.</p>
+
+<p>"Enough!" said the traveler. Then, going up to the postmaster,
+"Let the horses be put into my berlin," he exclaimed with a
+threatening gesture.</p>
+
+<p>The postmaster, much embarrassed, did not know whom to obey,
+and looked at Michael, who evidently had the right to resist the
+unjust demands of the traveler.</p>
+
+<p>Michael hesitated an instant. He did not wish to make use of
+his podorojna, which would have drawn attention to him, and he
+was most unwilling also, by giving up his horses, to delay his
+journey, and yet he must not engage in a struggle which might
+compromise his mission.</p>
+
+<p>The two reporters looked at him ready to support him should he
+appeal to them.</p>
+
+<p>"My horses will remain in my carriage," said Michael, but
+without raising his tone more than would be suitable for a plain
+Irkutsk merchant.</p>
+
+<p>The traveler advanced towards Michael and laid his hand
+heavily on his shoulder. "Is it so?" he said roughly.
+ "You will not give up your horses to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, they shall belong to whichever of us is able to
+start.
+ Defend yourself; I shall not spare you!"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, the traveler drew his saber from its sheath, and
+Nadia threw herself before Michael.</p>
+
+<p>Blount and Alcide Jolivet advanced towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not fight," said Michael quietly, folding his arms
+across his chest.</p>
+
+<p>"You will not fight?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Not even after this?" exclaimed the traveler. And before
+anyone could prevent him, he struck Michael's shoulder with the
+handle of the whip. At this insult Michael turned deadly
+pale.
+ His hands moved convulsively as if he would have knocked the
+brute down.
+ But by a tremendous effort he mastered himself. A duel! it was
+more than a delay; it was perhaps the failure of his mission.
+ It would be better to lose some hours. Yes; but to swallow this
+affront!</p>
+
+<p>"Will you fight now, coward?" repeated the traveler, adding
+coarseness to brutality.</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Michael, without moving, but looking the other
+straight in the face.</p>
+
+<p>"The horses this moment," said the man, and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>The postmaster followed him, after shrugging his shoulders and
+bestowing on Michael a glance of anything but approbation.</p>
+
+<p>The effect produced on the reporters by this incident was not
+to Michael's advantage. Their discomfiture was visible.
+ How could this strong young man allow himself to be struck like
+that and not demand satisfaction for such an insult?
+ They contented themselves with bowing to him and retired,
+Jolivet remarking to Harry Blount</p>
+
+<p>"I could not have believed that of a man who is so skillful in
+finishing up Ural Mountain bears. Is it the case that a man can
+be courageous at one time and a coward at another?
+ It is quite incomprehensible."</p>
+
+<p>A moment afterwards the noise of wheels and whip showed that
+the berlin, drawn by the tarantass' horses, was driving rapidly
+away from the post-house.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, unmoved, and Michael, still quivering, remained alone
+in the room.
+ The courier of the Czar, his arms crossed over his chest was
+seated motionless as a statue. A color, which could not have been
+the blush of shame, had replaced the paleness on his
+countenance.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia did not doubt that powerful reasons alone could have
+allowed him to suffer so great a humiliation from such a man.
+Going up to him as he had come to her in the police-station at
+Nijni-Novgorod:</p>
+
+<p>"Your hand, brother," said she.</p>
+
+<p>And at the same time her hand, with an almost maternal
+gesture, wiped away a tear which sprang to her companion's
+eye.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII DUTY BEFORE EVERYTHING</h2>
+
+<p>NADIA, with the clear perception of a right-minded woman,
+guessed that some secret motive directed all Michael Strogoff's
+actions; that he, for a reason unknown to her, did not belong to
+himself; and that in this instance especially he had heroically
+sacrificed to duty even his resentment at the gross injury he had
+received.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, therefore, asked no explanation from Michael. Had not
+the hand which she had extended to him already replied to all
+that he might have been able to tell her?</p>
+
+<p>Michael remained silent all the evening. The postmaster not
+being able to supply them with fresh horses until the next
+morning, a whole night must be passed at the house.
+ Nadia could profit by it to take some rest, and a room was
+therefore prepared for her.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl would no doubt have preferred not to leave her
+companion, but she felt that he would rather be alone, and she
+made ready to go to her room.</p>
+
+<p>Just as she was about to retire she could not refrain from
+going up to Michael to say good-night.</p>
+
+<p>"Brother," she whispered. But he checked her with a
+gesture.
+ The girl sighed and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Michael Strogoff did not lie down. He could not have slept even
+for an hour. The place on which he had been struck by the brutal
+traveler felt like a burn.</p>
+
+<p>"For my country and the Father," he muttered as he ended his
+evening prayer.</p>
+
+<p>He especially felt a great wish to know who was the man who
+had struck him, whence he came, and where he was going.
+ As to his face, the features of it were so deeply engraven on
+his memory that he had no fear of ever forgetting them.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff at last asked for the postmaster. The latter,
+a Siberian of the old type, came directly, and looking rather
+contemptuously at the young man, waited to be questioned.</p>
+
+<p>"You belong to the country?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know that man who took my horses?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Had you never seen him before?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never."</p>
+
+<p>"Who do you think he was?"</p>
+
+<p>"A man who knows how to make himself obeyed."</p>
+
+<p>Michael fixed his piercing gaze upon the Siberian, but the
+other did not quail before it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you dare to judge me?" exclaimed Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the Siberian, "there are some things even a
+plain merchant cannot receive without returning."</p>
+
+<p>"Blows?"</p>
+
+<p>"Blows, young man. I am of an age and strength to tell you
+so."</p>
+
+<p>Michael went up to the postmaster and laid his two powerful
+hands on his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>Then in a peculiarly calm tone, "Be off, my friend," said he:
+"be off! I could kill you."</p>
+
+<p>The postmaster understood. "I like him better for that,"
+ he muttered and retired without another word.</p>
+
+<p>At eight o'clock the next morning, the 24th of July, three
+strong horses were harnessed to the tarantass.
+ Michael Strogoff and Nadia took their places, and Ichim, with
+its disagreeable remembrances, was soon left far behind.</p>
+
+<p>At the different relays at which they stopped during the day
+Strogoff ascertained that the berlin still preceded them on the
+road to Irkutsk, and that the traveler, as hurried as they were,
+never lost a minute in pursuing his way across the steppe.</p>
+
+<p>At four o'clock in the evening they reached Abatskaia, fifty
+miles farther on, where the Ichim, one of the principal affluents
+of the Irtych, had to be crossed. This passage was rather more
+difficult than that of the Tobol. Indeed the current of the Ichim
+was very rapid just at that place.
+ During the Siberian winter, the rivers being all frozen to a
+thickness of several feet, they are easily practicable, and the
+traveler even crosses them without being aware of the fact, for
+their beds have disappeared under the snowy sheet spread
+uniformly over the steppe; but in summer the difficulties of
+crossing are sometimes great.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, two hours were taken up in making the passage of the
+Ichim, which much exasperated Michael, especially as the boatmen
+gave them alarming news of the Tartar invasion.
+ Some of Feofar-Khan's scouts had already appeared on both banks
+of the lower Ichim, in the southern parts of the government of
+Tobolsk. Omsk was threatened. They spoke of an engagement which
+had taken place between the Siberian and Tartar troops on the
+frontier of the great Kirghese horde--an engagement not to the
+advantage of the Russians, who were weak in numbers.
+ The troops had retreated thence, and in consequence there had
+been a general emigration of all the peasants of the
+province.
+ The boatmen spoke of horrible atrocities committed by the
+invaders-- pillage, theft, incendiarism, murder. Such was the
+system of Tartar warfare.</p>
+
+<p>The people all fled before Feofar-Khan. Michael Strogoff's
+great fear was lest, in the depopulation of the towns, he should
+be unable to obtain the means of transport.
+ He was therefore extremely anxious to reach Omsk. Perhaps there
+they would get the start of the Tartar scouts, who were coming
+down the valley of the Irtych, and would find the road open to
+Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>Just at the place where the tarantass crossed the river ended
+what is called, in military language, the "Ichim chain"--a chain
+of towers, or little wooden forts, extending from the southern
+frontier of Siberia for a distance of nearly four hundred
+versts.
+ Formerly these forts were occupied by detachments of Cossacks,
+and they protected the country against the Kirghese, as well as
+against the Tartars. But since the Muscovite Government had
+believed these hordes reduced to absolute submission, they had
+been abandoned, and now could not be used; just at the time when
+they were needed.
+ Many of these forts had been reduced to ashes; and the boatmen
+even pointed out the smoke to Michael, rising in the southern
+horizon, and showing the approach of the Tartar
+advance-guard.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the ferryboat landed the tarantass on the right
+bank of the Ichim, the journey across the steppe was resumed with
+all speed.
+ Michael Strogoff remained very silent. He was, however, always
+attentive to Nadia, helping her to bear the fatigue of this long
+journey without break or rest; but the girl never complained.
+ She longed to give wings to the horses. Something told her that
+her companion was even more anxious than herself to reach
+Irkutsk; and how many versts were still between!</p>
+
+<p>It also occurred to her that if Omsk was entered by the
+Tartars, Michael's mother, who lived there, would be in danger,
+and that this was sufficient to explain her son's impatience to
+get to her.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia at last spoke to him of old Marfa, and of how
+unprotected she would be in the midst of all these events.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you received any news of your mother since the beginning
+of the invasion?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"None, Nadia. The last letter my mother wrote to me contained
+good news. Marfa is a brave and energetic Siberian woman.
+ Notwithstanding her age, she has preserved all her moral
+strength.
+ She knows how to suffer."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall see her, brother," said Nadia quickly. "Since you
+give me the name of sister, I am Marfa's daughter."</p>
+
+<p>And as Michael did not answer she added:</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps your mother has been able to leave Omsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible, Nadia," replied Michael; "and I hope she may
+have reached Tobolsk. Marfa hates the Tartars. She knows the
+steppe, and would have no fear in just taking her staff and going
+down the banks of the Irtych. There is not a spot in all the
+province unknown to her.
+ Many times has she traveled all over the country with my father;
+and many times I myself, when a mere child, have accompanied them
+across the Siberian desert. Yes, Nadia, I trust that my mother
+has left Omsk."</p>
+
+<p>"And when shall you see her?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall see her--on my return."</p>
+
+<p>"If, however, your mother is still at Omsk, you will be able
+to spare an hour to go to her?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not go and see her."</p>
+
+<p>"You will not see her?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Nadia," said Michael, his chest heaving as he felt he
+could not go on replying to the girl's questions.</p>
+
+<p>"You say no! Why, brother, if your mother is still at Omsk,
+for what reason could you refuse to see her?"</p>
+
+<p>"For what reason, Nadia? You ask me for what reason,"
+exclaimed Michael, in so changed a voice that the young girl
+started. "For the same reason as that which made me patient even
+to cowardice with the villain who--"
+ He could not finish his sentence.</p>
+
+<p>"Calm yourself, brother," said Nadia in a gentle voice.
+ "I only know one thing, or rather I do not know it, I feel
+it.
+ It is that all your conduct is now directed by the sentiment of
+a duty more sacred--if there can be one--than that which unites
+the son to the mother."</p>
+
+<p>Nadia was silent, and from that moment avoided every subject
+which in any way touched on Michael's peculiar situation.
+ He had a secret motive which she must respect. She respected
+it.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, July 25th, at three o'clock in the morning, the
+tarantass arrived at Tioukalmsk, having accomplished a distance
+of eighty miles since it had crossed the Ichim. They rapidly
+changed horses.
+ Here, however, for the first time, the iemschik made
+difficulties about starting, declaring that detachments of
+Tartars were roving across the steppe, and that travelers,
+horses, and carriages would be a fine prize for them.</p>
+
+<p>Only by dint of a large bribe could Michael get over the
+unwillingness of the iemschik, for in this instance, as in many
+others, he did not wish to show his podorojna.
+ The last ukase, having been transmitted by telegraph, was known
+in the Siberian provinces; and a Russian specially exempted from
+obeying these words would certainly have drawn public attention
+to himself--a thing above all to be avoided by the Czar's
+courier.
+ As to the iemschik's hesitation, either the rascal traded on the
+traveler's impatience or he really had good reason to fear.</p>
+
+<p>However, at last the tarantass started, and made such good way
+that by three in the afternoon it had reached Koulatsinskoe,
+fifty miles farther on. An hour after this it was on the banks of
+the Irtych. Omsk was now only fourteen miles distant.</p>
+
+<p>The Irtych is a large river, and one of the principal of those
+which flow towards the north of Asia. Rising in the Altai
+Mountains, it flows from the southeast to the northwest and
+empties itself into the Obi, after a course of four thousand
+miles.</p>
+
+<p>At this time of year, when all the rivers of the Siberian
+basin are much swollen, the waters of the Irtych were very
+high.
+ In consequence the current was changed to a regular torrent,
+rendering the passage difficult enough. A swimmer could not have
+crossed, however powerful; and even in a ferryboat there would be
+some danger.</p>
+
+<p>But Michael and Nadia, determined to brave all perils whatever
+they might be, did not dream of shrinking from this one.
+ Michael proposed to his young companion that he should cross
+first, embarking in the ferryboat with the tarantass and horses,
+as he feared that the weight of this load would render it less
+safe.
+ After landing the carriage he would return and fetch Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>The girl refused. It would be the delay of an hour, and she
+would not, for her safety alone, be the cause of it.</p>
+
+<p>The embarkation was made not without difficulty, for the banks
+were partly flooded and the boat could not get in near
+enough.
+ However, after half an hour's exertion, the boatmen got the
+tarantass and the three horses on board. The passengers embarked
+also, and they shoved off.</p>
+
+<p>For a few minutes all went well. A little way up the river the
+current was broken by a long point projecting from the bank, and
+forming an eddy easily crossed by the boat. The two boatmen
+propelled their barge with long poles, which they handled
+cleverly; but as they gained the middle of the stream it grew
+deeper and deeper, until at last they could only just reach the
+bottom.
+ The ends of the poles were only a foot above the water, which
+rendered their use difficult. Michael and Nadia, seated in the
+stern of the boat, and always in dread of a delay, watched the
+boatmen with some uneasiness.</p>
+
+<p>"Look out!" cried one of them to his comrade.</p>
+
+<p>The shout was occasioned by the new direction the boat was
+rapidly taking. It had got into the direct current and was being
+swept down the river. By diligent use of the poles, putting the
+ends in a series of notches cut below the gunwale, the boatmen
+managed to keep the craft against the stream, and slowly urged it
+in a slanting direction towards the right bank.</p>
+
+<p>They calculated on reaching it some five or six versts below
+the landing place; but, after all, that would not matter so long
+as men and beasts could disembark without accident.
+ The two stout boatmen, stimulated moreover by the promise of
+double fare, did not doubt of succeeding in this difficult
+passage of the Irtych.</p>
+
+<p>But they reckoned without an accident which they were
+powerless to prevent, and neither their zeal nor their
+skill-fulness could, under the circumstances, have done more.</p>
+
+<p>The boat was in the middle of the current, at nearly equal
+distances from either shore, and being carried down at the rate
+of two versts an hour, when Michael, springing to his feet, bent
+his gaze up the river.</p>
+
+<p>Several boats, aided by oars as well as by the current, were
+coming swiftly down upon them.</p>
+
+<p>Michael's brow contracted, and a cry escaped him.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter?" asked the girl.</p>
+
+<p>But before Michael had time to reply one of the boatmen
+exclaimed in an accent of terror:</p>
+
+<p>"The Tartars! the Tartars!"</p>
+
+<p>There were indeed boats full of soldiers, and in a few minutes
+they must reach the ferryboat, it being too heavily laden to
+escape from them.</p>
+
+<p>The terrified boatmen uttered exclamations of despair and
+dropped their poles.</p>
+
+<p>"Courage, my friends!" cried Michael; "courage! Fifty roubles
+for you if we reach the right bank before the boats overtake
+us."</p>
+
+<p>Incited by these words, the boatmen again worked manfully but
+it soon become evident that they could not escape the
+Tartars.</p>
+
+<p>It was scarcely probable that they would pass without
+attacking them.
+ On the contrary, there was everything to be feared from robbers
+such as these.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be afraid, Nadia," said Michael; "but be ready for
+anything."</p>
+
+<p>"I am ready," replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Even to leap into the water when I tell you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whenever you tell me."</p>
+
+<p>"Have confidence in me, Nadia."</p>
+
+<p>"I have, indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>The Tartar boats were now only a hundred feet distant.
+ They carried a detachment of Bokharian soldiers, on their way to
+reconnoiter around Omsk.</p>
+
+<p>The ferryboat was still two lengths from the shore.
+ The boatmen redoubled their efforts. Michael himself seized a
+pole and wielded it with superhuman strength.
+ If he could land the tarantass and horses, and dash off with
+them, there was some chance of escaping the Tartars, who were not
+mounted.</p>
+
+<p>But all their efforts were in vain. "Saryn na kitchou!"
+ shouted the soldiers from the first boat.</p>
+
+<p>Michael recognized the Tartar war-cry, which is usually
+answered by lying flat on the ground. As neither he nor the
+boatmen obeyed a volley was let fly, and two of the horses were
+mortally wounded.</p>
+
+<p>At the next moment a violent blow was felt. The boats had run
+into the ferryboat.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Nadia!" cried Michael, ready to jump overboard.</p>
+
+<p>The girl was about to follow him, when a blow from a lance
+struck him, and he was thrown into the water. The current swept
+him away, his hand raised for an instant above the waves, and
+then he disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia uttered a cry, but before she had time to throw herself
+after him she was seized and dragged into one of the boats.
+ The boatmen were killed, the ferryboat left to drift away, and
+the Tartars continued to descend the Irtych.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV MOTHER AND SON</h2>
+
+<p>OMSK is the official capital of Western Siberia. It is not the
+most important city of the government of that name, for Tomsk has
+more inhabitants and is larger. But it is at Omsk that the
+Governor-General of this the first half of Asiatic Russia
+resides.
+ Omsk, properly so called, is composed of two distinct towns: one
+which is exclusively inhabited by the authorities and officials;
+the other more especially devoted to the Siberian merchants,
+although, indeed, the trade of the town is of small
+importance.</p>
+
+<p>This city has about 12,000 to 13,000 inhabitants.
+ It is defended by walls, but these are merely of earth, and
+could afford only insufficient protection. The Tartars, who were
+well aware of this fact, consequently tried at this period to
+carry it by main force, and in this they succeeded, after an
+investment of a few days.</p>
+
+<p>The garrison of Omsk, reduced to two thousand men, resisted
+valiantly.
+ But driven back, little by little, from the mercantile portion
+of the place, they were compelled to take refuge in the upper
+town.</p>
+
+<p>
+ It was there that the Governor-General, his officers, and
+soldiers had entrenched themselves. They had made the upper
+quarter of Omsk a kind of citadel, and hitherto they held out
+well in this species of improvised "kreml," but without much hope
+of the promised succor.
+ The Tartar troops, who were descending the Irtych, received
+every day fresh reinforcements, and, what was more serious, they
+were led by an officer, a traitor to his country, but a man of
+much note, and of an audacity equal to any emergency.
+ This man was Colonel Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff, terrible as any of the most savage Tartar
+chieftains, was an educated soldier. Possessing on his mother's
+side some Mongolian blood, he delighted in deceptive strategy and
+ambuscades, stopping short of nothing when he desired to fathom
+some secret or to set some trap. Deceitful by nature, he
+willingly had recourse to the vilest trickery; lying when
+occasion demanded, excelling in the adoption of all disguises and
+in every species of deception.
+ Further, he was cruel, and had even acted as an executioner.
+ Feofar-Khan possessed in him a lieutenant well capable of
+seconding his designs in this savage war.</p>
+
+<p>When Michael Strogoff arrived on the banks of the Irtych, Ivan
+Ogareff was already master of Omsk, and was pressing the siege of
+the upper quarter of the town all the more eagerly because he
+must hasten to Tomsk, where the main body of the Tartar army was
+concentrated.</p>
+
+<p>Tomsk, in fact, had been taken by Feofar-Khan some days
+previously, and it was thence that the invaders, masters of
+Central Siberia, were to march upon Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>Irkutsk was the real object of Ivan Ogareff. The plan of the
+traitor was to reach the Grand Duke under a false name, to gain
+his confidence, and to deliver into Tartar hands the town and the
+Grand Duke himself.
+ With such a town, and such a hostage, all Asiatic Siberia must
+necessarily fall into the hands of the invaders. Now it was known
+that the Czar was acquainted with this conspiracy, and that it
+was for the purpose of baffling it that a courier had been
+intrusted with the important warning.
+ Hence, therefore, the very stringent instructions which had been
+given to the young courier to pass incognito through the invaded
+district.</p>
+
+<p>This mission he had so far faithfully performed, but now could
+he carry it to a successful completion?</p>
+
+<p>The blow which had struck Michael Strogoff was not mortal.
+ By swimming in a manner by which he had effectually concealed
+himself, he had reached the right bank, where he fell exhausted
+among the bushes.</p>
+
+<p>When he recovered his senses, he found himself in the cabin of
+a mujik, who had picked him up and cared for him. For how long a
+time had he been the guest of this brave Siberian? He could not
+guess.
+ But when he opened his eyes he saw the handsome bearded face
+bending over him, and regarding him with pitying eyes.
+ "Do not speak, little father," said the mujik, "Do not
+speak!
+ Thou art still too weak. I will tell thee where thou art and
+everything that has passed."</p>
+
+<p>And the mujik related to Michael Strogoff the different
+incidents of the struggle which he had witnessed--the attack upon
+the ferry by the Tartar boats, the pillage of the tarantass, and
+the massacre of the boatmen.</p>
+
+<p>But Michael Strogoff listened no longer, and slipping his hand
+under his garment he felt the imperial letter still secured in
+his breast.
+ He breathed a sigh of relief.</p>
+
+<p>But that was not all. "A young girl accompanied me," said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"They have not killed her," replied the mujik, anticipating
+the anxiety which he read in the eyes of his guest. "They have
+carried her off in their boat, and have continued the descent of
+Irtych. It is only one prisoner more to join the many they are
+taking to Tomsk!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff was unable to reply. He pressed his hand upon
+his heart to restrain its beating. But, notwithstanding these
+many trials, the sentiment of duty mastered his whole soul.
+ "Where am I?" asked he.</p>
+
+<p>"Upon the right bank of the Irtych, only five versts from
+Omsk,"
+ replied the mujik.</p>
+
+<p>"What wound can I have received which could have thus
+prostrated me?
+ It was not a gunshot wound?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; a lance-thrust in the head, now healing," replied the
+mujik.
+ "After a few days' rest, little father, thou wilt be able to
+proceed.
+ Thou didst fall into the river; but the Tartars neither touched
+nor searched thee; and thy purse is still in thy pocket."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff gripped the mujik's hand. Then, recovering
+himself with a sudden effort, "Friend," said he, "how long have I
+been in thy hut?"</p>
+
+<p>"Three days."</p>
+
+<p>"Three days lost!"</p>
+
+<p>"Three days hast thou lain unconscious."</p>
+
+<p>"Hast thou a horse to sell me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thou wishest to go?"</p>
+
+<p>"At once."</p>
+
+<p>"I have neither horse nor carriage, little father.
+ Where the Tartar has passed there remains nothing!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will go on foot to Omsk to find a horse."</p>
+
+<p>"A few more hours of rest, and thou wilt be in a better
+condition to pursue thy journey."</p>
+
+<p>"Not an hour!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come now," replied the mujik, recognizing the fact that it
+was useless to struggle against the will of his guest, "I will
+guide thee myself.
+ Besides," he added, "the Russians are still in great force at
+Omsk, and thou couldst, perhaps, pass unperceived."</p>
+
+<p>"Friend," replied Michael Strogoff, "Heaven reward thee for
+all thou hast done for me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Only fools expect reward on earth," replied the mujik.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff went out of the hut. When he tried to walk he
+was seized with such faintness that, without the assistance of
+the mujik, he would have fallen; but the fresh air quickly
+revived him.
+ He then felt the wound in his head, the violence of which his
+fur cap had lessened. With the energy which he possessed, he was
+not a man to succumb under such a trifle. Before his eyes lay a
+single goal--far-distant Irkutsk. He must reach it!
+ But he must pass through Omsk without stopping there.</p>
+
+<p>"God protect my mother and Nadia!" he murmured. "I have no
+longer the right to think of them!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff and the mujik soon arrived in the mercantile
+quarter of the lower town. The surrounding earthwork had been
+destroyed in many places, and there were the breaches through
+which the marauders who followed the armies of Feofar-Khan had
+penetrated.
+ Within Omsk, in its streets and squares, the Tartar soldiers
+swarmed like ants; but it was easy to see that a hand of iron
+imposed upon them a discipline to which they were little
+accustomed.
+ They walked nowhere alone, but in armed groups, to defend
+themselves against surprise.</p>
+
+<p>In the chief square, transformed into a camp, guarded by many
+sentries, 2,000 Tartars bivouacked. The horses, picketed but
+still saddled, were ready to start at the first order. Omsk could
+only be a temporary halting-place for this Tartar cavalry, which
+preferred the rich plains of Eastern Siberia, where the towns
+were more wealthy, and, consequently, pillage more
+profitable.</p>
+
+<p>Above the mercantile town rose the upper quarter, which Ivan
+Ogareff, notwithstanding several assaults vigorously made but
+bravely repelled, had not yet been able to reduce. Upon its
+embattled walls floated the national colors of Russia.</p>
+
+<p>It was not without a legitimate pride that Michael Strogoff
+and his guide, vowing fidelity, saluted them.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff was perfectly acquainted with the town of
+Omsk, and he took care to avoid those streets which were much
+frequented.
+ This was not from any fear of being recognized. In the town his
+old mother only could have called him by name, but he had sworn
+not to see her, and he did not. Besides--and he wished it with
+his whole heart-- she might have fled into some quiet portion of
+the steppe.</p>
+
+<p>The mujik very fortunately knew a postmaster who, if well
+paid, would not refuse at his request either to let or to sell a
+carriage or horses.
+ There remained the difficulty of leaving the town, but the
+breaches in the fortifications would, of course, facilitate his
+departure.</p>
+
+<p>The mujik was accordingly conducting his guest straight to the
+posting-house, when, in a narrow street, Michael Strogoff, coming
+to a sudden stop sprang behind a jutting wall.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter?" asked the astonished mujik.</p>
+
+<p>"Silence!" replied Michael, with his finger on his lips.
+ At this moment a detachment debouched from the principal square
+into the street which Michael Strogoff and his companion had just
+been following.</p>
+
+<p>At the head of the detachment, composed of twenty horsemen,
+was an officer dressed in a very simple uniform.
+ Although he glanced rapidly from one side to the other he could
+not have seen Michael Strogoff, owing to his precipitous
+retreat.</p>
+
+<p>The detachment went at full trot into the narrow street.
+Neither the officer nor his escort concerned themselves about the
+inhabitants.
+ Several unlucky ones had scarcely time to make way for their
+passage.
+ There were a few half-stifled cries, to which thrusts of the
+lance gave an instant reply, and the street was immediately
+cleared.</p>
+
+<p>When the escort had disappeared, "Who is that officer?"
+ asked Michael Strogoff. And while putting the question his face
+was pale as that of a corpse.</p>
+
+<p>"It is Ivan Ogareff," replied the Siberian, in a deep voice
+which breathed hatred.</p>
+
+<p>"He!" cried Michael Strogoff, from whom the word escaped with
+a fury he could not conquer. He had just recognized in this
+officer the traveler who had struck him at the posting-house of
+Ichim. And, although he had only caught a glimpse of him, it
+burst upon his mind, at the same time, that this traveler was the
+old Zingari whose words he had overheard in the market place of
+Nijni-Novgorod.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff was not mistaken. The two men were one and
+the same.
+ It was under the garb of a Zingari, mingling with the band of
+Sangarre, that Ivan Ogareff had been able to leave the town of
+Nijni-Novgorod, where he had gone to seek his confidants.
+Sangarre and her Zingari, well paid spies, were absolutely
+devoted to him. It was he who, during the night, on the
+fair-ground had uttered that singular sentence, which Michael
+Strogoff could not understand; it was he who was voyaging on
+board the Caucasus, with the whole of the Bohemian band; it was
+he who, by this other route, from Kasan to Ichim, across the
+Urals, had reached Omsk, where now he held supreme authority.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff had been barely three days at Omsk, and had it
+not been for their fatal meeting at Ichim, and for the event
+which had detained him three days on the banks of the Irtych,
+Michael Strogoff would have evidently beaten him on the way to
+Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>And who knows how many misfortunes would have been avoided in
+the future!
+ In any case--and now more than ever--Michael Strogoff must avoid
+Ivan Ogareff, and contrive not to be seen. When the moment of
+encountering him face to face should arrive, he knew how to meet
+it, even should the traitor be master of the whole of
+Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>The mujik and Michael resumed their way and arrived at the
+posting-house. To leave Omsk by one of the breaches would not be
+difficult after nightfall. As for purchasing a carriage to
+replace the tarantass, that was impossible.
+ There were none to be let or sold. But what want had Michael
+Strogoff now for a carriage? Was he not alone, alas? A horse
+would suffice him; and, very fortunately, a horse could be
+had.
+ It was an animal of strength and mettle, and Michael Strogoff,
+accomplished horseman as he was, could make good use of it.</p>
+
+<p>It was four o'clock in the afternoon. Michael Strogoff,
+compelled to wait till nightfall, in order to pass the
+fortifications, but not desiring to show himself, remained in the
+posting-house, and there partook of food.</p>
+
+<p>There was a great crowd in the public room. They were talking
+of the expected arrival of a corps of Muscovite troops, not at
+Omsk, but at Tomsk--a corps intended to recapture that town from
+the Tartars of Feofar-Khan.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff lent an attentive ear, but took no part in
+the conversation. Suddenly a cry made him tremble, a cry which
+penetrated to the depths of his soul, and these two words rushed
+into his ear: "My son!"</p>
+
+<p>His mother, the old woman Marfa, was before him! Trembling,
+she smiled upon him. She stretched forth her arms to him. Michael
+Strogoff arose.
+ He was about to throw himself--</p>
+
+<p>The thought of duty, the serious danger for his mother and
+himself in this unfortunate meeting, suddenly stopped him, and
+such was his command over himself that not a muscle of his face
+moved. There were twenty people in the public room.
+ Among them were, perhaps, spies, and was it not known in the
+town that the son of Marfa Strogoff belonged to the corps of the
+couriers of the Czar?</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff did not move.</p>
+
+<p>"Michael!" cried his mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you, my good lady?" Michael Strogoff stammered,
+unable to speak in his usual firm tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Who am I, thou askest! Dost thou no longer know thy
+mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken," coldly replied Michael Strogoff. "A
+resemblance deceives you."</p>
+
+<p>The old Marfa went up to him, and, looking straight into his
+eyes, said, "Thou art not the son of Peter and Marfa
+Strogoff?"</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff would have given his life to have locked his
+mother in his arms; but if he yielded it was all over with him,
+with her, with his mission, with his oath!
+ Completely master of himself, he closed his eyes, in order not
+to see the inexpressible anguish which agitated the revered
+countenance of his mother. He drew back his hands, in order not
+to touch those trembling hands which sought him.
+ "I do not know in truth what it is you say, my good woman,"
+ he replied, stepping back.</p>
+
+<p>"Michael!" again cried his aged mother.</p>
+
+<p>"My name is not Michael. I never was your son! I am Nicholas
+Korpanoff, a merchant at Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>And suddenly he left the public room, whilst for the last time
+the words re-echoed, "My son! my son!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, by a desperate effort, had gone. He did not
+see his old mother, who had fallen back almost inanimate upon a
+bench.
+ But when the postmaster hastened to assist her, the aged woman
+raised herself. Suddenly a thought occurred to her.
+ She denied by her son! It was not possible. As for being herself
+deceived, and taking another for him, equally impossible.
+ It was certainly her son whom she had just seen; and if he had
+not recognized her it was because he would not, it was because he
+ought not, it was because he had some cogent reasons for acting
+thus!
+ And then, her mother's feelings arising within her, she had only
+one thought--"Can I, unwittingly, have ruined him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am mad," she said to her interrogators. "My eyes have
+deceived me!
+ This young man is not my child. He had not his voice. Let us
+think no more of it; if we do I shall end by finding him
+everywhere."</p>
+
+<p>Less than ten minutes afterwards a Tartar officer appeared in
+the posting-house. "Marfa Strogoff?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It is I," replied the old woman, in a tone so calm, and with
+a face so tranquil, that those who had witnessed the meeting with
+her son would not have known her.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said the officer,</p>
+
+<p>Marfa Strogoff, with firm step, followed the Tartar. Some
+moments afterwards she found herself in the chief square in the
+presence of Ivan Ogareff, to whom all the details of this scene
+had been immediately reported.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff, suspecting the truth, interrogated the old Siberian
+woman.
+ "Thy name?" he asked in a rough voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Marfa Strogoff."</p>
+
+<p>"Thou hast a son?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"He is a courier of the Czar?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Moscow."</p>
+
+<p>"Thou hast no news of him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No news."</p>
+
+<p>"Since how long?"</p>
+
+<p>"Since two months."</p>
+
+<p>"Who, then, was that young man whom thou didst call thy son a
+few moments ago at the posting-house?"</p>
+
+<p>"A young Siberian whom I took for him," replied Marfa
+Strogoff. "This is the tenth man in whom I have thought I
+recognized my son since the town has been so full of strangers. I
+think I see him everywhere."</p>
+
+<p>"So this young man was not Michael Strogoff?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was not Michael Strogoff."</p>
+
+<p>"Dost thou know, old woman, that I can torture thee until thou
+avowest the truth?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have spoken the truth, and torture will not cause me to
+alter my words in any way."</p>
+
+<p>"This Siberian was not Michael Strogoff?" asked a second time
+Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it was not he," replied a second time Marfa Strogoff. "Do
+you think that for anything in the world I would deny a son whom
+God has given me?"</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff regarded with an evil eye the old woman who
+braved him to the face. He did not doubt but that she had
+recognized her son in this young Siberian. Now if this son had
+first renounced his mother, and if his mother renounced him in
+her turn, it could occur only from the most weighty motive.
+Ogareff had therefore no doubt that the pretended Nicholas
+Korpanoff was Michael Strogoff, courier of the Czar, seeking
+concealment under a false name, and charged with some mission
+which it would have been important for him to know. He therefore
+at once gave orders for his pursuit.
+ Then "Let this woman be conducted to Tomsk," he said.</p>
+
+<p>While the soldiers brutally dragged her off, he added between
+his teeth, "When the moment arrives I shall know how to make her
+speak, this old sorceress!"</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XV THE MARSHES OF THE BARABA</h2>
+
+<p>IT was fortunate that Michael Strogoff had left the
+posting-house so promptly. The orders of Ivan Ogareff had been
+immediately transmitted to all the approaches of the city, and a
+full description of Michael sent to all the various commandants,
+in order to prevent his departure from Omsk. But he had already
+passed through one of the breaches in the wall; his horse was
+galloping over the steppe, and the chances of escape were in his
+favor.</p>
+
+<p>It was on the 29th of July, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+that Michael Strogoff had left Omsk. This town is situated about
+halfway between Moscow and Irkutsk, where it was necessary that
+he should arrive within ten days if he wished to get ahead of the
+Tartar columns.
+ It was evident that the unlucky chance which had brought him
+into the presence of his mother had betrayed his incognito.
+ Ivan Ogareff was no longer ignorant of the fact that a courier
+of the Czar had just passed Omsk, taking the direction of
+Irkutsk. The dispatches which this courier bore must have been of
+immense importance.
+ Michael Strogoff knew, therefore, that every effort would be
+made to capture him.</p>
+
+<p>
+ But what he did not know, and could not know, was that Marfa
+Strogoff was in the hands of Ivan Ogareff, and that she was about
+to atone, perhaps with her life, for that natural exhibition of
+her feelings which she had been unable to restrain when she
+suddenly found herself in the presence of her son. And it was
+fortunate that he was ignorant of it.
+ Could he have withstood this fresh trial?</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff urged on his horse, imbuing him with all his
+own feverish impatience, requiring of him one thing only, namely,
+to bear him rapidly to the next posting-house, where he could be
+exchanged for a quicker conveyance.</p>
+
+<p>At midnight he had cleared fifty miles, and halted at the
+station of Koulikovo. But there, as he had feared, he found
+neither horses nor carriages. Several Tartar detachments had
+passed along the highway of the steppe. Everything had been
+stolen or requisitioned both in the villages and in the
+posting-houses.
+ It was with difficulty that Michael Strogoff was even able to
+obtain some refreshment for his horse and himself.</p>
+
+<p>It was of great importance, therefore, to spare his horse, for
+he could not tell when or how he might be able to replace it.
+Desiring, however, to put the greatest possible distance between
+himself and the horsemen who had no doubt been dispatched in
+pursuit, he resolved to push on.
+ After one hour's rest he resumed his course across the
+steppe.</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto the weather had been propitious for his journey.
+ The temperature was endurable. The nights at this time of the
+year are very short, and as they are lighted by the moon, the
+route over the steppe is practicable. Michael Strogoff, moreover,
+was a man certain of his road and devoid of doubt or hesitation,
+and in spite of the melancholy thoughts which possessed him he
+had preserved his clearness of mind, and made for his destined
+point as though it were visible upon the horizon.
+ When he did halt for a moment at some turn in the road it was to
+breathe his horse. Now he would dismount to ease his steed for a
+moment, and again he would place his ear to the ground to listen
+for the sound of galloping horses upon the steppe.
+ Nothing arousing his suspicions, he resumed his way.</p>
+
+<p>On the 30th of July, at nine o'clock in the morning, Michael
+Strogoff passed through the station of Touroumoff and entered the
+swampy district of the Baraba.</p>
+
+<p>There, for a distance of three hundred versts, the natural
+obstacles would be extremely great. He knew this, but he also
+knew that he would certainly surmount them.</p>
+
+<p>These vast marshes of the Baraba, form the reservoir to all
+the rain-water which finds no outlet either towards the Obi or
+towards the Irtych. The soil of this vast depression is entirely
+argillaceous, and therefore impermeable, so that the waters
+remain there and make of it a region very difficult to cross
+during the hot season. There, however, lies the way to Irkutsk,
+and it is in the midst of ponds, pools, lakes, and swamps, from
+which the sun draws poisonous exhalations, that the road winds,
+and entails upon the traveler the greatest fatigue and
+danger.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff spurred his horse into the midst of a grassy
+prairie, differing greatly from the close-cropped sod of the
+steppe, where feed the immense Siberian herds. The grass here was
+five or six feet in height, and had made room for swamp-plants,
+to which the dampness of the place, assisted by the heat of
+summer, had given giant proportions.
+ These were principally canes and rushes, which formed a tangled
+network, an impenetrable undergrowth, sprinkled everywhere with a
+thousand flowers remarkable for the brightness of their
+color.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, galloping amongst this undergrowth of cane,
+was no longer visible from the swamps which bordered the
+road.
+ The tall grass rose above him, and his track was indicated only
+by the flight of innumerable aquatic birds, which rose from the
+side of the road and dispersed into the air in screaming
+flocks.</p>
+
+<p>The way, however, was clearly traceable. Now it would lie
+straight between the dense thicket of marsh-plants; again it
+would follow the winding shores of vast pools, some of which,
+several versts in length and breadth, deserve the name of
+lakes.
+ In other localities the stagnant waters through which the road
+lay had been avoided, not by bridges, but by tottering platforms
+ballasted with thick layers of clay, whose joists shook like a
+too weak plank thrown across an abyss.
+ Some of these platforms extended over three hundred feet, and
+travelers by tarantass, when crossing them have experienced a
+nausea like sea-sickness.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, whether the soil beneath his feet was solid
+or whether it sank under him, galloped on without halt, leaping
+the space between the rotten joists; but however fast they
+traveled the horse and the horseman were unable to escape from
+the sting of the two-winged insects which infest this marshy
+country.</p>
+
+<p>Travelers who are obliged to cross the Baraba during the
+summer take care to provide themselves with masks of horse-hair,
+to which is attached a coat of mail of very fine wire, which
+covers their shoulders. Notwithstanding these precautions, there
+are few who come out of these marshes without having their faces,
+necks, and hands covered with red spots.
+ The atmosphere there seems to bristle with fine needles, and one
+would almost say that a knight's armor would not protect him
+against the darts of these dipterals. It is a dreary region,
+which man dearly disputes with tipulae, gnats, mosquitos,
+horse-flies, and millions of microscopic insects which are not
+visible to the naked eye; but, although they are not seen, they
+make themselves felt by their intolerable stinging, to which the
+most callous Siberian hunters have never been able to inure
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff's horse, stung by these venomous insects,
+sprang forward as if the rowels of a thousand spurs had pierced
+his flanks.
+ Mad with rage, he tore along over verst after verst with the
+speed of an express train, lashing his sides with his tail,
+seeking by the rapidity of his pace an alleviation of his
+torture.</p>
+
+<p>It required as good a horseman as Michael Strogoff not to be
+thrown by the plungings of his horse, and the sudden stops and
+bounds which he made to escape from the stings of his
+persecutors.
+ Having become insensible, so to speak, to physical suffering,
+possessed only with the one desire to arrive at his destination
+at whatever cost, he saw during this mad race only one thing--
+that the road flew rapidly behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Who would have thought that this district of the Baraba, so
+unhealthy during the summer, could have afforded an asylum for
+human beings?
+ Yet it did so. Several Siberian hamlets appeared from time to
+time among the giant canes. Men, women, children, and old men,
+clad in the skins of beasts, their faces covered with hardened
+blisters of skin, pastured their poor herds of sheep.
+ In order to preserve the animals from the attack of the insects,
+they drove them to the leeward of fires of green wood, which were
+kept burning night and day, and the pungent smoke of which
+floated over the vast swamp.</p>
+
+<p>When Michael Strogoff perceived that his horse, tired out, was
+on the point of succumbing, he halted at one of these wretched
+hamlets, and there, forgetting his own fatigue, he himself rubbed
+the wounds of the poor animal with hot grease according to the
+Siberian custom; then he gave him a good feed; and it was only
+after he had well groomed and provided for him that he thought of
+himself, and recruited his strength by a hasty meal of bread and
+meat and a glass of kwass.
+ One hour afterwards, or at the most two, he resumed with all
+speed the interminable road to Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>On the 30th of July, at four o'clock in the afternoon, Michael
+Strogoff, insensible of every fatigue, arrived at Elamsk. There
+it became necessary to give a night's rest to his horse.
+ The brave animal could no longer have continued the journey.
+ At Elamsk, as indeed elsewhere, there existed no means of
+transport,-- for the same reasons as at the previous villages,
+neither carriages nor horses were to be had.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff resigned himself therefore to pass the night
+at Elamsk, to give his horse twelve hours' rest. He recalled the
+instructions which had been given to him at Moscow--to cross
+Siberia incognito, to arrive at Irkutsk, but not to sacrifice
+success to the rapidity of the journey; and consequently it was
+necessary that he should husband the sole means of transport
+which remained to him.</p>
+
+<p>On the morrow, Michael Strogoff left Elamsk at the moment when
+the first Tartar scouts were signaled ten versts behind upon the
+road to the Baraba, and he plunged again into the swampy
+region.
+ The road was level, which made it easy, but very tortuous, and
+therefore long. It was impossible, moreover, to leave it, and to
+strike a straight line across that impassable network of pools
+and bogs.</p>
+
+<p>On the next day, the 1st of August, eighty miles farther,
+Michael Strogoff arrived at midday at the town of Spaskoe, and at
+two o'clock he halted at Pokrowskoe. His horse, jaded since his
+departure from Elamsk, could not have taken a single step
+more.</p>
+
+<p>There Michael Strogoff was again compelled to lose, for
+necessary rest, the end of that day and the entire night; but
+starting again on the following morning, and still traversing the
+semi-inundated soil, on the 2nd of August, at four o'clock in the
+afternoon, after a stage of fifty miles he reached Kamsk.</p>
+
+<p>The country had changed. This little village of Kamsk lies,
+like an island, habitable and healthy, in the midst of the
+uninhabitable district. It is situated in the very center of the
+Baraba. The emigration caused by the Tartar invasion had not yet
+depopulated this little town of Kamsk. Its inhabitants probably
+fancied themselves safe in the center of the Baraba, whence at
+least they thought they would have time to flee if they were
+directly menaced.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, although exceedingly anxious for news, could
+ascertain nothing at this place. It would have been rather to him
+that the Governor would have addressed himself had he known who
+the pretended merchant of Irkutsk really was.
+ Kamsk, in fact, by its very situation seemed to be outside the
+Siberian world and the grave events which troubled it.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, Michael Strogoff showed himself little, if at
+all.
+ To be unperceived was not now enough for him: he would have
+wished to be invisible. The experience of the past made him more
+and more circumspect in the present and the future.
+ Therefore he secluded himself, and not caring to traverse the
+streets of the village, he would not even leave the inn at which
+he had halted.</p>
+
+<p>As for his horse, he did not even think of exchanging him for
+another animal. He had become accustomed to this brave
+creature.
+ He knew to what extent he could rely upon him. In buying him at
+Omsk he had been lucky, and in taking him to the postmaster the
+generous mujik had rendered him a great service. Besides, if
+Michael Strogoff had already become attached to his horse, the
+horse himself seemed to become inured, by degrees, to the fatigue
+of such a journey, and provided that he got several hours of
+repose daily, his rider might hope that he would carry him beyond
+the invaded provinces.</p>
+
+<p>So, during the evening and night of the 2nd of August, Michael
+Strogoff remained confined to his inn, at the entrance of the
+town; which was little frequented and out of the way of the
+importunate and curious.</p>
+
+<p>Exhausted with fatigue, he went to bed after having seen that
+his horse lacked nothing; but his sleep was broken. What he had
+seen since his departure from Moscow showed him the importance of
+his mission.
+ The rising was an extremely serious one, and the treachery of
+Ogareff made it still more formidable. And when his eyes fell
+upon the letter bearing upon it the authority of the imperial
+seal-- the letter which, no doubt, contained the remedy for so
+many evils, the safety of all this war-ravaged country--Michael
+Strogoff felt within himself a fierce desire to dash on across
+the steppe, to accomplish the distance which separated him from
+Irkutsk as the crow would fly it, to be an eagle that he might
+overtop all obstacles, to be a hurricane that he might sweep
+through the air at a hundred versts an hour, and to be at last
+face to face with the Grand Duke, and to exclaim: "Your highness,
+from his Majesty the Czar!"</p>
+
+<p>On the next morning at six o'clock, Michael Strogoff started
+off again.
+ Thanks to his extreme prudence this part of the journey was
+signalized by no incident whatever. At Oubinsk he gave his horse
+a whole night's rest, for he wished on the next day to accomplish
+the hundred versts which lie between Oubinsk and Ikoulskoe
+without halting.
+ He started therefore at dawn; but unfortunately the Baraba
+proved more detestable than ever.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, between Oubinsk and Kamakore the very heavy rains of
+some previous weeks were retained by this shallow depression as
+in a water-tight bowl. There was, for a long distance, no break
+in the succession of swamps, pools, and lakes. One of these
+lakes-- large enough to warrant its geographical
+nomenclature--Tchang, Chinese in name, had to be coasted for more
+than twenty versts, and this with the greatest difficulty. Hence
+certain delays occurred, which all the impatience of Michael
+Strogoff could not avoid.
+ He had been well advised in not taking a carriage at Kamsk, for
+his horse passed places which would have been impracticable for a
+conveyance on wheels.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening, at nine o'clock, Michael Strogoff arrived at
+Ikoulskoe, and halted there over night. In this remote village of
+the Baraba news of the war was utterly wanting.
+ From its situation, this part of the province, lying in the fork
+formed by the two Tartar columns which had bifurcated, one upon
+Omsk and the other upon Tomsk, had hitherto escaped the horrors
+of the invasion.</p>
+
+<p>But the natural obstacles were now about to disappear, for, if
+he experienced no delay, Michael Strogoff should on the morrow be
+free of the Baraba and arrive at Kolyvan. There he would be
+within eighty miles of Tomsk. He would then be guided by
+circumstances, and very probably he would decide to go around
+Tomsk, which, if the news were true, was occupied by
+Feofar-Khan.</p>
+
+<p>But if the small towns of Ikoulskoe and Karguinsk, which he
+passed on the next day, were comparatively quiet, owing to their
+position in the Baraba, was it not to be dreaded that, upon the
+right banks of the Obi, Michael Strogoff would have much more to
+fear from man? It was probable. However, should it become
+necessary, he would not hesitate to abandon the beaten path to
+Irkutsk. To journey then across the steppe he would, no doubt,
+run the risk of finding himself without supplies.
+ There would be, in fact, no longer a well-marked road.
+ Still, there must be no hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, towards half past three in the afternoon, Michael
+Strogoff left the last depressions of the Baraba, and the dry and
+hard soil of Siberia rang out once more beneath his horse's
+hoofs.</p>
+
+<p>He had left Moscow on the 15th of July. Therefore on this day,
+the 5th of August, including more than seventy hours lost on the
+banks of the Irtych, twenty days had gone by since his
+departure.</p>
+
+<p>One thousand miles still separated him from Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI A FINAL EFFORT</h2>
+
+<p>MICHAEL'S fear of meeting the Tartars in the plains beyond the
+Baraba was by no means ungrounded. The fields, trodden down by
+horses' hoofs, afforded but too clear evidence that their hordes
+had passed that way; the same, indeed, might be said of these
+barbarians as of the Turks: "Where the Turk goes, no grass
+grows."</p>
+
+<p>Michael saw at once that in traversing this country the
+greatest caution was necessary. Wreaths of smoke curling upwards
+on the horizon showed that huts and hamlets were still
+burning.
+ Had these been fired by the advance guard, or had the Emir's
+army already advanced beyond the boundaries of the province?
+ Was Feofar-Khan himself in the government of Yeniseisk? Michael
+could settle on no line of action until these questions were
+answered.
+ Was the country so deserted that he could not discover a single
+Siberian to enlighten him?</p>
+
+<p>Michael rode on for two versts without meeting a human
+being.
+ He looked carefully for some house which had not been
+deserted.
+ Every one was tenantless.</p>
+
+<p>
+ One hut, however, which he could just see between the trees, was
+still smoking. As he approached he perceived, at some yards from
+the ruins of the building, an old man surrounded by weeping
+children.
+ A woman still young, evidently his daughter and the mother of
+the poor children, kneeling on the ground, was gazing on the
+scene of desolation. She had at her breast a baby but a few
+months old; shortly she would have not even that nourishment to
+give it.
+ Ruin and desolation were all around!</p>
+
+<p>Michael approached the old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you answer me a few questions?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Speak," replied the old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Have the Tartars passed this way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, for my house is in flames."</p>
+
+<p>"Was it an army or a detachment?"</p>
+
+<p>"An army, for, as far as eye can reach, our fields are laid
+waste."</p>
+
+<p>"Commanded by the Emir?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the Emir; for the Obi's waters are red."</p>
+
+<p>"Has Feofar-Khan entered Tomsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"He has."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know if his men have entered Kolyvan?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; for Kolyvan does not yet burn."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, friend. Can I aid you and yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by."</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell."</p>
+
+<p>And Michael, having presented five and twenty roubles to the
+unfortunate woman, who had not even strength to thank him, put
+spurs to his horse once more.</p>
+
+<p>One thing he knew; he must not pass through Tomsk. To go to
+Kolyvan, which the Tartars had not yet reached, was possible.
+Yes, that is what he must do; there he must prepare himself for
+another long stage.
+ There was nothing for it but, having crossed the Obi, to take
+the Irkutsk road and avoid Tomsk.</p>
+
+<p>This new route decided on, Michael must not delay an
+instant.
+ Nor did he, but, putting his horse into a steady gallop, he took
+the road towards the left bank of the Obi, which was still forty
+versts distant.
+ Would there be a ferry boat there, or should he, finding that
+the Tartars had destroyed all the boats, be obliged to swim
+across?</p>
+
+<p>As to his horse, it was by this time pretty well worn out, and
+Michael intended to make it perform this stage only, and then to
+exchange it for a fresh one at Kolyvan. Kolyvan would be like a
+fresh starting point, for on leaving that town his journey would
+take a new form.
+ So long as he traversed a devastated country the difficulties
+must be very great; but if, having avoided Tomsk, he could
+r&#130;sum&#130; the road to Irkutsk across the province of
+Yeniseisk, which was not yet laid waste, he would finish his
+journey in a few days.</p>
+
+<p>Night came on, bringing with it refreshing coolness after the
+heat of the day. At midnight the steppe was profoundly dark.
+ The sound of the horses's hoofs alone was heard on the road,
+except when, every now and then, its master spoke a few
+encouraging words.
+ In such darkness as this great care was necessary lest he should
+leave the road, bordered by pools and streams, tributaries of the
+Obi. Michael therefore advanced as quickly as was consistent with
+safety. He trusted no less to the excellence of his eyes, which
+penetrated the gloom, than to the well-proved sagacity of his
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>Just as Michael dismounted to discover the exact direction of
+the road, he heard a confused murmuring sound from the west. It
+was like the noise of horses' hoofs at some distance on the
+parched ground.
+ Michael listened attentively, putting his ear to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a detachment of cavalry coming by the road from
+Omsk,"
+ he said to himself. "They are marching very quickly, for the
+noise is increasing. Are they Russians or Tartars?"</p>
+
+<p>Michael again listened. "Yes," said he, "they are at a sharp
+trot.
+ My horse cannot outstrip them. If they are Russians I will join
+them; if Tartars I must avoid them. But how? Where can I hide in
+this steppe?"</p>
+
+<p>He gave a look around, and, through the darkness, discovered a
+confused mass at a hundred paces before him on the left of the
+road.
+ "There is a copse!" he exclaimed. "To take refuge there is to
+run the risk of being caught, if they are in search of me; but I
+have no choice."</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments Michael, dragging his horse by the bridle,
+reached a little larch wood, through which the road lay.
+ Beyond this it was destitute of trees, and wound among bogs and
+pools, separated by dwarfed bushes, whins, and heather.
+ The ground on either side was quite impracticable, and the
+detachment must necessarily pass through the wood.
+ They were pursuing the high road to Irkutsk. Plunging in about
+forty feet, he was stopped by a stream running under the
+brushwood.
+ But the shadow was so deep that Michael ran no risk of being
+seen, unless the wood should be carefully searched.
+ He therefore led his horse to the stream and fastened him to a
+tree, returning to the edge of the road to listen and ascertain
+with what sort of people he had to do.</p>
+
+<p>Michael had scarcely taken up his position behind a group of
+larches when a confused light appeared, above which glared
+brighter lights waving about in the shadow.</p>
+
+<p>"Torches!" said he to himself. And he drew quickly back,
+gliding like a savage into the thickest underwood.</p>
+
+<p>As they approached the wood the horses' pace was
+slackened.
+ The horsemen were probably lighting up the road with the
+intention of examining every turn.</p>
+
+<p>Michael feared this, and instinctively drew near to the bank
+of the stream, ready to plunge in if necessary.</p>
+
+<p>Arrived at the top of the wood, the detachment halted.
+ The horsemen dismounted. There were about fifty.
+ A dozen of them carried torches, lighting up the road.</p>
+
+<p>By watching their preparations Michael found to his joy that
+the detachment were not thinking of visiting the copse, but only
+bivouacking near, to rest their horses and allow the men to take
+some refreshment. The horses were soon unsaddled, and began to
+graze on the thick grass which carpeted the ground.
+ The men meantime stretched themselves by the side of the road,
+and partook of the provisions they produced from their
+knapsacks.</p>
+
+<p>Michael's self-possession had never deserted him, and creeping
+amongst the high grass he endeavored not only to examine the
+new-comers, but to hear what they said. It was a detachment from
+Omsk, composed of Usbeck horsemen, a race of the Mongolian
+type.
+ These men, well built, above the medium height, rough, and
+wild-featured, wore on their heads the "talpak," or black
+sheep-skin cap, and on their feet yellow high-heeled boots with
+turned-up toes, like the shoes of the Middle Ages. Their tunics
+were close-fitting, and confined at the waist by a leathern belt
+braided with red.
+ They were armed defensively with a shield, and offensively with
+a curved sword, and a flintlock musket slung at the saddle-bow.
+From their shoulders hung gay-colored cloaks.</p>
+
+<p>The horses, which were feeding at liberty at the edge of the
+wood, were, like their masters, of the Usbeck race.
+ These animals are rather smaller than the Turcomanian horses,
+but are possessed of remarkable strength, and know no other pace
+than the gallop.</p>
+
+<p>This detachment was commanded by a "pendja-baschi"; that is to
+say, a commander of fifty men, having under him a
+"deh-baschi,"
+ or simple commander of ten men. These two officers wore helmets
+and half coats-of-mail; little trumpets fastened to their
+saddle-bows were the distinctive signs of their rank.</p>
+
+<p>The pendja-baschi had been obliged to let his men rest,
+fatigued with a long stage. He and the second officer, smoking
+"beng," the leaf which forms the base of the "has-chisch,"
+ strolled up and down the wood, so that Michael Strogoff without
+being seen, could catch and understand their conversation, which
+was spoken in the Tartar language.</p>
+
+<p>Michael's attention was singularly excited by their very first
+words.
+ It was of him they were speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"This courier cannot be much in advance of us," said the
+pendja-baschi; "and, on the other hand, it is absolutely
+impossible that he can have followed any other route than that of
+the Baraba."</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows if he has left Omsk?" replied the deh-baschi.
+"Perhaps he is still hidden in the town."</p>
+
+<p>"That is to be wished, certainly. Colonel Ogareff would have
+no fear then that the dispatches he bears should ever reach their
+destination."</p>
+
+<p>"They say that he is a native, a Siberian," resumed the
+deh-baschi.
+ "If so, he must be well acquainted with the country, and it is
+possible that he has left the Irkutsk road, depending on
+rejoining it later."</p>
+
+<p>"But then we should be in advance of him," answered the
+pendja-baschi; "for we left Omsk within an hour after his
+departure, and have since followed the shortest road with all the
+speed of our horses.
+ He has either remained in Omsk, or we shall arrive at Tomsk
+before him, so as to cut him off; in either case he will not
+reach Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"A rugged woman, that old Siberian, who is evidently his
+mother,"
+ said the deh-baschi.</p>
+
+<p>At this remark Michael's heart beat violently.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the pendja-baschi. "She stuck to it well that
+the pretended merchant was not her son, but it was too late.
+ Colonel Ogareff was not to be taken in; and, as he said, he will
+know how to make the old witch speak when the time comes."</p>
+
+<p>These words were so many dagger-thrusts for Michael. He was
+known to be a courier of the Czar! A detachment of horsemen on
+his track could not fail to cut him off. And, worst of all, his
+mother was in the hands of the Tartars, and the cruel Ogareff had
+undertaken to make her speak when he wished!</p>
+
+<p>Michael well knew that the brave Siberian would sacrifice her
+life for him. He had fancied that he could not hate Ivan Ogareff
+more, yet a fresh tide of hate now rose in his heart. The wretch
+who had betrayed his country now threatened to torture his
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>The conversation between the two officers continued, and
+Michael understood that an engagement was imminent in the
+neighborhood of Kolyvan, between the Muscovite troops coming from
+the north and the Tartars. A small Russian force of two thousand
+men, reported to have reached the lower course of the Obi, were
+advancing by forced marches towards Tomsk. If such was the case,
+this force, which would soon find itself engaged with the main
+body of Feofar-Khan's army, would be inevitably overwhelmed, and
+the Irkutsk road would be in the entire possession of the
+invaders.</p>
+
+<p>As to himself, Michael learnt, by some words from the
+pendja-baschi, that a price was set on his head, and that orders
+had been given to take him, dead or alive.</p>
+
+<p>It was necessary, therefore, to get the start of the Usbeck
+horsemen on the Irkutsk road, and put the Obi between himself and
+them.
+ But to do that, he must escape before the camp was broken
+up.</p>
+
+<p>His determination taken, Michael prepared to execute it.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, the halt would not be prolonged, and the pendja-baschi
+did not intend to give his men more than an hour's rest, although
+their horses could not have been changed for fresh ones since
+Omsk, and must be as much fatigued as that of Michael
+Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>There was not a moment to lose. It was within an hour of
+morning.
+ It was needful to profit by the darkness to leave the little
+wood and dash along the road; but although night favored it the
+success of such a flight appeared to be almost impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Not wishing to do anything at random, Michael took time for
+reflection, carefully weighing the chances so as to take the
+best.
+ From the situation of the place the result was this-- that he
+could not escape through the back of the wood, the stream which
+bordered it being not only deep, but very wide and muddy.
+ Beneath this thick water was a slimy bog, on which the foot
+could not rest. There was only one way open, the high-road. To
+endeavor to reach it by creeping round the edge of the wood,
+without attracting attention, and then to gallop at headlong
+speed, required all the remaining strength and energy of his
+noble steed.
+ Too probably it would fall dead on reaching the banks of the
+Obi, when, either by boat or by swimming, he must cross this
+important river.
+ This was what Michael had before him.</p>
+
+<p>His energy and courage increased in sight of danger.</p>
+
+<p>His life, his mission, his country, perhaps the safety of his
+mother, were at stake. He could not hesitate.</p>
+
+<p>There was not a moment to be lost. Already there was a slight
+movement among the men of the detachment. A few horsemen were
+strolling up and down the road in front of the wood.
+ The rest were still lying at the foot of the trees, but their
+horses were gradually penetrating towards the center of the
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>Michael had at first thought of seizing one of these horses,
+but he recollected that, of course, they would be as fatigued as
+his own. It was better to trust to his own brave steed, which had
+already rendered him such important service.
+ The good animal, hidden behind a thicket, had escaped the sight
+of the Usbecks. They, besides, had not penetrated so far into the
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>Michael crawled up to his horse through the grass, and found
+him lying down. He patted and spoke gently to him, and managed to
+raise him without noise. Fortunately, the torches were entirely
+consumed, and now went out, the darkness being still profound
+under shelter of the larches. After replacing the bit, Michael
+looked to his girths and stirrups, and began to lead his horse
+quietly away.
+ The intelligent animal followed his master without even making
+the least neigh.</p>
+
+<p>A few Usbeck horses raised their heads, and began to wander
+towards the edge of the wood. Michael held his revolver in his
+hand, ready to blow out the brains of the first Tartar who should
+approach him.
+ But happily the alarm was not given, and he was able to gain the
+angle made by the wood where it joined the road.</p>
+
+<p>To avoid being seen, Michael's intention was not to mount
+until after turning a corner some two hundred feet from the
+wood.
+ Unfortunately, just at the moment that he was issuing from the
+wood, an Usbeck's horse, scenting him, neighed and began to trot
+along the road. His master ran to catch him, and seeing a shadowy
+form moving in the dim light, "Look out!" he shouted.</p>
+
+<p>At the cry, all the men of the bivouac jumped up, and ran to
+seize their horses. Michael leaped on his steed, and galloped
+away.
+ The two officers of the detachment urged on their men to
+follow.</p>
+
+<p>Michael heard a report, and felt a ball pass through his
+tunic.
+ Without turning his head, without replying, he spurred on, and,
+clearing the brushwood with a tremendous bound, he galloped at
+full speed toward the Obi.</p>
+
+<p>The Usbecks' horses being unsaddled gave him a small start,
+but in less than two minutes he heard the tramp of several horses
+gradually gaining on him.</p>
+
+<p>Day was now beginning to break, and objects at some distance
+were becoming visible. Michael turned his head, and perceived a
+horseman rapidly approaching him. It was the deh-baschi. Being
+better mounted, this officer had distanced his detachment.</p>
+
+<p>Without drawing rein, Michael extended his revolver, and took
+a moment's aim. The Usbeck officer, hit in the breast, rolled on
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>But the other horsemen followed him closely, and without
+waiting to assist the deh-baschi, exciting each other by their
+shouts, digging their spurs into their horses' sides, they
+gradually diminished the distance between themselves and
+Michael.</p>
+
+<p>For half an hour only was the latter able to keep out of range
+of the Tartars, but he well knew that his horse was becoming
+weaker, and dreaded every instant that he would stumble never to
+rise again.</p>
+
+<p>It was now light, although the sun had not yet risen above the
+horizon.
+ Two versts distant could be seen a pale line bordered by a few
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>This was the Obi, which flows from the southwest to the
+northeast, the surface almost level with the ground, its bed
+being but the steppe itself.</p>
+
+<p>Several times shots were fired at Michael, but without hitting
+him, and several times too he discharged his revolver on those of
+the soldiers who pressed him too closely. Each time an Usbeck
+rolled on the ground, midst cries of rage from his
+companions.
+ But this pursuit could only terminate to Michael's
+disadvantage.
+ His horse was almost exhausted. He managed to reach the bank of
+the river. The Usbeck detachment was now not more than fifty
+paces behind him.</p>
+
+<p>The Obi was deserted--not a boat of any description which
+could take him over the water!</p>
+
+<p>"Courage, my brave horse!" cried Michael. "Come! A last
+effort!"
+ And he plunged into the river, which here was half a verst in
+width.</p>
+
+<p>It would have been difficult to stand against the current--
+indeed, Michael's horse could get no footing. He must therefore
+swim across the river, although it was rapid as a torrent.
+ Even to attempt it showed Michael's marvelous courage.
+ The soldiers reached the bank, but hesitated to plunge in.</p>
+
+<p>The pendja-baschi seized his musket and took aim at Michael,
+whom he could see in the middle of the stream.
+ The shot was fired, and Michael's horse, struck in the side, was
+borne away by the current.</p>
+
+<p>His master, speedily disentangling himself from his stirrups,
+struck out boldly for the shore. In the midst of a hailstorm of
+balls he managed to reach the opposite side, and disappeared in
+the rushes.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII THE RIVALS</h2>
+
+<p>MICHAEL was in comparative safety, though his situation was
+still terrible. Now that the faithful animal who had so bravely
+borne him had met his death in the waters of the river, how was
+he to continue his journey?</p>
+
+<p>He was on foot, without provisions, in a country devastated by
+the invasion, overrun by the Emir's scouts, and still at a
+considerable distance from the place he was striving to
+reach.
+ "By Heaven, I will get there!" he exclaimed, in reply to all the
+reasons for faltering. "God will protect our sacred Russia."</p>
+
+<p>Michael was out of reach of the Usbeck horsemen.
+ They had not dared to pursue him through the river.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Once more on solid ground Michael stopped to consider what he
+should do next. He wished to avoid Tomsk, now occupied by the
+Tartar troops. Nevertheless, he must reach some town, or at least
+a post-house, where he could procure a horse.
+ A horse once found, he would throw himself out of the beaten
+track, and not again take to the Irkutsk road until in the
+neighborhood of Krasnoiarsk. From that place, if he were quick,
+he hoped to find the way still open, and he intended to go
+through the Lake Baikal provinces in a southeasterly
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>Michael began by going eastward. By following the course of
+the Obi two versts further, he reached a picturesque little town
+lying on a small hill. A few churches, with Byzantine cupolas
+colored green and gold, stood up against the gray sky.
+ This is Kolyvan, where the officers and people employed at Kamsk
+and other towns take refuge during the summer from the unhealthy
+climate of the Baraba. According to the latest news obtained by
+the Czar's courier, Kolyvan could not be yet in the hands of the
+invaders. The Tartar troops, divided into two columns, had
+marched to the left on Omsk, to the right on Tomsk, neglecting
+the intermediate country.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff's plan was simply this--to reach Kolyvan
+before the arrival of the Usbeck horsemen, who would ascend the
+other bank of the Obi to the ferry. There he would procure
+clothes and a horse, and r&#130;sum&#130; the road to Irkutsk
+across the southern steppe.</p>
+
+<p>It was now three o'clock in the morning. The neighborhood of
+Kolyvan was very still, and appeared to have been totally
+abandoned.
+ The country population had evidently fled to the northwards, to
+the province of Yeniseisk, dreading the invasion, which they
+could not resist.</p>
+
+<p>Michael was walking at a rapid pace towards Kolyvan when
+distant firing struck his ear. He stopped, and clearly
+distinguished the dull roar of artillery, and above it a crisp
+rattle which could not be mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>"It is cannon and musketry!" said he. "The little Russian body
+is engaged with the Tartar army! Pray Heaven that I may arrive at
+Kolyvan before them!"</p>
+
+<p>The firing became gradually louder, and soon to the left of
+Kolyvan a mist collected--not smoke, but those great white clouds
+produced by discharges of artillery.</p>
+
+<p>The Usbeck horsemen stopped on the left of the Obi, to await
+the result of the battle. From them Michael had nothing to fear
+as he hastened towards the town.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile the firing increased, and became sensibly
+nearer.
+ It was no longer a confused roar, but distinct reports.
+ At the same time the smoke partially cleared, and it became
+evident that the combatants were rapidly moving southwards.
+ It appeared that Kolyvan was to be attacked on the north
+side.
+ But were the Russians defending it or the Tartars? It being
+impossible to decide this, Michael became greatly perplexed.</p>
+
+<p>He was not more than half a verst from Kolyvan when he
+observed flames shooting up among the houses of the town, and the
+steeple of a church fell in the midst of clouds of smoke and
+fire.
+ Was the struggle, then, in Kolyvan? Michael was compelled to
+think so.
+ It was evident that Russians and Tartars were fighting in the
+streets of the town. Was this a time to seek refuge there?
+ Would he not run a risk of being taken prisoner? Should he
+succeed in escaping from Kolyvan, as he had escaped from Omsk? He
+hesitated and stopped a moment. Would it not be better to try,
+even on foot, to reach some small town, and there procure a horse
+at any price?
+ This was the only thing to be done; and Michael, leaving the
+Obi, went forward to the right of Kolyvan.</p>
+
+<p>The firing had now increased in violence. Flames soon sprang
+up on the left of the town. Fire was devouring one entire quarter
+of Kolyvan.</p>
+
+<p>Michael was running across the steppe endeavoring to gain the
+covert of some trees when a detachment of Tartar cavalry appeared
+on the right.
+ He dared not continue in that direction. The horsemen advanced
+rapidly, and it would have been difficult to escape them.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, in a thick clump of trees, he saw an isolated house,
+which it would be possible to reach before he was perceived.
+ Michael had no choice but to run there, hide himself and ask or
+take something to recruit his strength, for he was exhausted with
+hunger and fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>He accordingly ran on towards this house, still about half a
+verst distant. As he approached, he could see that it was a
+telegraph office. Two wires left it in westerly and easterly
+directions, and a third went towards Kolyvan.</p>
+
+<p>It was to be supposed that under the circumstances this
+station was abandoned; but even if it was, Michael could take
+refuge there, and wait till nightfall, if necessary, to again set
+out across the steppe covered with Tartar scouts.</p>
+
+<p>He ran up to the door and pushed it open.</p>
+
+<p>A single person was in the room whence the telegraphic
+messages were dispatched. This was a clerk, calm, phlegmatic,
+indifferent to all that was passing outside. Faithful to his
+post, he waited behind his little wicket until the public claimed
+his services.</p>
+
+<p>Michael ran up to him, and in a voice broken by fatigue, "What
+do you know?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," answered the clerk, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Are the Russians and Tartars engaged?"</p>
+
+<p>"They say so."</p>
+
+<p>"But who are the victors?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know."</p>
+
+<p>Such calmness, such indifference, in the midst of these
+terrible events, was scarcely credible.</p>
+
+<p>"And is not the wire cut?" said Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"It is cut between Kolyvan and Krasnoiarsk, but it is still
+working between Kolyvan and the Russian frontier."</p>
+
+<p>"For the government?"</p>
+
+<p>"For the government, when it thinks proper. For the public,
+when they pay. Ten copecks a word, whenever you like, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael was about to reply to this strange clerk that he had
+no message to send, that he only implored a little bread and
+water, when the door of the house was again thrown open.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking that it was invaded by Tartars, Michael made ready to
+leap out of the window, when two men only entered the room who
+had nothing of the Tartar soldier about them. One of them held a
+dispatch, written in pencil, in his hand, and, passing the other,
+he hurried up to the wicket of the imperturbable clerk.</p>
+
+<p>In these two men Michael recognized with astonishment, which
+everyone will understand, two personages of whom he was not
+thinking at all, and whom he had never expected to see again.
+ They were the two reporters, Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet, no
+longer traveling companions, but rivals, enemies, now that they
+were working on the field of battle.</p>
+
+<p>They had left Ichim only a few hours after the departure of
+Michael Strogoff, and they had arrived at Kolyvan before him, by
+following the same road, in consequence of his losing three days
+on the banks of the Irtych. And now, after being both present at
+the engagement between the Russians and Tartars before the town,
+they had left just as the struggle broke out in the streets, and
+ran to the telegraph office, so as to send off their rival
+dispatches to Europe, and forestall each other in their report of
+events.</p>
+
+<p>Michael stood aside in the shadow, and without being seen
+himself he could see and hear all that was going on.
+ He would now hear interesting news, and would find out whether
+or not he could enter Kolyvan.</p>
+
+<p>Blount, having distanced his companion, took possession of the
+wicket, whilst Alcide Jolivet, contrary to his usual habit,
+stamped with impatience.</p>
+
+<p>"Ten copecks a word," said the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>Blount deposited a pile of roubles on the shelf, whilst his
+rival looked on with a sort of stupefaction.</p>
+
+<p>"Good," said the clerk. And with the greatest coolness in the
+world he began to telegraph the following dispatch: "Daily
+Telegraph, London.</p>
+
+<p>"From Kolyvan, Government of Omsk, Siberia, 6th August.</p>
+
+<p>"Engagement between Russian and Tartar troops."</p>
+
+<p>The reading was in a distinct voice, so that Michael heard all
+that the English correspondent was sending to his paper.</p>
+
+<p>"Russians repulsed with great loss. Tartars entered Kolyvan
+to-day."
+ These words ended the dispatch.</p>
+
+<p>"My turn now," cried Alcide Jolivet, anxious to send off his
+dispatch, addressed to his cousin.</p>
+
+<p>But that was not Blount's idea, who did not intend to give up
+the wicket, but have it in his power to send off the news just as
+the events occurred. He would therefore not make way for his
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>"But you have finished!" exclaimed Jolivet.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not finished," returned Harry Blount quietly.</p>
+
+<p>And he proceeded to write some sentences, which he handed in
+to the clerk, who read out in his calm voice: "John Gilpin was a
+citizen of credit and renown; a train-band captain eke was he of
+famous London town."</p>
+
+<p>Harry Blount was telegraphing some verses learned in his
+childhood, in order to employ the time, and not give up his place
+to his rival.
+ It would perhaps cost his paper some thousands of roubles, but
+it would be the first informed. France could wait.</p>
+
+<p>Jolivet's fury may be imagined, though under any other
+circumstances he would have thought it fair warfare.
+ He even endeavored to force the clerk to take his dispatch in
+preference to that of his rival.</p>
+
+<p>"It is that gentleman's right," answered the clerk coolly,
+pointing to Blount, and smiling in the most amiable manner.
+ And he continued faithfully to transmit to the Daily Telegraph
+the well-known verses of Cowper.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst he was working Blount walked to the window and, his
+field glass to his eyes, watched all that was going on in the
+neighborhood of Kolyvan, so as to complete his information. In a
+few minutes he resumed his place at the wicket, and added to his
+telegram: "Two churches are in flames. The fire appears to gain
+on the right.
+ 'John Gilpin's spouse said to her dear, Though wedded we have
+been these twice ten tedious years, yet we no holiday have
+seen.'"</p>
+
+<p>Alcide Jolivet would have liked to strangle the honorable
+correspondent of the Daily Telegraph.</p>
+
+<p>He again interrupted the clerk, who, quite unmoved, merely
+replied: "It is his right, sir, it is his right--at ten copecks a
+word."</p>
+
+<p>And he telegraphed the following news, just brought him by
+Blount: "Russian fugitives are escaping from the town.
+ 'Away went Gilpin--who but he? His fame soon spread around: He
+carries weight! he rides a race! 'Tis for a thousand pound!'"
+ And Blount turned round with a quizzical look at his rival.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide Jolivet fumed.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Harry Blount had returned to the window, but
+this time his attention was diverted by the interest of the scene
+before him. Therefore, when the clerk had finished telegraphing
+the last lines dictated by Blount, Alcide Jolivet noiselessly
+took his place at the wicket, and, just as his rival had done,
+after quietly depositing a respectable pile of roubles on the
+shelf, he delivered his dispatch, which the clerk read aloud:
+"Madeleine Jolivet, 10, Faubourg Montmartre, Paris.</p>
+
+<p>"From Kolyvan, Government of Omsk, Siberia, 6th August.</p>
+
+<p>"Fugitives are escaping from the town. Russians defeated.
+ Fiercely pursued by the Tartar cavalry."</p>
+
+<p>And as Harry Blount returned he heard Jolivet completing his
+telegram by singing in a mocking tone:</p>
+
+<p>"II est un petit homme, Tout habille de gris, Dans Paris!"</p>
+
+<p>Imitating his rival, Alcide Jolivet had used a merry refrain
+of Beranger.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo!" said Harry Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so," answered Jolivet.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime the situation at Kolyvan was alarming in the
+extreme.
+ The battle was raging nearer, and the firing was incessant.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the telegraph office shook to its
+foundations.
+ A shell had made a hole in the wall, and a cloud of dust filled
+the office.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide was just finishing writing his lines; but to stop, dart
+on the shell, seize it in both hands, throw it out of the window,
+and return to the wicket, was only the affair of a moment.</p>
+
+<p>Five seconds later the shell burst outside. Continuing with
+the greatest possible coolness, Alcide wrote: "A six-inch shell
+has just blown up the wall of the telegraph office.
+ Expecting a few more of the same size."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff had no doubt that the Russians were driven
+out of Kolyvan. His last resource was to set out across the
+southern steppe.</p>
+
+<p>Just then renewed firing broke out close to the telegraph
+house, and a perfect shower of bullets smashed all the glass in
+the windows.
+ Harry Blount fell to the ground wounded in the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Jolivet even at such a moment, was about to add this
+postscript to his dispatch: "Harry Blount, correspondent of the
+Daily Telegraph, has fallen at my side struck by--" when the
+imperturbable clerk said calmly: "Sir, the wire has broken." And,
+leaving his wicket, he quietly took his hat, brushed it round
+with his sleeve, and, still smiling, disappeared through a little
+door which Michael had not before perceived.</p>
+
+<p>The house was surrounded by Tartar soldiers, and neither
+Michael nor the reporters could effect their retreat.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide Jolivet, his useless dispatch in his hand, had run to
+Blount, stretched on the ground, and had bravely lifted him on
+his shoulders, with the intention of flying with him.
+ He was too late!</p>
+
+<p>Both were prisoners; and, at the same time, Michael, taken
+unawares as he was about to leap from the window, fell into the
+hands of the Tartars!</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h3>END OF BOOK I</h3>
+
+<h3> </h3>
+
+<h1>BOOK II</h1>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I A TARTAR CAMP</h2>
+
+<p>AT a day's march from Kolyvan, several versts beyond the town
+of Diachinks, stretches a wide plain, planted here and there with
+great trees, principally pines and cedars.
+ This part of the steppe is usually occupied during the warm
+season by Siberian shepherds, and their numerous flocks.
+ But now it might have been searched in vain for one of its nomad
+inhabitants. Not that the plain was deserted.
+ It presented a most animated appearance.</p>
+
+<p>There stood the Tartar tents; there Feofar-Khan, the terrible
+Emir of Bokhara, was encamped; and there on the following day,
+the 7th of August, were brought the prisoners taken at Kolyvan
+after the annihilation of the Russian force, which had vainly
+attempted to oppose the progress of the invaders.
+ Of the two thousand men who had engaged with the two columns of
+the enemy, the bases of which rested on Tomsk and Omsk, only a
+few hundred remained. Thus events were going badly, and the
+imperial government appeared to have lost its power beyond the
+frontiers of the Ural--for a time at least, for the Russians
+could not fail eventually to defeat the savage hordes of the
+invaders.
+ But in the meantime the invasion had reached the center of
+Siberia, and it was spreading through the revolted country both
+to the eastern, and the western provinces.
+ If the troops of the Amoor and the province of Takutsk did not
+arrive in time to occupy it, Irkutsk, the capital of Asiatic
+Russia, being insufficiently garrisoned, would fall into the
+hands of the Tartars, and the Grand Duke, brother of the Emperor,
+would be sacrificed to the vengeance of Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>
+ What had become of Michael Strogoff? Had he broken down under
+the weight of so many trials? Did he consider himself conquered
+by the series of disasters which, since the adventure of Ichim,
+had increased in magnitude? Did he think his cause lost? that his
+mission had failed? that his orders could no longer be
+obeyed?</p>
+
+<p>Michael was one of those men who never give in while life
+exists.
+ He was yet alive; he still had the imperial letter safe; his
+disguise had been undiscovered. He was included amongst the
+numerous prisoners whom the Tartars were dragging with them like
+cattle; but by approaching Tomsk he was at the same time drawing
+nearer to Irkutsk. Besides, he was still in front of Ivan
+Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>"I will get there!" he repeated to himself.</p>
+
+<p>Since the affair of Kolyvan all the powers of his mind were
+concentrated on one object--to become free! How should he escape
+from the Emir's soldiers?</p>
+
+<p>Feofar's camp presented a magnificent spectacle.</p>
+
+<p>Numberless tents, of skin, felt, or silk, glistened in the
+rays of the sun. The lofty plumes which surmounted their conical
+tops waved amidst banners, flags, and pennons of every color.
+ The richest of these tents belonged to the Seides and Khodjas,
+who are the principal personages of the khanat.
+ A special pavilion, ornamented with a horse's tail issuing from
+a sheaf of red and white sticks artistically interlaced,
+indicated the high rank of these Tartar chiefs.
+ Then in the distance rose several thousand of the Turcoman
+tents, called "karaoy," which had been carried on the backs of
+camels.</p>
+
+<p>The camp contained at least a hundred and fifty thousand
+soldiers, as many foot as horse soldiers, collected under the
+name of Alamanes. Amongst them, and as the principal types of
+Turkestan, would have been directly remarked the Tadjiks, from
+their regular features, white skin, tall forms, and black eyes
+and hair; they formed the bulk of the Tartar army, and of them
+the khanats of Khokhand and Koundouge had furnished a contingent
+nearly equal to that of Bokhara. With the Tadjiks were mingled
+specimens of different races who either reside in Turkestan or
+whose native countries border on it.
+ There were Usbecks, red-bearded, small in stature, similar to
+those who had pursued Michael. Here were Kirghiz, with flat faces
+like the Kalmucks, dressed in coats of mail: some carried the
+lance, bows, and arrows of Asiatic manufacture; some the saber, a
+matchlock gun, and the "tschakane," a little short-handled ax,
+the wounds from which invariably prove fatal.
+ There were Mongols--of middle height, with black hair plaited
+into pigtails, which hung down their back; round faces, swarthy
+complexions, lively deep-set eyes, scanty beards-- dressed in
+blue nankeen trimmed with black plush, sword-belts of leather
+with silver buckles, coats gayly braided, and silk caps edged
+with fur and three ribbons fluttering behind.
+ Brown-skinned Afghans, too, might have been seen.
+ Arabs, having the primitive type of the beautiful Semitic races;
+and Turcomans, with eyes which looked as if they had lost the
+pupil,--all enrolled under the Emir's flag, the flag of
+incendiaries and devastators.</p>
+
+<p>Among these free soldiers were a certain number of slave
+soldiers, principally Persians, commanded by officers of the same
+nation, and they were certainly not the least esteemed of
+Feofar-Khan's army.</p>
+
+<p>If to this list are added the Jews, who acted as servants,
+their robes confined with a cord, and wearing on their heads
+instead of the turban, which is forbidden them, little caps of
+dark cloth; if with these groups are mingled some hundreds of
+"kalenders," a sort of religious mendicants, clothed in rags,
+covered by a leopard skin, some idea may be formed of the
+enormous agglomerations of different tribes included under the
+general denomination of the Tartar army.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be more romantic than this picture, in
+delineating which the most skillful artist would have exhausted
+all the colors of his palette.</p>
+
+<p>Feofar's tent overlooked the others. Draped in large folds of
+a brilliant silk looped with golden cords and tassels, surmounted
+by tall plumes which waved in the wind like fans, it occupied the
+center of a wide clearing, sheltered by a grove of magnificent
+birch and pine trees. Before this tent, on a japanned table
+inlaid with precious stones, was placed the sacred book of the
+Koran, its pages being of thin gold-leaf delicately engraved.
+ Above floated the Tartar flag, quartered with the Emir's
+arms.</p>
+
+<p>In a semicircle round the clearing stood the tents of the
+great functionaries of Bokhara. There resided the chief of the
+stables, who has the right to follow the Emir on horseback even
+into the court of his palace; the grand falconer; the
+"housch-begui," bearer of the royal seal; the "toptschi-baschi,"
+grand master of the artillery; the "khodja," chief of the
+council, who receives the prince's kiss, and may present himself
+before him with his girdle untied; the "scheikh-oul-islam," chief
+of the Ulemas, representing the priests; the "cazi-askev," who,
+in the Emir's absence settles all disputes raised among the
+soldiers; and lastly, the chief of the astrologers, whose great
+business is to consult the stars every time the Khan thinks of
+changing his quarters.</p>
+
+<p>When the prisoners were brought into the camp, the Emir was in
+his tent.
+ He did not show himself. This was fortunate, no doubt. A sign, a
+word from him might have been the signal for some bloody
+execution.
+ But he intrenched himself in that isolation which constitutes in
+part the majesty of Eastern kings. He who does not show himself
+is admired, and, above all, feared.</p>
+
+<p>As to the prisoners, they were to be penned up in some
+enclosure, where, ill-treated, poorly fed, and exposed to all the
+inclemencies of the weather, they would await Feofar's
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>The most docile and patient of them all was undoubtedly
+Michael Strogoff. He allowed himself to be led, for they were
+leading him where he wished to go, and under conditions of safety
+which free he could not have found on the road from Kolyvan to
+Tomsk. To escape before reaching that town was to risk again
+falling into the hands of the scouts, who were scouring the
+steppe. The most eastern line occupied by the Tartar columns was
+not situated beyond the eighty-fifth meridian, which passes
+through Tomsk. This meridian once passed, Michael considered that
+he should be beyond the hostile zones, that he could traverse
+Genisci without danger, and gain Krasnoiarsk before Feofar-Khan
+had invaded the province.</p>
+
+<p>"Once at Tomsk," he repeated to himself, to repress some
+feelings of impatience which he could not entirely master, "in a
+few minutes I should be beyond the outposts; and twelve hours
+gained on Feofar, twelve hours on Ogareff, that surely would be
+enough to give me a start of them to Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>The thing that Michael dreaded more than everything else was
+the presence of Ivan Ogareff in the Tartar camp. Besides the
+danger of being recognized, he felt, by a sort of instinct, that
+this was the traitor whom it was especially necessary to
+precede.
+ He understood, too, that the union of Ogareff's troops with
+those of Feofar would complete the invading army, and that the
+junction once effected, the army would march en masse on the
+capital of Eastern Siberia. All his apprehensions came from this
+quarter, and he dreaded every instant to hear some flourish of
+trumpets, announcing the arrival of the lieutenant of the
+Emir.</p>
+
+<p>To this was added the thought of his mother, of Nadia,-- the
+one a prisoner at Omsk; the other dragged on board the Irtych
+boats, and no doubt a captive, as Marfa Strogoff was.
+ He could do nothing for them. Should he ever see them again?
+ At this question, to which he dared not reply, his heart sank
+very low.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time with Michael Strogoff and so many other
+prisoners Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet had also been taken to
+the Tartar camp.
+ Their former traveling companion, captured like them at the
+telegraph office, knew that they were penned up with him in the
+enclosure, guarded by numerous sentinels, but he did not wish to
+accost them.
+ It mattered little to him, at this time especially, what they
+might think of him since the affair at Ichim. Besides, he desired
+to be alone, that he might act alone, if necessary. He therefore
+held himself aloof from his former acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p>From the moment that Harry Blount had fallen by his side,
+Jolivet had not ceased his attentions to him. During the journey
+from Kolyvan to the camp--that is to say, for several
+hours--Blount, by leaning on his companion's arm, had been
+enabled to follow the rest of the prisoners.
+ He tried to make known that he was a British subject; but it had
+no effect on the barbarians, who only replied by prods with a
+lance or sword.
+ The correspondent of the Daily Telegraph was, therefore, obliged
+to submit to the common lot, resolving to protest later, and
+obtain satisfaction for such treatment. But the journey was not
+the less disagreeable to him, for his wound caused him much pain,
+and without Alcide Jolivet's assistance he might never have
+reached the camp.</p>
+
+<p>Jolivet, whose practical philosophy never abandoned him, had
+physically and morally strengthened his companion by every means
+in his power.
+ His first care, when they found themselves definitely
+established in the enclosure, was to examine Blount's wound.
+Having managed carefully to draw off his coat, he found that the
+shoulder had been only grazed by the shot.</p>
+
+<p>"This is nothing," he said. "A mere scratch! After two or
+three dressings you will be all to rights."</p>
+
+<p>"But these dressings?" asked Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"I will make them for you myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you are something of a doctor?"</p>
+
+<p>"All Frenchmen are something of doctors."</p>
+
+<p>And on this affirmation Alcide, tearing his handkerchief, made
+lint of one piece, bandages of the other, took some water from a
+well dug in the middle of the enclosure, bathed the wound, and
+skillfully placed the wet rag on Harry Blount's shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"I treat you with water," he said. "This liquid is the most
+efficacious sedative known for the treatment of wounds, and is
+the most employed now.
+ Doctors have taken six thousand years to discover that! Yes, six
+thousand years in round numbers!"</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you, M. Jolivet," answered Harry, stretching himself
+on a bed of dry leaves, which his companion had arranged for him
+in the shade of a birch tree.</p>
+
+<p>"Bah! it's nothing! You would do as much for me."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not quite so sure," said Blount candidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, stupid! All English are generous."</p>
+
+<p>"Doubtless; but the French?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the French--they are brutes, if you like!
+ But what redeems them is that they are French. Say nothing more
+about that, or rather, say nothing more at all.
+ Rest is absolutely necessary for you."</p>
+
+<p>But Harry Blount had no wish to be silent. If the wound, in
+prudence, required rest, the correspondent of the Daily Telegraph
+was not a man to indulge himself.</p>
+
+<p>"M. Jolivet," he asked, "do you think that our last dispatches
+have been able to pass the Russian frontier?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" answered Alcide. "By this time you may be sure that
+my beloved cousin knows all about the affair at Kolyvan."</p>
+
+<p>"How many copies does your cousin work off of her
+dispatches?"
+ asked Blount, for the first time putting his question direct to
+his companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," answered Alcide, laughing, "my cousin is a very
+discreet person, who does not like to be talked about, and who
+would be in despair if she troubled the sleep of which you are in
+need."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't wish to sleep," replied the Englishman. "What will
+your cousin think of the affairs of Russia?"</p>
+
+<p>"That they seem for the time in a bad way. But, bah! the
+Muscovite government is powerful; it cannot be really uneasy at
+an invasion of barbarians."</p>
+
+<p>"Too much ambition has lost the greatest empires," answered
+Blount, who was not exempt from a certain English jealousy with
+regard to Russian pretensions in Central Asia.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do not let us talk politics," cried Jolivet. "It is
+forbidden by the faculty. Nothing can be worse for wounds in the
+shoulder-- unless it was to put you to sleep."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us, then, talk of what we ought to do," replied
+Blount.
+ "M. Jolivet, I have no intention at all of remaining a prisoner
+to these Tartars for an indefinite time."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I, either, by Jove!"</p>
+
+<p>"We will escape on the first opportunity?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if there is no other way of regaining our liberty."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know of any other?" asked Blount, looking at his
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. We are not belligerents; we are neutral, and we
+will claim our freedom."</p>
+
+<p>"From that brute of a Feofar-Khan?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; he would not understand," answered Jolivet; "but from his
+lieutenant, Ivan Ogareff."</p>
+
+<p>"He is a villain."</p>
+
+<p>" No doubt; but the villain is a Russian. He knows that it
+does not do to trifle with the rights of men, and he has no
+interest to retain us; on the contrary. But to ask a favor of
+that gentleman does not quite suit my taste."</p>
+
+<p>"But that gentleman is not in the camp, or at least I have not
+seen him here," observed Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"He will come. He will not fail to do that. He must join the
+Emir. Siberia is cut in two now, and very certainly Feofar's army
+is only waiting for him to advance on Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"And once free, what shall we do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Once free, we will continue our campaign, and follow the
+Tartars, until the time comes when we can make our way into the
+Russian camp.
+ We must not give up the game. No, indeed; we have only just
+begun.
+ You, friend, have already had the honor of being wounded in the
+service of the Daily Telegraph, whilst I--I have as yet suffered
+nothing in my cousin's service. Well, well! Good," murmured
+Alcide Jolivet; "there he is asleep. A few hours' sleep and a few
+cold water compresses are all that are required to set an
+Englishman on his legs again.
+ These fellows are made of cast iron."</p>
+
+<p>And whilst Harry Blount rested, Alcide watched near him, after
+having drawn out his note book, which he loaded with notes,
+determined besides to share them with his companion, for the
+greater satisfaction of the readers of the Daily Telegraph.
+Events had united them one with the other. They were no longer
+jealous of each other. So, then, the thing that Michael Strogoff
+dreaded above everything was the most lively desire of the two
+correspondents.
+ Ivan Ogareff's arrival would evidently be of use to them.
+ Blount and Jolivet's interest was, therefore, contrary to that
+of Michael. The latter well understood the situation, and it was
+one reason, added to many others, which prevented him from
+approaching his former traveling companions.
+ He therefore managed so as not to be seen by them.</p>
+
+<p>Four days passed thus without the state of things being in
+anywise altered. The prisoners heard no talk of the breaking up
+of the Tartar camp. They were strictly guarded.
+ It would have been impossible for them to pass the cordon of
+foot and horse soldiers, which watched them night and day.
+ As to the food which was given them it was barely
+sufficient.
+ Twice in the twenty-four hours they were thrown a piece of the
+intestines of goats grilled on the coals, or a few bits of that
+cheese called "kroute," made of sour ewe's milk, and which,
+soaked in mare's milk, forms the Kirghiz dish, commonly called
+"koumyss." And this was all.
+ It may be added that the weather had become detestable.
+ There were considerable atmospheric commotions, bringing squalls
+mingled with rain. The unfortunate prisoners, destitute of
+shelter, had to bear all the inclemencies of the weather, nor was
+there the slightest alleviation to their misery.
+ Several wounded women and children died, and the prisoners were
+themselves compelled to dig graves for the bodies of those whom
+their jailers would not even take the trouble to bury.</p>
+
+<p>During this trying period Alcide Jolivet and Michael Strogoff
+worked hard, each in the portions of the enclosure in which they
+found themselves.
+ Healthy and vigorous, they suffered less than so many others,
+and could better endure the hardships to which they were
+exposed.
+ By their advice, and the assistance they rendered, they were of
+the greatest possible use to their suffering and despairing
+fellow-captives.</p>
+
+<p>Was this state of things to last? Would Feofar-Khan, satisfied
+with his first success, wait some time before marching on
+Irkutsk? Such, it was to be feared, would be the case.
+ But it was not so. The event so much wished for by Jolivet and
+Blount, so much dreaded by Michael, occurred on the morning of
+the 12th of August.</p>
+
+<p>On that day the trumpets sounded, the drums beat, the cannon
+roared.
+ A huge cloud of dust swept along the road from Kolyvan. Ivan
+Ogareff, followed by several thousand men, made his entry into
+the Tartar camp.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II CORRESPONDENTS IN TROUBLE</h2>
+
+<p>IVAN OGAREFF was bringing up the main body of the army of the
+Emir. The cavalry and infantry now under him had formed part of
+the column which had taken Omsk. Ogareff, not having been able to
+reduce the high town, in which, it must be remembered, the
+governor and garrison had sought refuge, had decided to pass on,
+not wishing to delay operations which ought to lead to the
+conquest of Eastern Siberia. He therefore left a garrison in
+Omsk, and, reinforcing himself en route with the conquerors of
+Kolyvan, joined Feofar's army.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff's soldiers halted at the outposts of the
+camp.
+ They received no orders to bivouac. Their chief's plan,
+doubtless, was not to halt there, but to press on and reach Tomsk
+in the shortest possible time, it being an important town,
+naturally intended to become the center of future operations.</p>
+
+<p>Besides his soldiers, Ogareff was bringing a convoy of Russian
+and Siberian prisoners, captured either at Omsk or Kolyvan. These
+unhappy creatures were not led to the enclosure--already too
+crowded--but were forced to remain at the outposts without
+shelter, almost without nourishment.
+ What fate was Feofar-Khan reserving for these unfortunates?
+ Would he imprison them in Tomsk, or would some bloody execution,
+familiar to the Tartar chiefs, remove them when they were found
+too inconvenient? This was the secret of the capricious Emir.</p>
+
+<p>
+ This army had not come from Omsk and Kolyvan without bringing in
+its train the usual crowd of beggars, freebooters, pedlars, and
+gypsies, which compose the rear-guard of an army on the
+march.</p>
+
+<p>All these people lived on the country traversed, and left
+little of anything behind them. There was, therefore, a necessity
+for pushing forward, if only to secure provisions for the troops.
+The whole region between Ichim and the Obi, now completely
+devastated, no longer offered any resources.
+ The Tartars left a desert behind them.</p>
+
+<p>Conspicuous among the gypsies who had hastened from the
+western provinces was the Tsigane troop, which had accompanied
+Michael Strogoff as far as Perm. Sangarre was there. This fierce
+spy, the tool of Ivan Ogareff, had not deserted her master.
+Ogareff had traveled rapidly to Ichim, whilst Sangarre and her
+band had proceeded to Omsk by the southern part of the
+province.</p>
+
+<p>It may be easily understood how useful this woman was to
+Ogareff. With her gypsy-band she could penetrate anywhere.
+ Ivan Ogareff was kept acquainted with all that was going on in
+the very heart of the invaded provinces. There were a hundred
+eyes, a hundred ears, open in his service. Besides, he paid
+liberally for this espionage, from which he derived so much
+advantage.</p>
+
+<p>Once Sangarre, being implicated in a very serious affair, had
+been saved by the Russian officer. She never forgot what she owed
+him, and had devoted herself to his service body and soul.</p>
+
+<p>When Ivan Ogareff entered on the path of treason, he saw at
+once how he might turn this woman to account.
+ Whatever order he might give her, Sangarre would execute it.
+ An inexplicable instinct, more powerful still than that of
+gratitude, had urged her to make herself the slave of the traitor
+to whom she had been attached since the very beginning of his
+exile in Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>Confidante and accomplice, Sangarre, without country, without
+family, had been delighted to put her vagabond life to the
+service of the invaders thrown by Ogareff on Siberia. To the
+wonderful cunning natural to her race she added a wild energy,
+which knew neither forgiveness nor pity.
+ She was a savage worthy to share the wigwam of an Apache or the
+hut of an Andaman.</p>
+
+<p>Since her arrival at Omsk, where she had rejoined him with her
+Tsiganes, Sangarre had not again left Ogareff. The circumstance
+that Michael and Marfa Strogoff had met was known to her.
+ She knew and shared Ogareff's fears concerning the journey of a
+courier of the Czar. Having Marfa Strogoff in her power, she
+would have been the woman to torture her with all the refinement
+of a RedSkin in order to wrest her secret from her. But the hour
+had not yet come in which Ogareff wished the old Siberian to
+speak.
+ Sangarre had to wait, and she waited, without losing sight of
+her whom she was watching, observing her slightest gestures, her
+slightest words, endeavoring to catch the word "son" escaping
+from her lips, but as yet always baffled by Marfa's
+taciturnity.</p>
+
+<p>At the first flourish of the trumpets several officers of high
+rank, followed by a brilliant escort of Usbeck horsemen, moved to
+the front of the camp to receive Ivan Ogareff. Arrived in his
+presence, they paid him the greatest respect, and invited him to
+accompany them to Feofar-Khan's tent.</p>
+
+<p>Imperturbable as usual, Ogareff replied coldly to the
+deference paid to him. He was plainly dressed; but, from a sort
+of impudent bravado, he still wore the uniform of a Russian
+officer.</p>
+
+<p>As he was about to enter the camp, Sangarre, passing among the
+officers approached and remained motionless before him.
+ "Nothing?" asked Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"Have patience."</p>
+
+<p>"Is the time approaching when you will force the old woman to
+speak?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is approaching, Sangarre."</p>
+
+<p>"When will the old woman speak?"</p>
+
+<p>"When we reach Tomsk."</p>
+
+<p>"And we shall be there--"</p>
+
+<p>"In three days."</p>
+
+<p>A strange gleam shot from Sangarre's great black eyes, and she
+retired with a calm step. Ogareff pressed his spurs into his
+horse's flanks, and, followed by his staff of Tartar officers,
+rode towards the Emir's tent.</p>
+
+<p>Feofar-Khan was expecting his lieutenant. The council,
+composed of the bearer of the royal seal, the khodja, and some
+high officers, had taken their places in the tent.
+ Ivan Ogareff dismounted and entered.</p>
+
+<p>Feofar-Khan was a man of forty, tall, rather pale, of a fierce
+countenance, and evil eyes. A curly black beard flowed over his
+chest.
+ With his war costume, coat of mail of gold and silver,
+cross-belt and scabbard glistening with precious stones, boots
+with golden spurs, helmet ornamented with an aigrette of
+brilliant diamonds, Feofar presented an aspect rather strange
+than imposing for a Tartar Sardana-palus, an undisputed
+sovereign, who directs at his pleasure the life and fortune of
+his subjects.</p>
+
+<p>When Ivan Ogareff appeared, the great dignitaries remained
+seated on their gold-embroidered cushions; but Feofar rose from a
+rich divan which occupied the back part of the tent, the ground
+being hidden under the thick velvet-pile of a Bokharian
+carpet.</p>
+
+<p>The Emir approached Ogareff and gave him a kiss, the meaning
+of which he could not mistake. This kiss made the lieutenant
+chief of the council, and placed him temporarily above the
+khodja.</p>
+
+<p>Then Feofar spoke. "I have no need to question you," said he;
+"speak, Ivan. You will find here ears very ready to listen to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Takhsir," answered Ogareff, "this is what I have to make
+known to you." He spoke in the Tartar language, giving to his
+phrases the emphatic turn which distinguishes the languages of
+the Orientals. "Takhsir, this is not the time for unnecessary
+words.
+ What I have done at the head of your troops, you know.
+ The lines of the Ichim and the Irtych are now in our power; and
+the Turcoman horsemen can bathe their horses in the now Tartar
+waters.
+ The Kirghiz hordes rose at the voice of Feofar-Khan. You can now
+push your troops towards the east, and where the sun rises, or
+towards the west, where he sets."</p>
+
+<p>"And if I march with the sun?" asked the Emir, without his
+countenance betraying any of his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"To march with the sun," answered Ogareff, "is to throw
+yourself towards Europe; it is to conquer rapidly the Siberian
+provinces of Tobolsk as far as the Ural Mountains."</p>
+
+<p>"And if I go to meet this luminary of the heavens?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is to subdue to the Tartar dominion, with Irkutsk, the
+richest countries of Central Asia."</p>
+
+<p>"But the armies of the Sultan of St. Petersburg?" said
+Feofar-Khan, designating the Emperor of Russia by this strange
+title.</p>
+
+<p>"You have nothing to fear from them," replied Ivan
+Ogareff.
+ "The invasion has been sudden; and before the Russian army can
+succor them, Irkutsk or Tobolsk will have fallen into your
+power.
+ The Czar's troops have been overwhelmed at Kolyvan, as they will
+be everywhere where yours meet them."</p>
+
+<p>"And what advice does your devotion to the Tartar cause
+suggest?"
+ asked the Emir, after a few moments' silence.</p>
+
+<p>"My advice," answered Ivan Ogareff quickly, "is to march to
+meet the sun.
+ It is to give the grass of the eastern steppes to the Turcoman
+horses to consume. It is to take Irkutsk, the capital of the
+eastern provinces, and with it a hostage, the possession of whom
+is worth a whole country.
+ In the place of the Czar, the Grand Duke his brother must fall
+into your hands."</p>
+
+<p>This was the great result aimed at by Ivan Ogareff. To listen
+to him, one would have taken him for one of the cruel descendants
+of Stephan Razine, the celebrated pirate who ravaged Southern
+Russia in the eighteenth century.
+ To seize the Grand Duke, murder him pitilessly, would fully
+satisfy his hatred. Besides, with the capture of Irkutsk, all
+Eastern Siberia would pass to the Tartars.</p>
+
+<p>"It shall be thus, Ivan," replied Feofar.</p>
+
+<p>"What are your orders, Takhsir?"</p>
+
+<p>"To-day our headquarters shall be removed to Tomsk."</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff bowed, and, followed by the housch-begui, he retired
+to execute the Emir's orders.</p>
+
+<p>As he was about to mount his horse, to return to the outposts,
+a tumult broke out at some distance, in the part of the camp
+reserved for the prisoners. Shouts were heard, and two or three
+shots fired.
+ Perhaps it was an attempt at revolt or escape, which must be
+summarily suppressed.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff and the housch-begui walked forward and almost
+immediately two men, whom the soldiers had not been able to keep
+back appeared before them.</p>
+
+<p>The housch-begui, without more information, made a sign which
+was an order for death, and the heads of the two prisoners would
+have rolled on the ground had not Ogareff uttered a few words
+which arrested the sword already raised aloft.
+ The Russian had perceived that these prisoners were strangers,
+and he ordered them to be brought to him.</p>
+
+<p>They were Harry Blount and Alcide jolivet.</p>
+
+<p>On Ogareff's arrival in the camp, they had demanded to be
+conducted to his presence. The soldiers had refused.
+ In consequence, a struggle, an attempt at flight, shots fired
+which happily missed the two correspondents, but their execution
+would not have been long delayed, if it had not been for the
+intervention of the Emir's lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>The latter observed the prisoners for some moments, they being
+absolutely unknown to him. They had been present at that scene in
+the post-house at Ichim, in which Michael Strogoff had been
+struck by Ogareff; but the brutal traveler had paid no attention
+to the persons then collected in the common room.</p>
+
+<p>Blount and Jolivet, on the contrary, recognized him at once,
+and the latter said in a low voice, "Hullo! It seems that Colonel
+Ogareff and the rude personage of Ichim are one!" Then he added
+in his companion's ear, "Explain our affair, Blount. You will do
+me a service.
+ This Russian colonel in the midst of a Tartar camp disgusts me;
+and although, thanks to him, my head is still on my shoulders, my
+eyes would exhibit my feelings were I to attempt to look him in
+the face."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Alcide Jolivet assumed a look of complete and
+haughty indifference.</p>
+
+<p>Whether or not Ivan Ogareff perceived that the prisoner's
+attitude was insulting towards him, he did not let it appear.
+ "Who are you, gentlemen?" he asked in Russian, in a cold tone,
+but free from its usual rudeness.</p>
+
+<p>"Two correspondents of English and French newspapers,"
+ replied Blount laconically.</p>
+
+<p>"You have, doubtless, papers which will establish your
+identity?"</p>
+
+<p>"Here are letters which accredit us in Russia, from the
+English and French chancellor's office."</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff took the letters which Blount held out, and read
+them attentively. "You ask," said he, "authorization to follow
+our military operations in Siberia?"</p>
+
+<p>"We ask to be free, that is all," answered the English
+correspondent dryly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are so, gentlemen," answered Ogareff; "I am curious to
+read your articles in the Daily Telegraph."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," replied Blount, with the most imperturbable coolness,
+"it is sixpence a number, including postage." And thereupon he
+returned to his companion, who appeared to approve completely of
+his replies.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff, without frowning, mounted his horse, and going
+to the head of his escort, soon disappeared in a cloud of
+dust.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Jolivet, what do you think of Colonel Ivan Ogareff,
+general-in-chief of the Tartar troops?" asked Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, my dear friend," replied Alcide, smiling, "that the
+housch-begui made a very graceful gesture when he gave the order
+for our heads to be cut off."</p>
+
+<p>Whatever was the motive which led Ogareff to act thus in
+regard to the two correspondents, they were free and could rove
+at their pleasure over the scene of war. Their intention was not
+to leave it.
+ The sort of antipathy which formerly they had entertained for
+each other had given place to a sincere friendship. Circumstances
+having brought them together, they no longer thought of
+separating.
+ The petty questions of rivalry were forever extinguished.
+ Harry Blount could never forget what he owed his companion, who,
+on the other hand, never tried to remind him of it.
+ This friendship too assisted the reporting operations, and was
+thus to the advantage of their readers.</p>
+
+<p>"And now," asked Blount, "what shall we do with our
+liberty?"</p>
+
+<p>"Take advantage of it, of course," replied Alcide, "and go
+quietly to Tomsk to see what is going on there."</p>
+
+<p>"Until the time--very near, I hope--when we may rejoin some
+Russian regiment?"</p>
+
+<p>"As you say, my dear Blount, it won't do to Tartarise
+ourselves too much. The best side is that of the most civilized
+army, and it is evident that the people of Central Asia will have
+everything to lose and absolutely nothing to gain from this
+invasion, while the Russians will soon repulse them.
+ It is only a matter of time."</p>
+
+<p>The arrival of Ivan Ogareff, which had given Jolivet and
+Blount their liberty, was to Michael Strogoff, on the contrary, a
+serious danger.
+ Should chance bring the Czar's courier into Ogareff's presence,
+the latter could not fail to recognize in him the traveler whom
+he had so brutally treated at the Ichim post-house, and although
+Michael had not replied to the insult as he would have done under
+any other circumstances, attention would be drawn to him, and at
+once the accomplishment of his plans would be rendered more
+difficult.</p>
+
+<p>This was the unpleasant side of the business. A favorable
+result of his arrival, however, was the order which was given to
+raise the camp that very day, and remove the headquarters to
+Tomsk. This was the accomplishment of Michael's most fervent
+desire. His intention, as has been said, was to reach Tomsk
+concealed amongst the other prisoners; that is to say, without
+any risk of falling into the hands of the scouts who swarmed
+about the approaches to this important town.
+ However, in consequence of the arrival of Ivan Ogareff, he
+questioned whether it would not be better to give up his first
+plan and attempt to escape during the journey.</p>
+
+<p>Michael would, no doubt, have kept to the latter plan had he
+not learnt that Feofar-Khan and Ogareff had already set out for
+the town with some thousands of horsemen. "I will wait, then,"
+said he to himself; "at least, unless some exceptional
+opportunity for escape occurs.
+ The adverse chances are numerous on this side of Tomsk, while
+beyond I shall in a few hours have passed the most advanced
+Tartar posts to the east. Still three days of patience, and may
+God aid me!"</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed a journey of three days which the prisoners,
+under the guard of a numerous detachment of Tartars, were to make
+across the steppe.
+ A hundred and fifty versts lay between the camp and the town--
+an easy march for the Emir's soldiers, who wanted for nothing,
+but a wretched journey for these people, enfeebled by
+privations.
+ More than one corpse would show the road they had traversed.</p>
+
+<p>It was two o'clock in the afternoon, on the 12th of August,
+under a hot sun and cloudless sky, that the toptschi-baschi gave
+the order to start.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide and Blount, having bought horses, had already taken the
+road to Tomsk, where events were to reunite the principal
+personages of this story.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst the prisoners brought by Ivan Ogareff to the Tartar
+camp was an old woman, whose taciturnity seemed to keep her apart
+from all those who shared her fate. Not a murmur issued from her
+lips.
+ She was like a statue of grief. This woman was more strictly
+guarded than anyone else, and, without her appearing to notice,
+was constantly watched by the Tsigane Sangarre. Notwithstanding
+her age she was compelled to follow the convoy of prisoners on
+foot, without any alleviation of her suffering.</p>
+
+<p>However, a kind Providence had placed near her a courageous,
+kind-hearted being to comfort and assist her. Amongst her
+companions in misfortune a young girl, remarkable for beauty and
+taciturnity, seemed to have given herself the task of watching
+over her.
+ No words had been exchanged between the two captives, but the
+girl was always at the old woman's side when help was useful.
+ At first the mute assistance of the stranger was accepted with
+some mistrust. Gradually, however, the young girl's clear glance,
+her reserve, and the mysterious sympathy which draws together
+those who are in misfortune, thawed Marfa Strogoff's
+coldness.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia--for it was she--was thus able, without knowing it, to
+render to the mother those attentions which she had herself
+received from the son. Her instinctive kindness had doubly
+inspired her.
+ In devoting herself to her service, Nadia secured to her youth
+and beauty the protection afforded by the age of the old
+prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>On the crowd of unhappy people, embittered by sufferings, this
+silent pair--one seeming to be the grandmother, the other the
+grand-daughter--imposed a sort of respect.</p>
+
+<p>After being carried off by the Tartar scouts on the Irtych,
+Nadia had been taken to Omsk. Kept prisoner in the town, she
+shared the fate of all those captured by Ivan Ogareff, and
+consequently that of Marfa Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>If Nadia had been less energetic, she would have succumbed to
+this double blow. The interruption to her journey, the death of
+Michael, made her both desperate and excited. Divided, perhaps
+forever, from her father, after so many happy efforts had brought
+her near him, and, to crown her grief, separated from the
+intrepid companion whom God seemed to have placed in her way to
+lead her.
+ The image of Michael Strogoff, struck before her eyes with a
+lance and disappearing beneath the waters of the Irtych, never
+left her thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Could such a man have died thus? For whom was God reserving
+His miracles if this good man, whom a noble object was urging
+onwards, had been allowed to perish so miserably? Then anger
+would prevail over grief. The scene of the affront so strangely
+borne by her companion at the Ichim relay returned to her
+memory.
+ Her blood boiled at the recollection.</p>
+
+<p>"Who will avenge him who can no longer avenge himself?" she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>And in her heart, she cried, "May it be I!" If before his
+death Michael had confided his secret to her, woman, aye girl
+though she was, she might have been able to carry to a successful
+conclusion the interrupted task of that brother whom God had so
+soon taken from her.</p>
+
+<p>Absorbed in these thoughts, it can be understood how Nadia
+could remain insensible to the miseries even of her
+captivity.
+ Thus chance had united her to Marfa Strogoff without her having
+the least suspicion of who she was. How could she imagine that
+this old woman, a prisoner like herself, was the mother of him,
+whom she only knew as the merchant Nicholas Korpanoff? And on the
+other hand, how could Marfa guess that a bond of gratitude
+connected this young stranger with her son?</p>
+
+<p>The thing that first struck Nadia in Marfa Strogoff was the
+similarity in the way in which each bore her hard fate.
+ This stoicism of the old woman under the daily hardships, this
+contempt of bodily suffering, could only be caused by a moral
+grief equal to her own. So Nadia thought; and she was not
+mistaken.
+ It was an instinctive sympathy for that part of her misery which
+Marfa did not show which first drew Nadia towards her.
+ This way of bearing her sorrow went to the proud heart of the
+young girl. She did not offer her services; she gave them.
+ Marfa had neither to refuse nor accept them. In the difficult
+parts of the journey, the girl was there to support her.
+ When the provisions were given out, the old woman would not have
+moved, but Nadia shared her small portion with her; and thus this
+painful journey was performed. Thanks to her companion, Marfa was
+able to follow the soldiers who guarded the prisoners without
+being fastened to a saddle-bow, as were many other unfortunate
+wretches, and thus dragged along this road of sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>"May God reward you, my daughter, for what you have done for
+my old age!"
+ said Marfa Strogoff once, and for some time these were the only
+words exchanged between the two unfortunate beings.</p>
+
+<p>During these few days, which to them appeared like centuries,
+it would seem that the old woman and the girl would have been led
+to speak of their situation. But Marfa Strogoff, from a caution
+which may be easily understood, never spoke about herself except
+with the greatest brevity. She never made the smallest allusion
+to her son, nor to the unfortunate meeting.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia also, if not completely silent, spoke little. However,
+one day her heart overflowed, and she told all the events which
+had occurred from her departure from Wladimir to the death of
+Nicholas Korpanoff.</p>
+
+<p>All that her young companion told intensely interested the old
+Siberian. "Nicholas Korpanoff!" said she.
+ "Tell me again about this Nicholas. I know only one man, one
+alone, in whom such conduct would not have astonished me.
+ Nicholas Korpanoff! Was that really his name? Are you sure of
+it, my daughter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why should he have deceived me in this," replied Nadia, "when
+he deceived me in no other way?"</p>
+
+<p>Moved, however, by a kind of presentiment, Marfa Strogoff put
+questions upon questions to Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"You told me he was fearless, my daughter. You have proved
+that he has been so?" asked she.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, fearless indeed!" replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"It was just what my son would have done," said Marfa to
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>Then she resumed, "Did you not say that nothing stopped him,
+nor astonished him; that he was so gentle in his strength that
+you had a sister as well as a brother in him, and he watched over
+you like a mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes," said Nadia. "Brother, sister, mother--he has been
+all to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"And defended you like a lion?"</p>
+
+<p>"A lion indeed!" replied Nadia. "A lion, a hero!"</p>
+
+<p>"My son, my son!" thought the old Siberian. "But you said,
+however, that he bore a terrible insult at that post-house in
+Ichim?"</p>
+
+<p>"He did bear it," answered Nadia, looking down.</p>
+
+<p>"He bore it!" murmured Marfa, shuddering.</p>
+
+<p>"Mother, mother," cried Nadia, "do not blame him! He had a
+secret.
+ A secret of which God alone is as yet the judge!"</p>
+
+<p>"And," said Marfa, raising her head and looking at Nadia as
+though she would read the depths of her heart, "in that hour of
+humiliation did you not despise this Nicholas Korpanoff?"</p>
+
+<p>"I admired without understanding him," replied the girl.
+ "I never felt him more worthy of respect."</p>
+
+<p>The old woman was silent for a minute.</p>
+
+<p>"Was he tall?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Very tall."</p>
+
+<p>"And very handsome? Come, speak, my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"He was very handsome," replied Nadia, blushing.</p>
+
+<p>"It was my son! I tell you it was my son!" exclaimed the old
+woman, embracing Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Your son!" said Nadia amazed, "your son!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said Marfa; "let us get to the bottom of this, my
+child.
+ Your companion, your friend, your protector had a mother.
+ Did he never speak to you of his mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of his mother?" said Nadia. "He spoke to me of his mother as
+I spoke to him of my father--often, always. He adored her."</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia, Nadia, you have just told me about my own son,"
+ said the old woman.</p>
+
+<p>And she added impetuously, "Was he not going to see this
+mother, whom you say he loved, in Omsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Nadia, "no, he was not."</p>
+
+<p>"Not!" cried Marfa. "You dare to tell me not!"</p>
+
+<p>"I say so: but it remains to me to tell you that from motives
+which outweighed everything else, motives which I do not know, I
+understand that Nicholas Korpanoff had to traverse the country
+completely in secret.
+ To him it was a question of life and death, and still more, a
+question of duty and honor."</p>
+
+<p>"Duty, indeed, imperious duty," said the old Siberian, "of
+those who sacrifice everything, even the joy of giving a kiss,
+perhaps the last, to his old mother. All that you do not know,
+Nadia--all that I did not know myself--I now know.
+ You have made me understand everything. But the light which you
+have thrown on the mysteries of my heart, I cannot return on
+yours.
+ Since my son has not told you his secret, I must keep it.
+ Forgive me, Nadia; I can never repay what you have done for
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Mother, I ask you nothing," replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>All was thus explained to the old Siberian, all, even the
+conduct of her son with regard to herself in the inn at Omsk.
+There was no doubt that the young girl's companion was Michael
+Strogoff, and that a secret mission in the invaded country
+obliged him to conceal his quality of the Czar's courier.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, my brave boy!" thought Marfa. "No, I will not betray you,
+and tortures shall not wrest from me the avowal that it was you
+whom I saw at Omsk."</p>
+
+<p>Marfa could with a word have paid Nadia for all her devotion
+to her.
+ She could have told her that her companion, Nicholas Korpanoff,
+or rather Michael Strogoff, had not perished in the waters of the
+Irtych, since it was some days after that incident that she had
+met him, that she had spoken to him.</p>
+
+<p>But she restrained herself, she was silent, and contented
+herself with saying, "Hope, my child! Misfortune will not
+overwhelm you.
+ You will see your father again; I feel it; and perhaps he who
+gave you the name of sister is not dead. God cannot have allowed
+your brave companion to perish. Hope, my child, hope! Do as I
+do.
+ The mourning which I wear is not yet for my son."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III BLOW FOR BLOW</h2>
+
+<p>SUCH were now the relative situations of Marfa Strogoff and
+Nadia. All was understood by the old Siberian, and though the
+young girl was ignorant that her much-regretted companion still
+lived, she at least knew his relationship to her whom she had
+made her mother; and she thanked God for having given her the joy
+of taking the place of the son whom the prisoner had lost.</p>
+
+<p>But what neither of them could know was that Michael, having
+been captured at Kolyvan, was in the same convoy and was on his
+way to Tomsk with them.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners brought by Ivan Ogareff had been added to those
+already kept by the Emir in the Tartar camp. These unfortunate
+people, consisting of Russians, Siberians, soldiers and
+civilians, numbered some thousands, and formed a column which
+extended over several versts. Some among them being considered
+dangerous were handcuffed and fastened to a long chain.
+ There were, too, women and children, many of the latter
+suspended to the pommels of the saddles, while the former were
+dragged mercilessly along the road on foot, or driven forward as
+if they were animals.
+ The horsemen compelled them to maintain a certain order, and
+there were no laggards with the exception of those who fell never
+to rise again.</p>
+
+<p>
+ In consequence of this arrangement, Michael Strogoff, marching
+in the first ranks of those who had left the Tartar camp-- that
+is to say, among the Kolyvan prisoners--was unable to mingle with
+the prisoners who had arrived after him from Omsk. He had
+therefore no suspicion that his mother and Nadia were present in
+the convoy, nor did they suppose that he was among those in
+front.
+ This journey from the camp to Tomsk, performed under the lashes
+and spear-points of the soldiers, proved fatal to many, and
+terrible to all.
+ The prisoners traveled across the steppe, over a road made still
+more dusty by the passage of the Emir and his vanguard.
+ Orders had been given to march rapidly. The short halts were
+rare.
+ The hundred miles under a burning sky seemed interminable,
+though they were performed as rapidly as possible.</p>
+
+<p>The country, which extends from the right of the Obi to the
+base of the spur detached from the Sayanok Mountains, is very
+sterile. Only a few stunted and burnt-up shrubs here and there
+break the monotony of the immense plain.
+ There was no cultivation, for there was no water; and it was
+water that the prisoners, parched by their painful march, most
+needed.
+ To find a stream they must have diverged fifty versts eastward,
+to the very foot of the mountains.</p>
+
+<p>There flows the Tom, a little affluent of the Obi, which
+passes near Tomsk before losing itself in one of the great
+northern arteries.
+ There water would have been abundant, the steppe less arid, the
+heat less severe. But the strictest orders had been given to the
+commanders of the convoy to reach Tomsk by the shortest way, for
+the Emir was much afraid of being taken in the flank and cut off
+by some Russian column descending from the northern
+provinces.</p>
+
+<p>It is useless to dwell upon the sufferings of the unhappy
+prisoners.
+ Many hundreds fell on the steppe, where their bodies would lie
+until winter, when the wolves would devour the remnants of their
+bones.</p>
+
+<p>As Nadia helped the old Siberian, so in the same way did
+Michael render to his more feeble companions in misfortune such
+services as his situation allowed. He encouraged some, supported
+others, going to and fro, until a prick from a soldier's lance
+obliged him to r&#130;sum&#130; the place which had been assigned
+him in the ranks.</p>
+
+<p>Why did he not endeavor to escape?</p>
+
+<p>The reason was that he had now quite determined not to venture
+until the steppe was safe for him. He was resolved in his idea of
+going as far as Tomsk "at the Emir's expense," and indeed he was
+right.
+ As he observed the numerous detachments which scoured the plain
+on the convoy's flanks, now to the south, now to the north, it
+was evident that before he could have gone two versts he must
+have been recaptured. The Tartar horsemen swarmed-- it actually
+appeared as if they sprang from the earth--like insects which a
+thunderstorm brings to the surface of the ground.
+ Flight under these conditions would have been extremely
+difficult, if not impossible. The soldiers of the escort
+displayed excessive vigilance, for they would have paid for the
+slightest carelessness with their heads.</p>
+
+<p>At nightfall of the 15th of August, the convoy reached the
+little village of Zabediero, thirty versts from Tomsk.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners' first movement would have been to rush into the
+river, but they were not allowed to leave the ranks until the
+halt had been organized. Although the current of the Tom was just
+now like a torrent, it might have favored the flight of some bold
+or desperate man, and the strictest measures of vigilance were
+taken. Boats, requisitioned at Zabediero, were brought up to the
+Tom and formed a line of obstacles impossible to pass.
+ As to the encampment on the outskirts of the village, it was
+guarded by a cordon of sentinels.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, who now naturally thought of escape, saw,
+after carefully surveying the situation, that under these
+conditions it was perfectly impossible; so, not wishing to
+compromise himself, he waited.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners were to encamp for the whole night on the banks
+of the Tom, for the Emir had put off the entrance of his troops
+into Tomsk. It had been decided that a military fete should mark
+the inauguration of the Tartar headquarters in this important
+city.
+ Feofar-Khan already occupied the fortress, but the bulk of his
+army bivouacked under its walls, waiting until the time came for
+them to make a solemn entry.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff left the Emir at Tomsk, where both had arrived
+the evening before, and returned to the camp at Zabediero. From
+here he was to start the next day with the rear-guard of the
+Tartar army.
+ A house had been arranged for him in which to pass the
+night.
+ At sunrise horse and foot soldiers were to proceed to Tomsk,
+where the Emir wished to receive them with the pomp usual to
+Asiatic sovereigns. As soon as the halt was organized, the
+prisoners, worn out with their three days' journey, and suffering
+from burning thirst, could drink and take a little rest.
+ The sun had already set, when Nadia, supporting Marfa Strogoff,
+reached the banks of the Tom. They had not till then been able to
+get through those who crowded the banks, but at last they came to
+drink in their turn.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman bent over the clear stream, and Nadia, plunging
+in her hand, carried it to Marfa's lips. Then she refreshed
+herself.
+ They found new life in these welcome waters. Suddenly Nadia
+started up; an involuntary cry escaped her.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff was there, a few steps from her. It was
+he.
+ The dying rays of the sun fell upon him.</p>
+
+<p>At Nadia's cry Michael started. But he had sufficient command
+over himself not to utter a word by which he might have been
+compromised.
+ And yet, when he saw Nadia, he also recognized his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Feeling he could not long keep master of himself at this
+unexpected meeting, he covered his eyes with his hands and walked
+quickly away.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia's impulse was to run after him, but the old Siberian
+murmured in her ear, "Stay, my daughter!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is he!" replied Nadia, choking with emotion. "He lives,
+mother!
+ It is he!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is my son," answered Marfa, "it is Michael Strogoff, and
+you see that I do not make a step towards him!
+ Imitate me, my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>Michael had just experienced the most violent emotion which a
+man can feel. His mother and Nadia were there!</p>
+
+<p>The two prisoners who were always together in his heart, God
+had brought them together in this common misfortune.
+ Did Nadia know who he was? Yes, for he had seen Marfa's gesture,
+holding her back as she was about to rush towards him.
+ Marfa, then, had understood all, and kept his secret.</p>
+
+<p>During that night, Michael was twenty times on the point of
+looking for and joining his mother; but he knew that he must
+resist the longing he felt to take her in his arms, and once more
+press the hand of his young companion. The least imprudence might
+be fatal. He had besides sworn not to see his mother.
+ Once at Tomsk, since he could not escape this very night, he
+would set off without having even embraced the two beings in whom
+all the happiness of his life was centered, and whom he should
+leave exposed to so many perils.</p>
+
+<p>Michael hoped that this fresh meeting at the Zabediero camp
+would have no disastrous consequences either to his mother or to
+himself.
+ But he did not know that part of this scene, although it passed
+so rapidly, had been observed by Sangarre, Ogareff's spy.</p>
+
+<p>The Tsigane was there, a few paces off, on the bank, as usual,
+watching the old Siberian woman. She had not caught sight of
+Michael, for he disappeared before she had time to look around;
+but the mother's gesture as she kept back Nadia had not escaped
+her, and the look in Marfa's eyes told her all.</p>
+
+<p>It was now beyond doubt that Marfa Strogoff's son, the Czar's
+courier, was at this moment in Zabediero, among Ivan Ogareff's
+prisoners.
+ Sangarre did not know him, but she knew that he was there.
+ She did not then attempt to discover him, for it would have been
+impossible in the dark and the immense crowd.</p>
+
+<p>As for again watching Nadia and Marfa Strogoff, that was
+equally useless.
+ It was evident that the two women would keep on their guard, and
+it would be impossible to overhear anything of a nature to
+compromise the courier of the Czar. The Tsigane's first thought
+was to tell Ivan Ogareff. She therefore immediately left the
+encampment.
+ A quarter of an hour after, she reached Zabediero, and was shown
+into the house occupied by the Emir's lieutenant. Ogareff
+received the Tsigane directly.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you to tell me, Sangarre?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Marfa Strogoff's son is in the encampment."</p>
+
+<p>"A prisoner?"</p>
+
+<p>"A prisoner."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" exclaimed Ogareff, "I shall know--"</p>
+
+<p>"You will know nothing, Ivan," replied Tsigane; "for you do
+not even know him by sight."</p>
+
+<p>"But you know him; you have seen him, Sangarre?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have not seen him; but his mother betrayed herself by a
+gesture, which told me everything."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you not mistaken?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not mistaken."</p>
+
+<p>"You know the importance which I attach to the apprehension of
+this courier," said Ivan Ogareff. "If the letter which he has
+brought from Moscow reaches Irkutsk, if it is given to the Grand
+Duke, the Grand Duke will be on his guard, and I shall not be
+able to get at him. I must have that letter at any price.
+ Now you come to tell me that the bearer of this letter is in my
+power.
+ I repeat, Sangarre, are you not mistaken?"</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff spoke with great animation. His emotion showed the
+extreme importance he attached to the possession of this letter.
+Sangarre was not at all put out by the urgency with which Ogareff
+repeated his question.
+ "I am not mistaken, Ivan," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Sangarre, there are thousands of prisoners; and you say
+that you do not know Michael Strogoff."</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered the Tsigane, with a look of savage joy, "I do
+not know him; but his mother knows him. Ivan, we must make his
+mother speak."</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow she shall speak!" cried Ogareff. So saying, he
+extended his hand to the Tsigane, who kissed it; for there is
+nothing servile in this act of respect, it being usual among the
+Northern races.</p>
+
+<p>Sangarre returned to the camp. She found out Nadia and Marfa
+Strogoff, and passed the night in watching them.
+ Although worn out with fatigue, the old woman and the girl did
+not sleep. Their great anxiety kept them awake.
+ Michael was living, but a prisoner. Did Ogareff know him, or
+would he not soon find him out? Nadia was occupied by the one
+thought that he whom she had thought dead still lived.
+ But Marfa saw further into the future: and, although she did not
+care what became of herself, she had every reason to fear for her
+son.</p>
+
+<p>Sangarre, under cover of the night, had crept near the two
+women, and remained there several hours listening. She heard
+nothing.
+ From an instinctive feeling of prudence not a word was exchanged
+between Nadia and Marfa Strogoff. The next day, the 16th of
+August, about ten in the morning, trumpet-calls resounded
+throughout the encampment.
+ The Tartar soldiers were almost immediately under arms.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff arrived, surrounded by a large staff of Tartar
+officers.
+ His face was more clouded than usual, and his knitted brow gave
+signs of latent wrath which was waiting for an occasion to break
+forth.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, hidden in a group of prisoners, saw this man
+pass.
+ He had a presentiment that some catastrophe was imminent: for
+Ivan Ogareff knew now that Marfa was the mother of Michael
+Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff dismounted, and his escort cleared a large circle
+round him.
+ Just then Sangarre approached him, and said, "I have no
+news."</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff's only reply was to give an order to one of his
+officers.
+ Then the ranks of prisoners were brutally hurried up by the
+soldiers.
+ The unfortunate people, driven on with whips, or pushed on with
+lances, arranged themselves round the camp. A strong guard of
+soldiers drawn up behind, rendered escape impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Silence then ensued, and, on a sign from Ivan Ogareff,
+Sangarre advanced towards the group, in the midst of which stood
+Marfa.</p>
+
+<p>The old Siberian saw her, and knew what was going to
+happen.
+ A scornful smile passed over her face. Then leaning towards
+Nadia, she said in a low tone, "You know me no longer, my
+daughter.
+ Whatever may happen, and however hard this trial may be, not a
+word, not a sign. It concerns him, and not me."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Sangarre, having regarded her for an instant,
+put her hand on her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want with me?" said Marfa.</p>
+
+<p>"Come!" replied Sangarre, and pushing the old Siberian before
+her, she took her to Ivan Ogareff, in the middle of the cleared
+ground.
+ Michael cast down his eyes that their angry flashings might not
+appear.</p>
+
+<p>Marfa, standing before Ivan Ogareff, drew herself up, crossed
+her arms on her breast, and waited.</p>
+
+<p>"You are Marfa Strogoff?" asked Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the old Siberian calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you retract what you said to me when, three days ago, I
+interrogated you at Omsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you do not know that your son, Michael Strogoff, courier
+of the Czar, has passed through Omsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know it."</p>
+
+<p>"And the man in whom you thought you recognized your son, was
+not he your son?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was not my son."</p>
+
+<p>"And since then you have not seen him amongst the
+prisoners?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"If he were pointed out, would you recognize him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>On this reply, which showed such determined resolution, a
+murmur was heard amongst the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff could not restrain a threatening gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen," said he to Marfa, "your son is here, and you shall
+immediately point him out to me."</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"All these men, taken at Omsk and Kolyvan, will defile before
+you; and if you do not show me Michael Strogoff, you shall
+receive as many blows of the knout as men shall have passed
+before you."</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff saw that, whatever might be his threats, whatever
+might be the tortures to which he submitted her, the indomitable
+Siberian would not speak. To discover the courier of the Czar, he
+counted, then, not on her, but on Michael himself.
+ He did not believe it possible that, when mother and son were in
+each other's presence, some involuntary movement would not betray
+him.
+ Of course, had he wished to seize the imperial letter, he would
+simply have given orders to search all the prisoners; but Michael
+might have destroyed the letter, having learnt its contents; and
+if he were not recognized, if he were to reach Irkutsk, all Ivan
+Ogareff's plans would be baffled.
+ It was thus not only the letter which the traitor must have, but
+the bearer himself.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia had heard all, and she now knew who was Michael
+Strogoff, and why he had wished to cross, without being
+recognized, the invaded provinces of Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>On an order from Ivan Ogareff the prisoners defiled, one by
+one, past Marfa, who remained immovable as a statue, and whose
+face expressed only perfect indifference.</p>
+
+<p>Her son was among the last. When in his turn he passed before
+his mother, Nadia shut her eyes that she might not see him.
+ Michael was to all appearance unmoved, but the palm of his hand
+bled under his nails, which were pressed into them.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff was baffled by mother and son.</p>
+
+<p>Sangarre, close to him, said one word, "The knout!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," cried Ogareff, who could no longer restrain himself;
+"the knout for this wretched old woman--the knout to the
+death!"</p>
+
+<p>A Tartar soldier bearing this terrible instrument of torture
+approached Marfa. The knout is composed of a certain number of
+leathern thongs, at the end of which are attached pieces of
+twisted iron wire.
+ It is reckoned that a sentence to one hundred and twenty blows
+of this whip is equivalent to a sentence of death.</p>
+
+<p>Marfa knew it, but she knew also that no torture would make
+her speak.
+ She was sacrificing her life.</p>
+
+<p>Marfa, seized by two soldiers, was forced on her knees on the
+ground. Her dress torn off left her back bare.
+ A saber was placed before her breast, at a few inches' distance
+only.
+ Directly she bent beneath her suffering, her breast would be
+pierced by the sharp steel.</p>
+
+<p>The Tartar drew himself up. He waited. "Begin!" said Ogareff.
+The whip whistled in the air.</p>
+
+<p>But before it fell a powerful hand stopped the Tartar's
+arm.
+ Michael was there. He had leapt forward at this horrible
+scene.
+ If at the relay at Ichim he had restrained himself when
+Ogareff's whip had struck him, here before his mother, who was
+about to be struck, he could not do so. Ivan Ogareff had
+succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>"Michael Strogoff!" cried he. Then advancing, "Ah, the man of
+Ichim?"</p>
+
+<p>"Himself!" said Michael. And raising the knout he struck
+Ogareff a sharp blow across the face. "Blow for blow!" said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"Well repaid!" cried a voice concealed by the tumult.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty soldiers threw themselves on Michael, and in another
+instant he would have been slain.</p>
+
+<p>But Ogareff, who on being struck had uttered a cry of rage and
+pain, stopped them. "This man is reserved for the Emir's
+judgment,"
+ said he. "Search him!"</p>
+
+<p>The letter with the imperial arms was found in Michael's
+bosom; he had not had time to destroy it; it was handed to
+Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>The voice which had pronounced the words, "Well repaid!"
+ was that of no other than Alcide Jolivet. "Par-dieu!" said he to
+Blount, "they are rough, these people.
+ Acknowledge that we owe our traveling companion a good turn.
+ Korpanoff or Strogoff is worthy of it. Oh, that was fine
+retaliation for the little affair at Ichim."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, retaliation truly," replied Blount; "but Strogoff is a
+dead man.
+ I suspect that, for his own interest at all events, it would
+have been better had he not possessed quite so lively a
+recollection of the event."</p>
+
+<p>"And let his mother perish under the knout?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that either she or his sister will be a bit
+better off from this outbreak of his?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know or think anything except that I should have
+done much the same in his position," replied Alcide. "What a scar
+the Colonel has received! Bah! one must boil over sometimes.
+ We should have had water in our veins instead of blood had it
+been incumbent on us to be always and everywhere unmoved to
+wrath."</p>
+
+<p>"A neat little incident for our journals," observed Blount,
+"if only Ivan Ogareff would let us know the contents of that
+letter."</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff, when he had stanched the blood which was
+trickling down his face, had broken the seal. He read and re-read
+the letter deliberately, as if he was determined to discover
+everything it contained.</p>
+
+<p>Then having ordered that Michael, carefully bound and guarded,
+should be carried on to Tomsk with the other prisoners, he took
+command of the troops at Zabediero, and, amid the deafening noise
+of drums and trumpets, he marched towards the town where the Emir
+awaited him.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV THE TRIUMPHAL ENTRY</h2>
+
+<p>TOMSK, founded in 1604, nearly in the heart of the Siberian
+provinces, is one of the most important towns in Asiatic Russia.
+Tobolsk, situated above the sixtieth parallel; Irkutsk, built
+beyond the hundredth meridian-- have seen Tomsk increase at their
+expense.</p>
+
+<p>And yet Tomsk, as has been said, is not the capital of this
+important province. It is at Omsk that the Governor-General of
+the province and the official world reside. But Tomsk is the most
+considerable town of that territory. The country being rich, the
+town is so likewise, for it is in the center of fruitful mines.
+In the luxury of its houses, its arrangements, and its equipages,
+it might rival the greatest European capitals.
+ It is a city of millionaires, enriched by the spade and pickax,
+and though it has not the honor of being the residence of the
+Czar's representative, it can boast of including in the first
+rank of its notables the chief of the merchants of the town, the
+principal grantees of the imperial government's mines.</p>
+
+<p>But the millionaires were fled now, and except for the
+crouching poor, the town stood empty to the hordes of
+Feofar-Khan. At four o'clock the Emir made his entry into the
+square, greeted by a flourish of trumpets, the rolling sound of
+the big drums, salvoes of artillery and musketry.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Feofar mounted his favorite horse, which carried on its head an
+aigrette of diamonds. The Emir still wore his uniform.
+ He was accompanied by a numerous staff, and beside him walked
+the Khans of Khokhand and Koundouge and the grand dignitaries of
+the Khanats.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment appeared on the terrace the chief of
+Feofar's wives, the queen, if this title may be given to the
+sultana of the states of Bokhara. But, queen or slave, this woman
+of Persian origin was wonderfully beautiful.
+ Contrary to the Mahometan custom, and no doubt by some caprice
+of the Emir, she had her face uncovered. Her hair, divided into
+four plaits, fell over her dazzling white shoulders, scarcely
+concealed by a veil of silk worked in gold, which fell from the
+back of a cap studded with gems of the highest value.
+ Under her blue-silk petticoat, fell the "zirdjameh" of silken
+gauze, and above the sash lay the "pirahn." But from the head to
+the little feet, such was the profusion of jewels-- gold beads
+strung on silver threads, chaplets of turquoises, "firouzehs"
+from the celebrated mines of Elbourz, necklaces of cornelians,
+agates, emeralds, opals, and sapphires-- that her dress seemed to
+be literally made of precious stones.
+ The thousands of diamonds which sparkled on her neck, arms,
+hands, at her waist, and at her feet might have been valued at
+almost countless millions of roubles.</p>
+
+<p>The Emir and the Khans dismounted, as did the dignitaries who
+escorted them. All entered a magnificent tent erected on the
+center of the first terrace. Before the tent, as usual, the Koran
+was laid.</p>
+
+<p>Feofar's lieutenant did not make them wait, and before five
+o'clock the trumpets announced his arrival. Ivan Ogareff-- the
+Scarred Cheek, as he was already nick-named--wearing the uniform
+of a Tartar officer, dismounted before the Emir's tent.
+ He was accompanied by a party of soldiers from the camp at
+Zabediero, who ranged up at the sides of the square, in the
+middle of which a place for the sports was reserved.
+ A large scar could be distinctly seen cut obliquely across the
+traitor's face.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff presented his principal officers to the Emir, who,
+without departing from the coldness which composed the main part
+of his dignity, received them in a way which satisfied them that
+they stood well in the good graces of their chief.</p>
+
+<p>At least so thought Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet, the two
+inseparables, now associated together in the chase after
+news.
+ After leaving Zabediero, they had proceeded rapidly to Tomsk.
+The plan they had agreed upon was to leave the Tartars as soon as
+possible, and to join a Russian regiment, and, if they could, to
+go with them to Irkutsk. All that they had seen of the invasion,
+its burnings, its pillages, its murders, had perfectly sickened
+them, and they longed to be among the ranks of the Siberian
+army.
+ Jolivet had told his companion that he could not leave Tomsk
+without making a sketch of the triumphal entry of the Tartar
+troops, if it was only to satisfy his cousin's curiosity; but the
+same evening they both intended to take the road to Irkutsk, and
+being well mounted hoped to distance the Emir's scouts.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide and Blount mingled therefore in the crowd, so as to
+lose no detail of a festival which ought to supply them with a
+hundred good lines for an article. They admired the magnificence
+of Feofar-Khan, his wives, his officers, his guards, and all the
+Eastern pomp, of which the ceremonies of Europe can give not the
+least idea.
+ But they turned away with disgust when Ivan Ogareff presented
+himself before the Emir, and waited with some impatience for the
+amusements to begin.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, my dear Blount," said Alcide, "we have come too
+soon, like honest citizens who like to get their money's
+worth.
+ All this is before the curtain rises, it would have been better
+to arrive only for the ballet."</p>
+
+<p>"What ballet?" asked Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"The compulsory ballet, to be sure. But see, the curtain is
+going to rise." Alcide Jolivet spoke as if he had been at the
+Opera, and taking his glass from its case, he prepared, with the
+air of a connoisseur, "to examine the first act of Feofar's
+company."</p>
+
+<p>A painful ceremony was to precede the sports. In fact, the
+triumph of the vanquisher could not be complete without the
+public humiliation of the vanquished. This was why several
+hundreds of prisoners were brought under the soldiers' whips.
+ They were destined to march past Feofar-Khan and his allies
+before being crammed with their companions into the prisons in
+the town.</p>
+
+<p>In the first ranks of these prisoners figured Michael
+Strogoff.
+ As Ogareff had ordered, he was specially guarded by a file of
+soldiers.
+ His mother and Nadia were there also.</p>
+
+<p>The old Siberian, although energetic enough when her own
+safety was in question, was frightfully pale. She expected some
+terrible scene. It was not without reason that her son had been
+brought before the Emir. She therefore trembled for him.
+ Ivan Ogareff was not a man to forgive having been struck in
+public by the knout, and his vengeance would be merciless.
+ Some frightful punishment familiar to the barbarians of Central
+Asia would, no doubt, be inflicted on Michael. Ogareff had
+protected him against the soldiers because he well knew what
+would happen by reserving him for the justice of the Emir.</p>
+
+<p>The mother and son had not been able to speak together since
+the terrible scene in the camp at Zabediero. They had been
+pitilessly kept apart--a bitter aggravation of their misery, for
+it would have been some consolation to have been together during
+these days of captivity. Marfa longed to ask her son's pardon for
+the harm she had unintentionally done him, for she reproached
+herself with not having commanded her maternal feelings.
+ If she had restrained herself in that post-house at Omsk, when
+she found herself face to face with him, Michael would have
+passed unrecognized, and all these misfortunes would have been
+avoided.</p>
+
+<p>Michael, on his side, thought that if his mother was there, if
+Ogareff had brought her with him, it was to make her suffer with
+the sight of his own punishment, or perhaps some frightful death
+was reserved for her also.</p>
+
+<p>As to Nadia, she only asked herself how she could save them
+both, how come to the aid of son and mother.
+ As yet she could only wonder, but she felt instinctively that
+she must above everything avoid drawing attention upon herself,
+that she must conceal herself, make herself insignificant.
+ Perhaps she might at least gnaw through the meshes which
+imprisoned the lion. At any rate if any opportunity was given her
+she would seize upon it, and sacrifice herself, if need be, for
+the son of Marfa Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime the greater part of the prisoners were passing
+before the Emir, and as they passed each was obliged to prostrate
+himself, with his forehead in the dust, in token of servitude.
+Slavery begins by humiliation. When the unfortunate people were
+too slow in bending, the rough guards threw them violently to the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide Jolivet and his companion could not witness such a
+sight without feeling indignant.</p>
+
+<p>"It is cowardly--let us go," said Alcide.</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Blount; "we must see it all."</p>
+
+<p>"See it all!--ah!" cried Alcide, suddenly, grasping his
+companion's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter with you?" asked the latter.</p>
+
+<p>"Look, Blount; it is she!"</p>
+
+<p>"What she?"</p>
+
+<p>"The sister of our traveling companion--alone, and a
+prisoner!
+ We must save her."</p>
+
+<p>"Calm yourself," replied Blount coolly. "Any interference on
+our part in behalf of the young girl would be worse than
+useless."</p>
+
+<p>Alcide Jolivet, who had been about to rush forward, stopped,
+and Nadia-- who had not perceived them, her features being half
+hidden by her hair-- passed in her turn before the Emir without
+attracting his attention.</p>
+
+<p>However, after Nadia came Marfa Strogoff; and as she did not
+throw herself quickly in the dust, the guards brutally pushed
+her.
+ She fell.</p>
+
+<p>Her son struggled so violently that the soldiers who were
+guarding him could scarcely hold him back. But the old woman
+rose, and they were about to drag her on, when Ogareff
+interposed, saying, "Let that woman stay!"</p>
+
+<p>As to Nadia, she happily regained the crowd of prisoners.
+ Ivan Ogareff had taken no notice of her.</p>
+
+<p>Michael was then led before the Emir, and there he remained
+standing, without casting down his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Your forehead to the ground!" cried Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>"No!" answered Michael.</p>
+
+<p>Two soldiers endeavored to make him bend, but they were
+themselves laid on the ground by a buffet from the young man's
+fist.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff approached Michael. "You shall die!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I can die," answered Michael fiercely; "but your traitor's
+face, Ivan, will not the less carry forever the infamous brand of
+the knout."</p>
+
+<p>At this reply Ivan Ogareff became perfectly livid.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is this prisoner?" asked the Emir, in a tone of voice
+terrible from its very calmness.</p>
+
+<p>"A Russian spy," answered Ogareff. In asserting that Michael
+was a spy he knew that the sentence pronounced against him would
+be terrible.</p>
+
+<p>The Emir made a sign at which all the crowd bent low their
+heads.
+ Then he pointed with his hand to the Koran, which was brought
+him.
+ He opened the sacred book and placed his finger on one of its
+pages.</p>
+
+<p>It was chance, or rather, according to the ideas of these
+Orientals, God Himself who was about to decide the fate of
+Michael Strogoff. The people of Central Asia give the name of
+"fal" to this practice. After having interpreted the sense of the
+verse touched by the judge's finger, they apply the sentence
+whatever it may be.</p>
+
+<p>The Emir had let his finger rest on the page of the Koran. The
+chief of the Ulemas then approached, and read in a loud voice a
+verse which ended with these words, "And he will no more see the
+things of this earth."</p>
+
+<p>"Russian spy!" exclaimed Feofar-Kahn in a voice trembling with
+fury, "you have come to see what is going on in the Tartar
+camp.
+ Then look while you may."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V "LOOK WHILE YOU MAY!"</h2>
+
+<p>MICHAEL was held before the Emir's throne, at the foot of the
+terrace, his hands bound behind his back.
+ His mother overcome at last by mental and physical torture, had
+sunk to the ground, daring neither to look nor listen.</p>
+
+<p>"Look while you may," exclaimed Feofar-Kahn, stretching his
+arm towards Michael in a threatening manner. Doubtless Ivan
+Ogareff, being well acquainted with Tartar customs, had taken in
+the full meaning of these words, for his lips curled for an
+instant in a cruel smile; he then took his place by
+Feofar-Khan.</p>
+
+<p>A trumpet call was heard. This was the signal for the
+amusements to begin. "Here comes the ballet," said Alcide to
+Blount; "but, contrary to our customs, these barbarians give it
+before the drama."</p>
+
+<p>Michael had been commanded to look at everything. He
+looked.
+ A troop of dancers poured into the open space before the Emir's
+tent.
+ Different Tartar instruments, the "doutare," a long-handled
+guitar, the "kobize," a kind of violoncello, the "tschibyzga," a
+long reed flute; wind instruments, tom-toms, tambourines, united
+with the deep voices of the singers, formed a strange
+harmony.
+ Added to this were the strains of an aerial orchestra, composed
+of a dozen kites, which, fastened by strings to their centers,
+resounded in the breeze like AEolian harps.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Then the dancers began. The performers were all of Persian
+origin; they were no longer slaves, but exercised their
+profession at liberty.
+ Formerly they figured officially in the ceremonies at the court
+of Teheran, but since the accession of the reigning family,
+banished or treated with contempt, they had been compelled to
+seek their fortune elsewhere. They wore the national costume, and
+were adorned with a profusion of jewels. Little triangles of
+gold, studded with jewels, glittered in their ears. Circles of
+silver, marked with black, surrounded their necks and legs.</p>
+
+<p>These performers gracefully executed various dances, sometimes
+alone, sometimes in groups. Their faces were uncovered, but from
+time to time they threw a light veil over their heads, and a
+gauze cloud passed over their bright eyes as smoke over a starry
+sky.
+ Some of these Persians wore leathern belts embroidered with
+pearls, from which hung little triangular bags.
+ From these bags, embroidered with golden filigree, they drew
+long narrow bands of scarlet silk, on which were braided verses
+of the Koran. These bands, which they held between them, formed a
+belt under which the other dancers darted; and, as they passed
+each verse, following the precept it contained, they either
+prostrated themselves on the earth or lightly bounded upwards, as
+though to take a place among the houris of Mohammed's heaven.</p>
+
+<p>But what was remarkable, and what struck Alcide, was that the
+Persians appeared rather indolent than fiery.
+ Their passion had deserted them, and, by the kind of dances as
+well as by their execution, they recalled rather the calm and
+self-possessed nauch girls of India than the impassioned dancers
+of Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>When this was over, a stern voice was heard saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Look while you may!"</p>
+
+<p>The man who repeated the Emir's words--a tall spare Tartar--
+was he who carried out the sentences of Feofar-Khan against
+offenders.
+ He had taken his place behind Michael, holding in his hand a
+broad curved saber, one of those Damascene blades which are
+forged by the celebrated armorers of Karschi or Hissar.</p>
+
+<p>Behind him guards were carrying a tripod supporting a
+chafing-dish filled with live coals. No smoke arose from this,
+but a light vapor surrounded it, due to the incineration of a
+certain aromatic and resinous substance which he had thrown on
+the surface.</p>
+
+<p>The Persians were succeeded by another party of dancers, whom
+Michael recognized. The journalists also appeared to recognize
+them, for Blount said to his companion, "These are the Tsiganes
+of Nijni-Novgorod."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt of it," cried Alcide. "Their eyes, I imagine, bring
+more money to these spies than their legs."</p>
+
+<p>In putting them down as agents in the Emir's service, Alcide
+Jolivet was, by all accounts, not mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>In the first rank of the Tsiganes, Sangarre appeared, superb
+in her strange and picturesque costume, which set off still
+further her remarkable beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Sangarre did not dance, but she stood as a statue in the midst
+of the performers, whose style of dancing was a combination of
+that of all those countries through which their race had
+passed--Turkey, Bohemia, Egypt, Italy, and Spain. They were
+enlivened by the sound of cymbals, which clashed on their arms,
+and by the hollow sounds of the "daires"--a sort of tambourine
+played with the fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Sangarre, holding one of those daires, which she played
+between her hands, encouraged this troupe of veritable
+corybantes.
+ A young Tsigane, of about fifteen years of age, then
+advanced.
+ He held in his hand a "doutare," strings of which he made to
+vibrate by a simple movement of the nails. He sung.
+ During the singing of each couplet, of very peculiar rhythm, a
+dancer took her position by him and remained there immovable,
+listening to him, but each time that the burden came from the
+lips of the young singer, she resumed her dance, dinning in his
+ears with her daire, and deafening him with the clashing of her
+cymbals.
+ Then, after the last chorus, the remainder surrounded the
+Tsigane in the windings of their dance.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment a shower of gold fell from the hands of the
+Emir and his train, and from the hands of his officers of all
+ranks; to the noise which the pieces made as they struck the
+cymbals of the dancers, being added the last murmurs of the
+doutares and tambourines.</p>
+
+<p>"Lavish as robbers," said Alcide in the ear of his
+companion.
+ And in fact it was the result of plunder which was falling; for,
+with the Tartar tomans and sequins, rained also Russian ducats
+and roubles.</p>
+
+<p>Then silence followed for an instant, and the voice of the
+executioner, who laid his hand on Michael's shoulder, once more
+pronounced the words, which this repetition rendered more and
+more sinister:</p>
+
+<p>"Look while you may"</p>
+
+<p>But this time Alcide observed that the executioner no longer
+held the saber bare in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the sun had sunk behind the horizon. A
+semi-obscurity began to envelop the plain. The mass of cedars and
+pines became blacker and blacker, and the waters of the Tom,
+totally obscured in the distance, mingled with the approaching
+shadows.</p>
+
+<p>But at that instant several hundreds of slaves, bearing
+lighted torches, entered the square. Led by Sangarre, Tsiganes
+and Persians reappeared before the Emir's throne, and showed off,
+by the contrast, their dances of styles so different.
+ The instruments of the Tartar orchestra sounded forth in harmony
+still more savage, accompanied by the guttural cries of the
+singers.
+ The kites, which had fallen to the ground, once more winged
+their way into the sky, each bearing a parti-colored lantern, and
+under a fresher breeze their harps vibrated with intenser sound
+in the midst of the aerial illumination.</p>
+
+<p>Then a squadron of Tartars, in their brilliant uniforms,
+mingled in the dances, whose wild fury was increasing rapidly,
+and then began a performance which produced a very strange
+effect.
+ Soldiers came on the ground, armed with bare sabers and long
+pistols, and, as they executed dances, they made the air re-echo
+with the sudden detonations of their firearms, which immediately
+set going the rumbling of the tambourines, and grumblings of the
+daires, and the gnashing of doutares.</p>
+
+<p>Their arms, covered with a colored powder of some metallic
+ingredient, after the Chinese fashion, threw long jets--red,
+green, and blue-- so that the groups of dancers seemed to be in
+the midst of fireworks.
+ In some respects, this performance recalled the military dance
+of the ancients, in the midst of naked swords; but this Tartar
+dance was rendered yet more fantastic by the colored fire, which
+wound, serpent-like, above the dancers, whose dresses seemed to
+be embroidered with fiery hems. It was like a kaleidoscope of
+sparks, whose infinite combinations varied at each movement of
+the dancers.</p>
+
+<p>Though it may be thought that a Parisian reporter would be
+perfectly hardened to any scenic effect, which our modern ideas
+have carried so far, yet Alcide Jolivet could not restrain a
+slight movement of the head, which at home, between the Boulevard
+Montmartre and La Madeleine would have said--"Very fair, very
+fair."</p>
+
+<p>Then, suddenly, at a signal, all the lights of the fantasia
+were extinguished, the dances ceased, and the performers
+disappeared.
+ The ceremony was over, and the torches alone lighted up the
+plateau, which a few instants before had been so brilliantly
+illuminated.</p>
+
+<p>On a sign from the Emir, Michael was led into the middle of
+the square.</p>
+
+<p>"Blount," said Alcide to his companion, "are you going to see
+the end of all this?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, that I am not," replied Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"The readers of the Daily Telegraph are, I hope, not very
+eager for the details of an execution a la mode Tartare?"</p>
+
+<p>"No more than your cousin!"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor fellow!" added Alcide, as he watched Michael. "That
+valiant soldier should have fallen on the field of battle!"</p>
+
+<p>"Can we do nothing to save him?" said Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing!"</p>
+
+<p>The reporters recalled Michael's generous conduct towards
+them; they knew now through what trials he must have passed, ever
+obedient to his duty; and in the midst of these Tartars, to whom
+pity is unknown, they could do nothing for him.
+ Having little desire to be present at the torture reserved for
+the unfortunate man, they returned to the town.
+ An hour later, they were on the road to Irkutsk, for it was
+among the Russians that they intended to follow what Alcide
+called, by anticipation, "the campaign of revenge."</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, Michael was standing ready, his eyes returning the
+Emir's haughty glance, while his countenance assumed an
+expression of intense scorn whenever he cast his looks on Ivan
+Ogareff. He was prepared to die, yet not a single sign of
+weakness escaped him.</p>
+
+<p>The spectators, waiting around the square, as well as
+Feofar-Khan's body-guard, to whom this execution was only one of
+the attractions, were eagerly expecting it. Then, their curiosity
+satisfied, they would rush off to enjoy the pleasures of
+intoxication.</p>
+
+<p>The Emir made a sign. Michael was thrust forward by his guards
+to the foot of the terrace, and Feofar said to him, "You came to
+see our goings out and comings in, Russian spy.
+ You have seen for the last time. In an instant your eyes will be
+forever shut to the day."</p>
+
+<p>Michael's fate was to be not death, but blindness; loss of
+sight, more terrible perhaps than loss of life.
+ The unhappy man was condemned to be blinded.</p>
+
+<p>However, on hearing the Emir's sentence Michael's heart did
+not grow faint. He remained unmoved, his eyes wide open, as
+though he wished to concentrate his whole life into one last
+look.
+ To entreat pity from these savage men would be useless, besides,
+it would be unworthy of him. He did not even think of it.
+ His thoughts were condensed on his mission, which had apparently
+so completely failed; on his mother, on Nadia, whom he should
+never more see! But he let no sign appear of the emotion he
+felt.
+ Then, a feeling of vengeance to be accomplished came over
+him.
+ "Ivan," said he, in a stern voice, "Ivan the Traitor, the last
+menace of my eyes shall be for you!"</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>But Michael was not to be looking at Ivan when his eyes were
+put out.
+ Marfa Strogoff stood before him.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother!" cried he. "Yes! yes! my last glance shall be for
+you, and not for this wretch! Stay there, before me!
+ Now I see once more your well-beloved face! Now shall my eyes
+close as they rest upon it . . . !"</p>
+
+<p>The old woman, without uttering a word, advanced.</p>
+
+<p>"Take that woman away!" said Ivan.</p>
+
+<p>Two soldiers were about to seize her, but she stepped back and
+remained standing a few paces from Michael.</p>
+
+<p>The executioner appeared. This time, he held his saber bare in
+his hand, and this saber he had just drawn from the chafing-dish,
+where he had brought it to a white heat.
+ Michael was going to be blinded in the Tartar fashion, with a
+hot blade passed before his eyes!</p>
+
+<p>Michael did not attempt to resist. Nothing existed before his
+eyes but his mother, whom his eyes seemed to devour.
+ All his life was in that last look.</p>
+
+<p>Marfa Strogoff, her eyes open wide, her arms extended towards
+where he stood, was gazing at him. The incandescent blade passed
+before Michael's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>A despairing cry was heard. His aged mother fell senseless to
+the ground. Michael Strogoff was blind.</p>
+
+<p>His orders executed, the Emir retired with his train.
+ There remained in the square only Ivan Ogareff and the torch
+bearers.
+ Did the wretch intend to insult his victim yet further, and yet
+to give him a parting blow?</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff slowly approached Michael, who, feeling him
+coming, drew himself up. Ivan drew from his pocket the Imperial
+letter, he opened it, and with supreme irony he held it up before
+the sightless eyes of the Czar's courier, saying, "Read, now,
+Michael Strogoff, read, and go and repeat at Irkutsk what you
+have read.
+ The true Courier of the Czar is Ivan Ogareff."</p>
+
+<p>This said, the traitor thrust the letter into his breast.
+ Then, without looking round he left the square, followed by the
+torch-bearers.</p>
+
+<p>Michael was left alone, at a few paces from his mother, lying
+lifeless, perhaps dead. He heard in the distance cries and songs,
+the varied noises of a wild debauch. Tomsk, illuminated,
+glittered and gleamed.</p>
+
+<p>Michael listened. The square was silent and deserted. He went,
+groping his way, towards the place where his mother had
+fallen.
+ He found her with his hand, he bent over her, he put his face
+close to hers, he listened for the beating of her heart.
+ Then he murmured a few words.</p>
+
+<p>Did Marfa still live, and did she hear her son's words?
+ Whether she did so or not, she made not the slightest
+movement.
+ Michael kissed her forehead and her white locks. He then raised
+himself, and, groping with his foot, trying to stretch out his
+hand to guide himself, he walked by degrees to the edge of the
+square.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Nadia appeared. She walked straight to her
+companion.
+ A knife in her hand cut the cords which bound Michael's
+arms.
+ The blind man knew not who had freed him, for Nadia had not
+spoken a word.</p>
+
+<p>But this done: "Brother!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia!" murmured Michael, "Nadia!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, brother," replied Nadia, "use my eyes whilst yours
+sleep.
+ I will lead you to Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI A FRIEND ON THE HIGHWAY</h2>
+
+<p>HALF an hour afterwards, Michael and Nadia had left Tomsk.</p>
+
+<p>Many others of the prisoners were that night able to escape
+from the Tartars, for officers and soldiers, all more or less
+intoxicated, had unconsciously relaxed the vigilant guard which
+they had hitherto maintained. Nadia, after having been carried
+off with the other prisoners, had been able to escape and return
+to the square, at the moment when Michael was led before the
+Emir. There, mingling with the crowd, she had witnessed the
+terrible scene. Not a cry escaped her when the scorching blade
+passed before her companion's eyes.
+ She kept, by her strength of will, mute and motionless.
+ A providential inspiration bade her restrain herself and retain
+her liberty that she might lead Marfa's son to that goal which he
+had sworn to reach. Her heart for an instant ceased to beat when
+the aged Siberian woman fell senseless to the ground, but one
+thought restored her to her former energy.
+ "I will be the blind man's dog," said she.</p>
+
+<p>
+ On Ogareff's departure, Nadia had concealed herself in the
+shade.
+ She had waited till the crowd left the square. Michael,
+abandoned as a wretched being from whom nothing was to be feared,
+was alone.
+ She saw him draw himself towards his mother, bend over her, kiss
+her forehead, then rise and grope his way in flight.</p>
+
+<p>A few instants later, she and he, hand in hand, had descended
+the steep slope, when, after having followed the high banks of
+the Tom to the furthest extremity of the town, they happily found
+a breach in the inclosure.</p>
+
+<p>The road to Irkutsk was the only one which penetrated towards
+the east.
+ It could not be mistaken. It was possible that on the morrow,
+after some hours of carousal, the scouts of the Emir, once more
+scattering over the steppes, might cut off all communication.
+ It was of the greatest importance therefore to get in advance of
+them.
+ How could Nadia bear the fatigues of that night, from the l6th
+to the 17th of August? How could she have found strength for so
+long a stage? How could her feet, bleeding under that forced
+march, have carried her thither? It is almost
+incomprehensible.
+ But it is none the less true that on the next morning, twelve
+hours after their departure from Tomsk, Michael and she reached
+the town of Semilowskoe, after a journey of thirty-five
+miles.</p>
+
+<p>Michael had not uttered a single word. It was not Nadia who
+held his hand, it was he who held that of his companion during
+the whole of that night; but, thanks to that trembling little
+hand which guided him, he had walked at his ordinary pace.</p>
+
+<p>Semilowskoe was almost entirely abandoned. The inhabitants had
+fled.
+ Not more than two or three houses were still occupied.
+ All that the town contained, useful or precious, had been
+carried off in wagons. However, Nadia was obliged to make a halt
+of a few hours.
+ They both required food and rest.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl led her companion to the extremity of the
+town.
+ There they found an empty house, the door wide open.
+ An old rickety wooden bench stood in the middle of the room,
+near the high stove which is to be found in all Siberian
+houses.
+ They silently seated themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia gazed in her companion's face as she had never before
+gazed.
+ There was more than gratitude, more than pity, in that look.
+ Could Michael have seen her, he would have read in that sweet
+desolate gaze a world of devotion and tenderness.</p>
+
+<p>The eyelids of the blind man, made red by the heated blade,
+fell half over his eyes. The pupils seemed to be singularly
+enlarged.
+ The rich blue of the iris was darker than formerly. The
+eyelashes and eyebrows were partly burnt, but in appearance, at
+least, the old penetrating look appeared to have undergone no
+change.
+ If he could no longer see, if his blindness was complete, it was
+because the sensibility of the retina and optic nerve was
+radically destroyed by the fierce heat of the steel.</p>
+
+<p>Then Michael stretched out his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you there, Nadia?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the young girl; "I am close to you, and I will
+not go away from you, Michael."</p>
+
+<p>At his name, pronounced by Nadia for the first time, a thrill
+passed through Michael's frame. He perceived that his companion
+knew all, who he was.</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia," replied he, "we must separate!"</p>
+
+<p>"We separate? How so, Michael?"</p>
+
+<p>"I must not be an obstacle to your journey! Your father is
+waiting for you at Irkutsk! You must rejoin your father!"</p>
+
+<p>"My father would curse me, Michael, were I to abandon you now,
+after all you have done for me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia, Nadia," replied Michael, "you should think only of
+your father!"</p>
+
+<p>"Michael," replied Nadia, "you have more need of me than my
+father.
+ Do you mean to give up going to Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" cried Michael, in a tone which plainly showed that
+none of his energy was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"But you have not the letter!"</p>
+
+<p>"That letter of which Ivan Ogareff robbed me! Well! I shall
+manage without it, Nadia! They have treated me as a spy!
+ I will act as a spy! I will go and repeat at Irkutsk all I have
+seen, all I have heard; I swear it by Heaven above!
+ The traitor shall meet me one day face to face! But I must
+arrive at Irkutsk before him."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet you speak of our separating, Michael?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia, they have taken everything from me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I have some roubles still, and my eyes! I can see for you,
+Michael; and I will lead you thither, where you could not go
+alone!"</p>
+
+<p>"And how shall we go?"</p>
+
+<p>"On foot."</p>
+
+<p>"And how shall we live?"</p>
+
+<p>"By begging."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us start, Nadia."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Michael."</p>
+
+<p>The two young people no longer kept the names "brother" and
+"sister."
+ In their common misfortune, they felt still closer united.
+ They left the house after an hour's repose. Nadia had procured
+in the town some morsels of "tchornekhleb," a sort of barley
+bread, and a little mead, called "meod" in Russia. This had cost
+her nothing, for she had already begun her plan of begging.
+ The bread and mead had in some degree appeased Michael's hunger
+and thirst. Nadia gave him the lion's share of this scanty
+meal.
+ He ate the pieces of bread his companion gave him, drank from
+the gourd she held to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you eating, Nadia?" he asked several times.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Michael," invariably replied the young girl, who
+contented herself with what her companion left.</p>
+
+<p>Michael and Nadia quitted Semilowskoe, and once more set out
+on the laborious road to Irkutsk. The girl bore up in a marvelous
+way against fatigue. Had Michael seen her, perhaps he would not
+have had the courage to go on.
+ But Nadia never complained, and Michael, hearing no sigh, walked
+at a speed he was unable to repress. And why?
+ Did he still expect to keep before the Tartars? He was on foot,
+without money; he was blind, and if Nadia, his only guide, were
+to be separated from him, he could only lie down by the side of
+the road and there perish miserably.
+ But if, on the other hand, by energetic perseverance he could
+reach Krasnoiarsk, all was perhaps not lost, since the governor,
+to whom he would make himself known, would not hesitate to give
+him the means of reaching Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>Michael walked on, speaking little, absorbed in his own
+thoughts.
+ He held Nadia's hand. The two were in incessant communication.
+It seemed to them that they had no need of words to exchange
+their thoughts.
+ From time to time Michael said, "Speak to me, Nadia."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I, Michael? We are thinking together!" the young
+girl would reply, and contrived that her voice should not betray
+her extreme fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>But sometimes, as if her heart had ceased to beat for an
+instant, her limbs tottered, her steps flagged, her arms fell to
+her sides, she dropped behind. Michael then stopped, he fixed his
+eyes on the poor girl, as though he would try to pierce the gloom
+which surrounded him; his breast heaved; then, supporting his
+companion more than before, he started on afresh.</p>
+
+<p>However, amidst these continual miseries, a fortunate
+circumstance on that day occurred which it appeared likely would
+considerably ease their fatigue. They had been walking from
+Semilowskoe for two hours when Michael stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no one on the road?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a single soul," replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not hear some noise behind us? If they are Tartars we
+must hide.
+ Keep a good look-out!"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait, Michael!" replied Nadia, going back a few steps to
+where the road turned to the right.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff waited alone for a minute, listening
+attentively.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia returned almost immediately and said, "It is a cart.
+ A young man is leading it."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Alone."</p>
+
+<p>Michael hesitated an instant. Should he hide? or should he, on
+the contrary, try to find a place in the vehicle, if not for
+himself, at least for her? For himself, he would be quite content
+to lay one hand on the cart, to push it if necessary, for his
+legs showed no sign of failing him; but he felt sure that Nadia,
+compelled to walk ever since they crossed the Obi, that is, for
+eight days, must be almost exhausted. He waited.</p>
+
+<p>The cart was soon at the corner of the road. It was a very
+dilapidated vehicle, known in the country as a kibitka, just
+capable of holding three persons. Usually the kibitka is drawn by
+three horses, but this had but one, a beast with long hair and a
+very long tail.
+ It was of the Mongol breed, known for strength and courage.</p>
+
+<p>A young man was leading it, with a dog beside him.
+ Nadia saw at once that the young man was Russian; his face was
+phlegmatic, but pleasant, and at once inspired confidence.
+ He did not appear to be in the slightest hurry; he was not
+walking fast that he might spare his horse, and, to look at him,
+it would not have been believed that he was following a road
+which might at any instant be swarming with Tartars.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, holding Michael by the hand, made way for the
+vehicle.
+ The kibitka stopped, and the driver smilingly looked at the
+young girl.</p>
+
+<p>"And where are you going to in this fashion?" he asked,
+opening wide his great honest eyes.</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of his voice, Michael said to himself that he had
+heard it before. And it was satisfactory to him to recognize the
+man for his brow at once cleared.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, where are you going?" repeated the young man,
+addressing himself more directly to Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"We are going to Irkutsk," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! little father, you do not know that there are still
+versts and versts between you and Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are going on foot?"</p>
+
+<p>"On foot."</p>
+
+<p>"You, well! but the young lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is my sister," said Michael, who judged it prudent to
+give again this name to Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your sister, little father! But, believe me, she will
+never be able to get to Irkutsk!"</p>
+
+<p>"Friend," returned Michael, approaching him, "the Tartars have
+robbed us of everything, and I have not a copeck to offer you;
+but if you will take my sister with you, I will follow your cart
+on foot; I will run when necessary, I will not delay you an
+hour!"</p>
+
+<p>"Brother," exclaimed Nadia, "I will not! I will not!
+ Sir, my brother is blind!"</p>
+
+<p>"Blind!" repeated the young man, much moved.</p>
+
+<p>"The Tartars have burnt out his eyes!" replied Nadia,
+extending her hands, as if imploring pity.</p>
+
+<p>"Burnt out his eyes! Oh! poor little father! I am going to
+Krasnoiarsk. Well, why should not you and your sister mount in
+the kibitka? By sitting a little close, it will hold us all
+three. Besides, my dog will not refuse to go on foot; only I
+don't go fast, I spare my horse."</p>
+
+<p>"Friend, what is your name?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Nicholas Pigassof."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a name that I will never forget," said Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, jump up, little blind father. Your sister will be
+beside you, in the bottom of the cart; I sit in front to
+drive.
+ There is plenty of good birch bark and straw in the bottom; it's
+like a nest. Serko, make room!"</p>
+
+<p>The dog jumped down without more telling. He was an animal of
+the Siberian race, gray hair, of medium size, with an honest big
+head, just made to pat, and he, moreover, appeared to be much
+attached to his master.</p>
+
+<p>In a moment more, Michael and Nadia were seated in the
+kibitka.
+ Michael held out his hands as if to feel for those of Pigassof.
+"You wish to shake my hands!" said Nicholas. "There they are,
+little father!
+ shake them as long as it will give you any pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>The kibitka moved on; the horse, which Nicholas never touched
+with the whip, ambled along. Though Michael did not gain any in
+speed, at least some fatigue was spared to Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the exhaustion of the young girl, that, rocked by the
+monotonous movement of the kibitka, she soon fell into a sleep,
+its soundness proving her complete prostration.
+ Michael and Nicholas laid her on the straw as comfortably as
+possible.
+ The compassionate young man was greatly moved, and if a tear did
+not escape from Michael's eyes, it was because the red-hot iron
+had dried up the last!</p>
+
+<p>"She is very pretty," said Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"They try to be strong, little father, they are brave, but
+they are weak after all, these dear little things!
+ Have you come from far."</p>
+
+<p>"Very far."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor young people! It must have hurt you very much when they
+burnt your eyes!"</p>
+
+<p>"Very much," answered Michael, turning towards Nicholas as if
+he could see him.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not weep?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"I should have wept too. To think that one could never again
+see those one loves. But they can see you, however; that's
+perhaps some consolation!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, perhaps. Tell me, my friend," continued Michael, "have
+you never seen me anywhere before?"</p>
+
+<p>"You, little father? No, never."</p>
+
+<p>"The sound of your voice is not unknown to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Why!" returned Nicholas, smiling, "he knows the sound of my
+voice!
+ Perhaps you ask me that to find out where I come from.
+ I come from Kolyvan."</p>
+
+<p>"From Kolyvan?" repeated Michael. "Then it was there I met
+you; you were in the telegraph office?"</p>
+
+<p>"That may be," replied Nicholas. "I was stationed there.
+ I was the clerk in charge of the messages."</p>
+
+<p>"And you stayed at your post up to the last moment?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it's at that moment one ought to be there!"</p>
+
+<p>"It was the day when an Englishman and a Frenchman were
+disputing, roubles in hand, for the place at your wicket, and the
+Englishman telegraphed some poetry."</p>
+
+<p>"That is possible, but I do not remember it."</p>
+
+<p>"What! you do not remember it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never read the dispatches I send. My duty being to forget
+them, the shortest way is not to know them."</p>
+
+<p>This reply showed Nicholas Pigassof's character.
+ In the meanwhile the kibitka pursued its way, at a pace which
+Michael longed to render more rapid. But Nicholas and his horse
+were accustomed to a pace which neither of them would like to
+alter.
+ The horse went for two hours and rested one--so on, day and
+night.
+ During the halts the horse grazed, the travelers ate in company
+with the faithful Serko. The kibitka was provisioned for at least
+twenty persons, and Nicholas generously placed his supplies at
+the disposal of his two guests, whom he believed to be brother
+and sister.</p>
+
+<p>After a day's rest, Nadia recovered some strength.
+ Nicholas took the best possible care of her.
+ The journey was being made under tolerable circumstances, slowly
+certainly, but surely. It sometimes happened that during the
+night, Nicholas, although driving, fell asleep, and snored with a
+clearness which showed the calmness of his conscience.
+ Perhaps then, by looking close, Michael's hand might have been
+seen feeling for the reins, and giving the horse a more rapid
+pace, to the great astonishment of Serko, who, however, said
+nothing.
+ The trot was exchanged for the amble as soon as Nicholas awoke,
+but the kibitka had not the less gained some versts.</p>
+
+<p>Thus they passed the river Ichirnsk, the villages of
+Ichisnokoe, Berikylokoe, Kuskoe, the river Marunsk, the village
+of the same name, Bogostowskoe, and, lastly, the Ichoula, a
+little stream which divides Western from Eastern Siberia. The
+road now lay sometimes across wide moors, which extended as far
+as the eye could reach, sometimes through thick forests of firs,
+of which they thought they should never get to the end.
+ Everywhere was a desert; the villages were almost entirely
+abandoned.
+ The peasants had fled beyond the Yenisei, hoping that this wide
+river would perhaps stop the Tartars.</p>
+
+<p>On the 22d of August, the kibitka entered the town of
+Atchinsk, two hundred and fifty miles from Tomsk. Eighty miles
+still lay between them and Krasnoiarsk.</p>
+
+<p>No incident had marked the journey. For the six days during
+which they had been together, Nicholas, Michael, and Nadia had
+remained the same, the one in his unchange-able calm, the other
+two, uneasy, and thinking of the time when their companion would
+leave them.</p>
+
+<p>Michael saw the country through which they traveled with the
+eyes of Nicholas and the young girl. In turns, they each
+described to him the scenes they passed. He knew whether he was
+in a forest or on a plain, whether a hut was on the steppe, or
+whether any Siberian was in sight.
+ Nicholas was never silent, he loved to talk, and, from his
+peculiar way of viewing things, his friends were amused by his
+conversation.
+ One day, Michael asked him what sort of weather it was.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine enough, little father," he answered, "but soon we shall
+feel the first winter frosts. Perhaps the Tartars will go into
+winter quarters during the bad season."</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff shook his head with a doubtful air.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not think so, little father?" resumed Nicholas. "You
+think that they will march on to Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"I fear so," replied Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes . . . you are right; they have with them a bad man, who
+will not let them loiter on the way. You have heard speak of Ivan
+Ogareff?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You know that it is not right to betray one's country!"</p>
+
+<p>"No . . . it is not right . . ." answered Michael, who wished
+to remain unmoved.</p>
+
+<p>"Little father," continued Nicholas, "it seems to me that you
+are not half indignant enough when Ivan Ogareff is spoken of.
+ Your Russian heart ought to leap when his name is uttered."</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me, my friend, I hate him more than you can ever hate
+him," said Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not possible," replied Nicholas; "no, it is not
+possible!
+ When I think of Ivan Ogareff, of the harm which he is doing to
+our sacred Russia, I get into such a rage that if I could get
+hold of him--"</p>
+
+<p>"If you could get hold of him, friend?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think I should kill him."</p>
+
+<p>"And I, I am sure of it," returned Michael quietly.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII THE PASSAGE OF THE YENISEI</h2>
+
+<p>AT nightfall, on the 25th of August, the kibitka came in sight
+of Krasnoiarsk. The journey from Tomsk had taken eight days.
+ If it had not been accomplished as rapidly as it might, it was
+because Nicholas had slept little. Consequently, it was
+impossible to increase his horse's pace, though in other hands,
+the journey would not have taken sixty hours.</p>
+
+<p>Happily, there was no longer any fear of Tartars. Not a scout
+had appeared on the road over which the kibitka had just
+traveled.
+ This was strange enough, and evidently some serious cause had
+prevented the Emir's troops from marching without delay upon
+Irkutsk. Something had occurred. A new Russian corps, hastily
+raised in the government of Yeniseisk, had marched to Tomsk to
+endeavor to retake the town. But, being too weak to withstand the
+Emir's troops, now concentrated there, they had been forced to
+effect a retreat. Feofar-Khan, including his own soldiers, and
+those of the Khanats of Khokhand and Koun-douze, had now under
+his command two hundred and fifty thousand men, to which the
+Russian government could not as yet oppose a sufficient
+force.
+ The invasion could not, therefore, be immediately stopped, and
+the whole Tartar army might at once march upon Irkutsk. The
+battle of Tomsk was on the 22nd of August, though this Michael
+did not know, but it explained why the vanguard of the Emir's
+army had not appeared at Krasnoiarsk by the 25th.</p>
+
+<p>
+ However, though Michael Strogoff could not know the events which
+had occurred since his departure, he at least knew that he was
+several days in advance of the Tartars, and that he need not
+despair of reaching before them the town of Irkutsk, still six
+hundred miles distant.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, at Krasnoiarsk, of which the population is about
+twelve thousand souls, he depended upon obtaining some means of
+transport.
+ Since Nicholas Pigassof was to stop in that town, it would be
+necessary to replace him by a guide, and to change the kibitka
+for another more rapid vehicle. Michael, after having addressed
+himself to the governor of the town, and established his identity
+and quality as Courier of the Czar--which would be easy-- doubted
+not that he would be enabled to get to Irkutsk in the shortest
+possible time. He would thank the good Nicholas Pigassof, and set
+out immediately with Nadia, for he did not wish to leave her
+until he had placed her in her father's arms.
+ Though Nicholas had resolved to stop at Krasnoiarsk, it was only
+as he said, "on condition of finding employment there."
+ In fact, this model clerk, after having stayed to the last
+minute at his post in Kolyvan, was endeavoring to place himself
+again at the disposal of the government.
+ "Why should I receive a salary which I have not earned?"
+ he would say.</p>
+
+<p>In the event of his services not being required at
+Krasnoiarsk, which it was expected would be still in telegraphic
+communication with Irkutsk, he proposed to go to Oudinsk, or even
+to the capital of Siberia itself. In the latter case, he would
+continue to travel with the brother and sister; and where would
+they find a surer guide, or a more devoted friend?</p>
+
+<p>The kibitka was now only half a verst from Krasnoiarsk. The
+numerous wooden crosses which are erected at the approaches to
+the town, could be seen to the right and left of the road. It was
+seven in the evening; the outline of the churches and of the
+houses built on the high bank of the Yenisei were clearly defined
+against the evening sky, and the waters of the river reflected
+them in the twilight.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are we, sister?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Half a verst from the first houses," replied Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"Can the town be asleep?" observed Michael. "Not a sound
+strikes my ear."</p>
+
+<p>"And I cannot see the slightest light, nor even smoke mounting
+into the air," added Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"What a queer town!" said Nicholas. "They make no noise in it,
+and go to bed uncommonly early!"</p>
+
+<p>A presentiment of impending misfortune passed across Michael's
+heart.
+ He had not said to Nadia that he had placed all his hopes on
+Krasnoiarsk, where he expected to find the means of safely
+finishing his journey.
+ He much feared that his anticipations would again be
+disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>But Nadia had guessed his thoughts, although she could not
+understand why her companion should be so anxious to reach
+Irkutsk, now that the Imperial letter was gone. She one day said
+something of the sort to him.
+ "I have sworn to go to Irkutsk," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>But to accomplish his mission, it was necessary that at
+Krasnoiarsk he should find some more rapid mode of
+locomotion.
+ "Well, friend," said he to Nicholas, "why are we not going
+on?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I am afraid of waking up the inhabitants of the town
+with the noise of my carriage!" And with a light fleck of the
+whip, Nicholas put his horse in motion.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes after they entered the High Street. Krasnoiarsk
+was deserted; there was no longer an Athenian in this "Northern
+Athens,"
+ as Madame de Bourboulon has called it. Not one of their dashing
+equipages swept through the wide, clean streets.
+ Not a pedestrian enlivened the footpaths raised at the bases of
+the magnificent wooden houses, of monumental aspect!
+ Not a Siberian belle, dressed in the last French fashion,
+promenaded the beautiful park, cleared in a forest of birch
+trees, which stretches away to the banks of the Yenisei! The
+great bell of the cathedral was dumb; the chimes of the churches
+were silent.
+ Here was complete desolation. There was no longer a living being
+in this town, lately so lively!</p>
+
+<p>The last telegram sent from the Czar's cabinet, before the
+rupture of the wire, had ordered the governor, the garrison, the
+inhabitants, whoever they might be, to leave Krasnoiarsk, to
+carry with them any articles of value, or which might be of use
+to the Tartars, and to take refuge at Irkutsk. The same
+injunction was given to all the villages of the province. It was
+the intention of the Muscovite government to lay the country
+desert before the invaders.
+ No one thought for an instant of disputing these orders.
+ They were executed, and this was the reason why not a single
+human being remained in Krasnoiarsk.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff, Nadia, and Nicholas passed silently through
+the streets of the town. They felt half-stupefied. They
+themselves made the only sound to be heard in this dead city.
+ Michael allowed nothing of what he felt to appear, but he
+inwardly raged against the bad luck which pursued him, his hopes
+being again disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>"Alack, alack!" cried Nicholas, "I shall never get any
+employment in this desert!"</p>
+
+<p>"Friend," said Nadia, "you must go on with us."</p>
+
+<p>"I must indeed!" replied Nicholas. "The wire is no doubt still
+working between Oudinsk and Irkutsk, and there-- Shall we start,
+little father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let us wait till to-morrow," answered Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," said Nicholas. "We have the Yenisei to cross,
+and need light to see our way there!"</p>
+
+<p>"To see!" murmured Nadia, thinking of her blind companion.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas heard her, and turning to Michael, "Forgive me,
+little father,"
+ said he. "Alas! night and day, it is true, are all the same to
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do not reproach yourself, friend," replied Michael, pressing
+his hand over his eyes. "With you for a guide I can still
+act.
+ Take a few hours' repose. Nadia must rest too. To-morrow we will
+recommence our journey!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael and his friends had not to search long for a place of
+rest.
+ The first house, the door of which they pushed open, was empty,
+as well as all the others. Nothing could be found within but a
+few heaps of leaves. For want of better fodder the horse had to
+content himself with this scanty nourishment. The provisions of
+the kibitka were not yet exhausted, so each had a share.
+ Then, after having knelt before a small picture of the Panaghia,
+hung on the wall, and still lighted up by a flickering lamp,
+Nicholas and the young girl slept, whilst Michael, over whom
+sleep had no influence, watched.</p>
+
+<p>Before daybreak the next morning, the 26th of August, the
+horse was drawing the kibitka through the forests of birch trees
+towards the banks of the Yenisei. Michael was in much
+anxiety.
+ How was he to cross the river, if, as was probable, all boats
+had been destroyed to retard the Tartars' march? He knew the
+Yenisei, its width was considerable, its currents strong.
+ Ordinarily by means of boats specially built for the conveyance
+of travelers, carriages, and horses, the passage of the Yenisei
+takes about three hours, and then it is with extreme difficulty
+that the boats reach the opposite bank. Now, in the absence of
+any ferry, how was the kibitka to get from one bank to the
+other?</p>
+
+<p>Day was breaking when the kibitka reached the left bank, where
+one of the wide alleys of the park ended.
+ They were about a hundred feet above the Yenisei, and could
+therefore survey the whole of its wide course.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see a boat?" asked Michael, casting his eyes eagerly
+about from one side to the other, mechanically, no doubt, as if
+he could really see.</p>
+
+<p>"It is scarcely light yet, brother," replied Nadia. "The fog
+is still thick, and we cannot see the water."</p>
+
+<p>"But I hear it roaring," said Michael.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, from the fog issued a dull roaring sound.
+ The waters being high rushed down with tumultuous violence.
+ All three waited until the misty curtain should rise.
+ The sun would not be long in dispersing the vapors.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"The fog is beginning to roll away, brother," replied Nadia,
+"and it will soon be clear."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you do not see the surface of the water yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Have patience, little father," said Nicholas. "All this will
+soon disappear. Look! here comes the breeze!
+ It is driving away the fog. The trees on the opposite hills are
+already appearing. It is sweeping, flying away.
+ The kindly rays of the sun have condensed all that mass of
+mist.
+ Ah! how beautiful it is, my poor fellow, and how unfortunate
+that you cannot see such a lovely sight!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see a boat?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"I see nothing of the sort," answered Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>"Look well, friend, on this and the opposite bank, as far as
+your eye can reach. A raft, even a canoe?"</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas and Nadia, grasping the bushes on the edge of the
+cliff, bent over the water. The view they thus obtained was
+extensive.
+ At this place the Yenisei is not less than a mile in width, and
+forms two arms, of unequal size, through which the waters flow
+swiftly.
+ Between these arms lie several islands, covered with alders,
+willows, and poplars, looking like verdant ships, anchored in the
+river. Beyond rise the high hills of the Eastern shore, crowned
+with forests, whose tops were then empurpled with light.
+ The Yenisei stretched on either side as far as the eye could
+reach.
+ The beautiful panorama lay before them for a distance of fifty
+versts.</p>
+
+<p>But not a boat was to be seen. All had been taken away or
+destroyed, according to order. Unless the Tartars should bring
+with them materials for building a bridge of boats, their march
+towards Irkutsk would certainly be stopped for some time by this
+barrier, the Yenisei.</p>
+
+<p>"I remember," said Michael, "that higher up, on the outskirts
+of Krasnoiarsk, there is a little quay. There the boats
+touch.
+ Friend, let us go up the river, and see if some boat has not
+been forgotten on the bank."</p>
+
+<p>Nadia seized Michael's hand and started off at a rapid pace in
+the direction indicated. If only a boat or a barge large enough
+to hold the kibitka could be found, or even one that would carry
+just themselves, Michael would not hesitate to attempt the
+passage!
+ Twenty minutes after, all three had reached the little quay,
+with houses on each side quite down to the water's edge.
+ It was like a village standing beyond the town of
+Krasnoiarsk.</p>
+
+<p>But not a boat was on the shore, not a barge at the little
+wharf, nothing even of which a raft could be made large enough to
+carry three people. Michael questioned Nicholas, who made the
+discouraging reply that the crossing appeared to him absolutely
+impracticable.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall cross!" answered Michael.</p>
+
+<p>The search was continued. They examined the houses on the
+shore, abandoned like all the rest of Krasnoiarsk. They had
+merely to push open the doors and enter. The cottages were
+evidently those of poor people, and quite empty. Nicholas visited
+one, Nadia entered another, and even Michael went here and there
+and felt about, hoping to light upon some article that might be
+useful.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas and the girl had each fruitlessly rummaged these
+cottages and were about to give up the search, when they heard
+themselves called.
+ Both ran to the bank and saw Michael standing on the threshold
+of a door.</p>
+
+<p>"Come!" he exclaimed. Nicholas and Nadia went towards him and
+followed him into the cottage.</p>
+
+<p>"What are these?" asked Michael, touching several objects
+piled up in a corner.</p>
+
+<p>"They are leathern bottles," answered Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>"Are they full?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, full of koumyss. We have found them very opportunely to
+renew our provisions!"</p>
+
+<p>"Koumyss" is a drink made of mare's or camel's milk, and is
+very sustaining, and even intoxicating; so that Nicholas and his
+companions could not but congratulate themselves on the
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>"Save one," said Michael, "but empty the others."</p>
+
+<p>"Directly, little father."</p>
+
+<p>"These will help us to cross the Yenisei."</p>
+
+<p>"And the raft?"</p>
+
+<p>"Will be the kibitka itself, which is light enough to
+float.
+ Besides, we will sustain it, as well as the horse, with these
+bottles."</p>
+
+<p>"Well thought of, little father," exclaimed Nicholas, "and by
+God's help we will get safely over . . . though perhaps not in a
+straight line, for the current is very rapid!"</p>
+
+<p>"What does that matter?" replied Michael. "Let us get across
+first, and we shall soon find out the road to Irkutsk on the
+other side of the river."</p>
+
+<p>"To work, then," said Nicholas, beginning to empty the
+bottles.</p>
+
+<p>One full of koumyss was reserved, and the rest, with the air
+carefully fastened in, were used to form a floating apparatus.
+Two bottles were fastened to the horse's sides to support it in
+the water.
+ Two others were attached to the shafts to keep them on a level
+with the body of the machine, thus transformed into a raft.
+ This work was soon finished.</p>
+
+<p>"You will not be afraid, Nadia?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"No, brother," answered the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"And you, friend?"</p>
+
+<p>"I?" cried Nicholas. "I am now going to have one of my dreams
+realized-- that of sailing in a cart."</p>
+
+<p>At the spot where they were now standing, the bank sloped, and
+was suitable for the launching of the kibitka.
+ The horse drew it into the water, and they were soon both
+floating.
+ As to Serko, he was swimming bravely.</p>
+
+<p>The three passengers, seated in the vehicle, had with due
+precaution taken off their shoes and stockings; but, thanks to
+the bottles, the water did not even come over their ankles.
+ Michael held the reins, and, according to Nicholas's directions,
+guided the animal obliquely, but cautiously, so as not to exhaust
+him by struggling against the current. So long as the kibitka
+went with the current all was easy, and in a few minutes it had
+passed the quays of Krasnoiarsk. It drifted northwards, and it
+was soon evident that it would only reach the opposite bank far
+below the town. But that mattered little.
+ The crossing would have been made without great difficulty, even
+on this imperfect apparatus, had the current been regular; but,
+unfortunately, there were whirlpools in numbers, and soon the
+kibitka, notwithstanding all Michael's efforts, was irresistibly
+drawn into one of these.</p>
+
+<p>There the danger was great. The kibitka no longer drifted, but
+spun rapidly round, inclining towards the center of the eddy,
+like a rider in a circus. The horse could scarcely keep his head
+above water, and ran a great risk of being suffocated.
+ Serko had been obliged to take refuge in the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>Michael knew what was happening. He felt himself drawn round
+in a gradually narrowing line, from which they could not get
+free.
+ How he longed to see, to be better able to avoid this peril, but
+that was no longer possible. Nadia was silent, her hands clinging
+to the sides of the cart, which was inclining more and more
+towards the center of depression.</p>
+
+<p>And Nicholas, did he not understand the gravity of the
+situation?
+ Was it with him phlegm or contempt of danger, courage or
+indifference?
+ Was his life valueless in his eyes, and, according to the
+Eastern expression, "an hotel for five days," which, whether one
+is willing or not, must be left the sixth? At any rate, the smile
+on his rosy face never faded for an instant.</p>
+
+<p>The kibitka was thus in the whirlpool, and the horse was
+nearly exhausted, when, all at once, Michael, throwing off such
+of his garments as might impede him, jumped into the water; then,
+seizing with a strong hand the bridle of the terrified horse, he
+gave him such an impulse that he managed to struggle out of the
+circle, and getting again into the current, the kibitka drifted
+along anew.</p>
+
+<p>"Hurrah!" exclaimed Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>Two hours after leaving the wharf, the kibitka had crossed the
+widest arm of the river, and had landed on an island more than
+six versts below the starting point.</p>
+
+<p>There the horse drew the cart onto the bank, and an hour's
+rest was given to the courageous animal; then the island having
+been crossed under the shade of its magnificent birches, the
+kibitka found itself on the shore of the smaller arm of the
+Yenisei.</p>
+
+<p>This passage was much easier; no whirlpools broke the course
+of the river in this second bed; but the current was so rapid
+that the kibitka only reached the opposite side five versts
+below.
+ They had drifted eleven versts in all.</p>
+
+<p>These great Siberian rivers across which no bridges have as
+yet been thrown, are serious obstacles to the facility of
+communication. All had been more or less unfortunate to Michael
+Strogoff. On the Irtych, the boat which carried him and Nadia had
+been attacked by Tartars. On the Obi, after his horse had been
+struck by a bullet, he had only by a miracle escaped from the
+horsemen who were pursuing him.
+ In fact, this passage of the Yenisei had been performed the
+least disastrously.</p>
+
+<p>"That would not have been so amusing," exclaimed Nicholas,
+rubbing his hands, as they disembarked on the right bank of the
+river, "if it had not been so difficult."</p>
+
+<p>"That which has only been difficult to us, friend,"
+ answered Michael Strogoff, "will, perhaps, be impossible to the
+Tartars."</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII A HARE CROSSES THE ROAD</h2>
+
+<p>MICHAEL STROGOFF might at last hope that the road to Irkutsk
+was clear. He had distanced the Tartars, now detained at Tomsk,
+and when the Emir's soldiers should arrive at Krasnoiarsk they
+would find only a deserted town. There being no communication
+between the two banks of the Yenisei, a delay of some days would
+be caused until a bridge of boats could be established, and to
+accomplish this would be a difficult undertaking.
+ For the first time since the encounter with Ivan Ogareff at
+Omsk, the courier of the Czar felt less uneasy, and began to hope
+that no fresh obstacle would delay his progress.</p>
+
+<p>The road was good, for that part of it which extends between
+Krasnoiarsk and Irkutsk is considered the best in the whole
+journey; fewer jolts for travelers, large trees to shade them
+from the heat of the sun, sometimes forests of pines or cedars
+covering an extent of a hundred versts.
+ It was no longer the wide steppe with limitless horizon; but the
+rich country was empty. Everywhere they came upon deserted
+villages. The Siberian peasantry had vanished.
+ It was a desert, but a desert by order of the Czar.</p>
+
+<p>
+ The weather was fine, but the air, which cooled during the
+night, took some time to get warm again. Indeed it was now near
+September, and in this high region the days were sensibly
+shortening.
+ Autumn here lasts but a very little while, although this part of
+Siberian territory is not situated above the fifty-fifth
+parallel, that of Edinburgh and Copenhagen. However, winter
+succeeds summer almost unexpectedly. These winters of Asiatic
+Russia may be said to be precocious, considering that during them
+the thermometer falls until the mercury is frozen nearly 42
+degrees below zero, and that 20 degrees below zero is considered
+an unsupportable temperature.</p>
+
+<p>The weather favored our travelers. It was neither stormy nor
+rainy.
+ The health of Nadia and Michael was good, and since leaving
+Tomsk they had gradually recovered from their past fatigues.</p>
+
+<p>As to Nicholas Pigassof, he had never been better in his
+life.
+ To him this journey was a trip, an agreeable excursion in which
+he employed his enforced holiday.</p>
+
+<p>"Decidedly," said he, "this is pleasanter than sitting twelve
+hours a day, perched on a stool, working the manip-ulator!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael had managed to get Nicholas to make his horse quicken
+his pace.
+ To obtain this result, he had confided to Nicholas that Nadia
+and he were on their way to join their father, exiled at Irkutsk,
+and that they were very anxious to get there. Certainly, it would
+not do to overwork the horse, for very probably they would not be
+able to exchange him for another; but by giving him frequent
+rests-- every ten miles, for instance--forty miles in twenty-four
+hours could easily be accomplished. Besides, the animal was
+strong, and of a race calculated to endure great fatigue. He was
+in no want of rich pasturage along the road, the grass being
+thick and abundant.
+ Therefore, it was possible to demand an increase of work from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas gave in to all these reasons. He was much moved at
+the situation of these two young people, going to share their
+father's exile.
+ Nothing had ever appeared so touching to him. With what a smile
+he said to Nadia: "Divine goodness! what joy will Mr. Korpanoff
+feel, when his eyes behold you, when his arms open to receive
+you! If I go to Irkutsk-- and that appears very probable
+now--will you permit me to be present at that interview! You
+will, will you not?" Then, striking his forehead: "But, I forgot,
+what grief too when he sees that his poor son is blind!
+ Ah! everything is mingled in this world!"</p>
+
+<p>However, the result of all this was the kibitka went faster,
+and, according to Michael's calculations, now made almost eight
+miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>After crossing the little river Biriousa, the kibitka reached
+Biriousensk on the morning of the 4th of September. There, very
+fortunately, for Nicholas saw that his provisions were becoming
+exhausted, he found in an oven a dozen "pogatchas," a kind of
+cake prepared with sheep's fat and a large supply of plain boiled
+rice.
+ This increase was very opportune, for something would soon have
+been needed to replace the koumyss with which the kibitka had
+been stored at Krasnoiarsk.</p>
+
+<p>After a halt, the journey was continued in the afternoon.
+ The distance to Irkutsk was not now much over three hundred
+miles.
+ There was not a sign of the Tartar vanguard. Michael Strogoff
+had some grounds for hoping that his journey would not be again
+delayed, and that in eight days, or at most ten, he would be in
+the presence of the Grand Duke.</p>
+
+<p>On leaving Biriousinsk, a hare ran across the road, in front
+of the kibitka. "Ah!" exclaimed Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter, friend?" asked Michael quickly, like a
+blind man whom the least sound arouses.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not see?" said Nicholas, whose bright face had become
+suddenly clouded. Then he added, "Ah! no! you could not see, and
+it's lucky for you, little father!"</p>
+
+<p>"But I saw nothing," said Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better! So much the better! But I--I saw!"</p>
+
+<p>"What was it then?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"A hare crossing our road!" answered Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>In Russia, when a hare crosses the path, the popular belief is
+that it is the sign of approaching evil. Nicholas, superstitious
+like the greater number of Russians, stopped the kibitka.</p>
+
+<p>Michael understood his companion's hesitation, without sharing
+his credulity, and endeavored to reassure him, "There is nothing
+to fear, friend," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing for you, nor for her, I know, little father,"
+answered Nicholas, "but for me!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is my fate," he continued. And he put his horse in motion
+again. However, in spite of these forebodings the day passed
+without any accident.</p>
+
+<p>At twelve o'clock the next day, the 6th of September, the
+kibitka halted in the village of Alsalevok, which was as deserted
+as the surrounding country. There, on a doorstep, Nadia found two
+of those strong-bladed knives used by Siberian hunters.
+ She gave one to Michael, who concealed it among his clothes, and
+kept the other herself.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas had not recovered his usual spirits. The ill-omen had
+affected him more than could have been believed, and he who
+formerly was never half an hour without speaking, now fell into
+long reveries from which Nadia found it difficult to arouse
+him.
+ The kibitka rolled swiftly along the road. Yes, swiftly!
+ Nicholas no longer thought of being so careful of his horse, and
+was as anxious to arrive at his journey's end as Michael
+himself.
+ Notwithstanding his fatalism, and though resigned, he would not
+believe himself in safety until within the walls of Irkutsk. Many
+Russians would have thought as he did, and more than one would
+have turned his horse and gone back again, after a hare had
+crossed his path.</p>
+
+<p>Some observations made by him, the justice of which was proved
+by Nadia transmitting them to Michael, made them fear that their
+trials were not yet over. Though the land from Krasnoiarsk had
+been respected in its natural productions, its forests now bore
+trace of fire and steel; and it was evident that some large body
+of men had passed that way.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty miles before Nijni-Oudinsk, the indications of recent
+devastation could not be mistaken, and it was impossible to
+attribute them to others than the Tartars. It was not only that
+the fields were trampled by horse's feet, and that trees were cut
+down.
+ The few houses scattered along the road were not only empty,
+some had been partly demolished, others half burnt down.
+ The marks of bullets could be seen on their walls.</p>
+
+<p>Michael's anxiety may be imagined. He could no longer doubt
+that a party of Tartars had recently passed that way, and yet it
+was impossible that they could be the Emir's soldiers, for they
+could not have passed without being seen.
+ But then, who were these new invaders, and by what
+out-of-the-way path across the steppe had they been able to join
+the highroad to Irkutsk? With what new enemies was the Czar's
+courier now to meet?</p>
+
+<p>He did not communicate his apprehensions either to Nicholas or
+Nadia, not wishing to make them uneasy. Besides, he had resolved
+to continue his way, as long as no insurmountable obstacle
+stopped him. Later, he would see what it was best to do.
+ During the ensuing day, the recent passage of a large body of
+foot and horse became more and more apparent.
+ Smoke was seen above the horizon. The kibitka advanced
+cautiously.
+ Several houses in deserted villages still burned, and could not
+have been set on fire more than four and twenty hours before.</p>
+
+<p>At last, during the day, on the 8th of September, the kibitka
+stopped suddenly. The horse refused to advance.
+ Serko barked furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"A corpse!" replied Nicholas, who had leapt out of the
+kibitka.
+ The body was that of a moujik, horribly mutilated, and already
+cold.
+ Nicholas crossed himself. Then, aided by Michael, he carried the
+body to the side of the road. He would have liked to give it
+decent burial, that the wild beasts of the steppe might not feast
+on the miserable remains, but Michael could not allow him the
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, friend, come!" he exclaimed, "we must not delay, even
+for an hour!" And the kibitka was driven on.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, if Nicholas had wished to render the last duties to
+all the dead bodies they were now to meet with on the Siberian
+highroad, he would have had enough to do!
+ As they approached Nijni-Oudinsk, they were found by twenties,
+stretched on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, necessary to follow this road until it was
+manifestly impossible to do so longer without falling into the
+hands of the invaders. The road they were following could not be
+abandoned, and yet the signs of devastation and ruin increased at
+every village they passed through. The blood of the victims was
+not yet dry.
+ As to gaining information about what had occurred, that was
+impossible.
+ There was not a living being left to tell the tale.</p>
+
+<p>About four o'clock in the afternoon of this day, Nicholas
+caught sight of the tall steeples of the churches of
+Nijni-Oudinsk. Thick vapors, which could not have been clouds,
+were floating around them.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas and Nadia looked, and communicated the result of
+their observations to Michael. They must make up their minds what
+to do.
+ If the town was abandoned, they could pass through without risk,
+but if, by some inexplicable maneuver, the Tartars occupied it,
+they must at every cost avoid the place.</p>
+
+<p>"Advance cautiously," said Michael Strogoff, "but
+advance!"</p>
+
+<p>A verst was soon traversed.</p>
+
+<p>"Those are not clouds, that is smoke!" exclaimed Nadia.
+"Brother, they are burning the town!"</p>
+
+<p>It was, indeed, only too plain. Flashes of light appeared in
+the midst of the vapor. It became thicker and thicker as it
+mounted upwards.
+ But were they Tartars who had done this? They might be Russians,
+obeying the orders of the Grand Duke. Had the government of the
+Czar determined that from Krasnoiarsk, from the Yenisei, not a
+town, not a village should offer a refuge to the Emir's
+soldiers?
+ What was Michael to do?</p>
+
+<p>He was undecided. However, having weighed the pros and cons,
+he thought that whatever might be the difficulties of a journey
+across the steppe without a beaten path, he ought not to risk
+capture a second time by the Tartars. He was just proposing to
+Nicholas to leave the road, when a shot was heard on their
+right.
+ A ball whistled, and the horse of the kibitka fell dead, shot
+through the head.</p>
+
+<p>A dozen horsemen dashed forward, and the kibitka was
+surrounded.
+ Before they knew where they were, Michael, Nadia, and Nicholas
+were prisoners, and were being dragged rapidly towards
+Nijni-Oudinsk.</p>
+
+<p>Michael, in this second attack, had lost none of his presence
+of mind.
+ Being unable to see his enemies, he had not thought of defending
+himself.
+ Even had he possessed the use of his eyes, he would not have
+attempted it. The consequences would have been his death and that
+of his companions. But, though he could not see, he could listen
+and understand what was said.</p>
+
+<p>From their language he found that these soldiers were Tartars,
+and from their words, that they preceded the invading army.</p>
+
+<p>In short, what Michael learnt from the talk at the present
+moment, as well as from the scraps of conversation he overheard
+later, was this. These men were not under the direct orders of
+the Emir, who was now detained beyond the Yenisei. They made part
+of a third column chiefly composed of Tartars from the khanats of
+Khokland and Koondooz, with which Feofar's army was to affect a
+junction in the neighborhood of Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>By Ogareff's advice, in order to assure the success of the
+invasion in the Eastern provinces, this column had skirted the
+base of the Altai Mountains. Pillaging and ravaging, it had
+reached the upper course of the Yenisei. There, guessing what had
+been done at Krasnoiarsk by order of the Czar, and to facilitate
+the passage of the river to the Emir's troops, this column had
+launched a flotilla of boats, which would enable Feofar to cross
+and r&#130;sum&#130; the road to Irkutsk. Having done this, it
+had descended the valley of the Yenisei and struck the road on a
+level with Alsalevsk. From this little town began the frightful
+course of ruin which forms the chief part of Tartar warfare.
+ Nijni-Oudinsk had shared the common fate, and the Tartars, to
+the number of fifty thousand, had now quitted it to take up a
+position before Irkutsk. Before long, they would be reinforced by
+the Emir's troops.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the state of affairs at this date, most serious for
+this isolated part of Eastern Siberia, and for the comparatively
+few defenders of its capital.</p>
+
+<p>It can be imagined with what thoughts Michael's mind was now
+occupied!
+ Who could have been astonished had he, in his present situation,
+lost all hope and all courage? Nothing of the sort, however; his
+lips muttered no other words than these: "I will get there!"</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour after the attack of the Tartar horsemen, Michael
+Strogoff, Nadia, and Nicholas entered Nijni-Oudinsk. The faithful
+dog followed them, though at a distance.
+ They could not stay in the town, as it was in flames, and about
+to be left by the last of the marauders.
+ The prisoners were therefore thrown on horses and hurried away;
+Nicholas resigned as usual, Nadia, her faith in Michael unshaken,
+and Michael himself, apparently indifferent, but ready to seize
+any opportunity of escaping.</p>
+
+<p>The Tartars were not long in perceiving that one of their
+prisoners was blind, and their natural barbarity led them to make
+game of their unfortunate victim. They were traveling fast.
+ Michael's horse, having no one to guide him, often started
+aside, and so made confusion among the ranks. This drew on his
+rider such abuse and brutality as wrung Nadia's heart, and filled
+Nicholas with indignation. But what could they do? They could not
+speak the Tartar language, and their assistance was mercilessly
+refused.
+ Soon it occurred to these men, in a refinement of cruelty, to
+exchange the horse Michael was riding for one which was
+blind.
+ The motive of the change was explained by a remark which Michael
+overheard, "Perhaps that Russian can see, after all!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael was placed on this horse, and the reins ironically put
+into his hand. Then, by dint of lashing, throwing stones, and
+shouting, the animal was urged into a gallop.
+ The horse, not being guided by his rider, blind as himself,
+sometimes ran into a tree, sometimes went quite off the road-- in
+consequence, collisions and falls, which might have been
+extremely dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>Michael did not complain. Not a murmur escaped him.
+ When his horse fell, he waited until it got up.
+ It was, indeed, soon assisted up, and the cruel fun
+continued.
+ At sight of this wicked treatment, Nicholas could not contain
+himself; he endeavored to go to his friend's aid.
+ He was prevented, and treated brutally.</p>
+
+<p>This game would have been prolonged, to the Tartars' great
+amusement, had not a serious accident put an end to it.
+ On the 10th of September the blind horse ran away, and made
+straight for a pit, some thirty or forty feet deep, at the side
+of the road.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas tried to go after him. He was held back.
+ The horse, having no guide, fell with his rider to the
+bottom.
+ Nicholas and Nadia uttered a piercing cry! They believed that
+their unfortunate companion had been killed.</p>
+
+<p>However, when they went to his assistance, it was found that
+Michael, having been able to throw himself out of the saddle, was
+unhurt, but the miserable horse had two legs broken, and was
+quite useless.
+ He was left there to die without being put out of his suffering,
+and Michael, fastened to a Tartar's saddle, was obliged to follow
+the detachment on foot.</p>
+
+<p>Even now, not a protest, not a complaint! He marched with a
+rapid step, scarcely drawn by the cord which tied him.
+ He was still "the Man of Iron," of whom General Kissoff had
+spoken to the Czar!</p>
+
+<p>The next day, the 11th of September, the detachment passed
+through the village of Chibarlinskoe. Here an incident occurred
+which had serious consequences. It was nightfall.
+ The Tartar horsemen, having halted, were more or less
+intoxicated.
+ They were about to start. Nadia, who till then, by a miracle,
+had been respectfully treated by the soldiers, was insulted by
+one of them.</p>
+
+<p>Michael could not see the insult, nor the insulter, but
+Nicholas saw for him. Then, quietly, without thinking, without
+perhaps knowing what he was doing, Nicholas walked straight up to
+the man, and, before the latter could make the least movement to
+stop him, had seized a pistol from his holster and discharged it
+full at his breast.</p>
+
+<p>The officer in command of the detachment hastened up on
+hearing the report. The soldiers would have cut the unfortunate
+Nicholas to pieces, but at a sign from their officer, he was
+bound instead, placed across a horse, and the detachment galloped
+off.</p>
+
+<p>The rope which fastened Michael, gnawed through by him, broke
+by the sudden start of the horse, and the half-tipsy rider
+galloped on without perceiving that his prisoner had escaped.</p>
+
+<p>Michael and Nadia found themselves alone on the road.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IX IN THE STEPPE</h2>
+
+<p>MICHAEL STROGOFF and Nadia were once more as free as they had
+been in the journey from Perm to the banks of the Irtych. But how
+the conditions under which they traveled were altered!
+ Then, a comfortable tarantass, fresh horses, well-kept
+post-horses assured the rapidity of their journey. Now they were
+on foot; it was utterly impossible to procure any other means of
+locomotion, they were without resources, not knowing how to
+obtain even food, and they had still nearly three hundred miles
+to go!
+ Moreover, Michael could now only see with Nadia's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>As to the friend whom chance had given them, they had just
+lost him, and fearful might be his fate. Michael had thrown
+himself down under the brushwood at the side of the road.
+ Nadia stood beside him, waiting for the word from him to
+continue the march.</p>
+
+<p>It was ten o'clock. The sun had more than three hours before
+disappeared below the horizon. There was not a house in
+sight.
+ The last of the Tartars was lost in the distance.
+ Michael and Nadia were quite alone.</p>
+
+<p>
+ "What will they do with our friend?" exclaimed the girl.
+ "Poor Nicholas! Our meeting will have been fatal to him!"
+ Michael made no response.</p>
+
+<p>"Michael," continued Nadia, "do you not know that he defended
+you when you were the Tartars' sport; that he risked his life for
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>Michael was still silent. Motionless, his face buried in his
+hands; of what was he thinking? Perhaps, although he did not
+answer, he heard Nadia speak.</p>
+
+<p>Yes! he heard her, for when the young girl added, "Where shall
+I lead you, Michael?"</p>
+
+<p>"To Irkutsk!" he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"By the highroad?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Nadia."</p>
+
+<p>Michael was still the same man who had sworn, whatever
+happened, to accomplish his object. To follow the highroad, was
+certainly to go the shortest way. If the vanguard of
+Feofar-Khan's troops appeared, it would then be time to strike
+across the country.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia took Michael's hand, and they started.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, the 13th of September, twenty versts
+further, they made a short halt in the village of Joulounov-skoe.
+It was burnt and deserted. All night Nadia had tried to see if
+the body of Nicholas had not been left on the road, but it was in
+vain that she looked among the ruins, and searched among the
+dead.
+ Was he reserved for some cruel torture at Irkutsk?</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, exhausted with hunger, was fortunate enough to find in
+one of the houses a quantity of dried meat and "soukharis,"
+pieces of bread, which, dried by evaporation, preserve their
+nutritive qualities for an indefinite time.</p>
+
+<p>Michael and the girl loaded themselves with as much as they
+could carry.
+ They had thus a supply of food for several days, and as to
+water, there would be no want of that in a district rendered
+fertile by the numerous little affluents of the Angara.</p>
+
+<p>They continued their journey. Michael walked with a firm step,
+and only slackened his pace for his companion's sake.
+ Nadia, not wishing to retard him, obliged herself to walk.
+ Happily, he could not see to what a miserable state fatigue had
+reduced her.</p>
+
+<p>However, Michael guessed it. "You are quite done up, poor
+child,"
+ he said sometimes.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she would reply.</p>
+
+<p>"When you can no longer walk, I will carry you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Michael."</p>
+
+<p>During this day they came to the little river Oka, but it was
+fordable, and they had no difficulty in crossing. The sky was
+cloudy and the temperature moderate. There was some fear that the
+rain might come on, which would much have increased their
+misery.
+ A few showers fell, but they did not last.</p>
+
+<p>They went on as before, hand in hand, speaking little, Nadia
+looking about on every side; twice a day they halted.
+ Six hours of the night were given to sleep. In a few huts Nadia
+again found a little mutton; but, contrary to Michael's hopes,
+there was not a single beast of burden in the country; horses,
+camels--all had been either killed or carried off.
+ They must still continue to plod on across this weary steppe on
+foot.</p>
+
+<p>The third Tartar column, on its way to Irkutsk, had left plain
+traces: here a dead horse, there an abandoned cart. The bodies of
+unfortunate Siberians lay along the road, principally at the
+entrances to villages.
+ Nadia, overcoming her repugnance, looked at all these
+corpses!</p>
+
+<p>The chief danger lay, not before, but behind.
+ The advance guard of the Emir's army, commanded by Ivan Ogareff,
+might at any moment appear. The boats sent down the lower Yenisei
+must by this time have reached Krasnoiarsk and been made use of.
+The road was therefore open to the invaders.
+ No Russian force could be opposed to them between Krasnoiarsk
+and Lake Baikal, Michael therefore expected before long the
+appearance of the Tartar scouts.</p>
+
+<p>At each halt, Nadia climbed some hill and looked anxiously to
+the Westward, but as yet no cloud of dust had signaled the
+approach of a troop of horse.</p>
+
+<p>Then the march was resumed; and when Michael felt that he was
+dragging poor Nadia forward too rapidly, he went at a slower
+pace.
+ They spoke little, and only of Nicholas. The young girl recalled
+all that this companion of a few days had done for them.</p>
+
+<p>In answering, Michael tried to give Nadia some hope of which
+he did not feel a spark himself, for he well knew that the
+unfortunate fellow would not escape death.</p>
+
+<p>One day Michael said to the girl, "You never speak to me of my
+mother, Nadia."</p>
+
+<p>His mother! Nadia had never wished to do so. Why renew his
+grief?
+ Was not the old Siberian dead? Had not her son given the last
+kiss to her corpse stretched on the plain of Tomsk?</p>
+
+<p>"Speak to me of her, Nadia," said Michael. "Speak--you will
+please me."</p>
+
+<p>And then Nadia did what she had not done before. She told all
+that had passed between Marfa and herself since their meeting at
+Omsk, where they had seen each other for the first time.
+ She said how an inexplicable instinct had led her towards the
+old prisoner without knowing who she was, and what encouragement
+she had received in return. At that time Michael Strogoff had
+been to her but Nicholas Korpanoff.</p>
+
+<p>"Whom I ought always to have been," replied Michael, his brow
+darkening.</p>
+
+<p>Then later he added, "I have broken my oath, Nadia. I had
+sworn not to see my mother!"</p>
+
+<p>"But you did not try to see her, Michael," replied Nadia.
+"Chance alone brought you into her presence."</p>
+
+<p>"I had sworn, whatever might happen, not to betray
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Michael, Michael! at sight of the lash raised upon Marfa,
+could you refrain? No! No oath could prevent a son from succoring
+his mother!"</p>
+
+<p>"I have broken my oath, Nadia," returned Michael. "May God and
+the Father pardon me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Michael," resumed the girl, "I have a question to ask
+you.
+ Do not answer it if you think you ought not. Nothing from you
+would vex me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Speak, Nadia."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, now that the Czar's letter has been taken from you, are
+you so anxious to reach Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>Michael tightly pressed his companion's hand, but he did not
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you know the contents of that letter before you left
+Moscow?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I did not know."</p>
+
+<p>"Must I think, Michael, that the wish alone to place me in my
+father's hands draws you toward Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Nadia," replied Michael, gravely. "I should deceive you
+if I allowed you to believe that it was so. I go where duty
+orders me to go. As to taking you to Irkutsk, is it not you,
+Nadia, who are now taking me there?
+ Do I not see with your eyes; and is it not your hand that guides
+me?
+ Have you not repaid a hundred-fold the help which I was able to
+give you at first? I do not know if fate will cease to go against
+us; but the day on which you thank me for having placed you in
+your father's hands, I in my turn will thank you for having led
+me to Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Michael!" answered Nadia, with emotion. "Do not speak
+so.
+ That does not answer me. Michael, why, now, are you in such
+haste to reach Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I must be there before Ivan Ogareff," exclaimed
+Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"Even now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Even now, and I will be there, too!"</p>
+
+<p>In uttering these words, Michael did not speak solely through
+hatred to the traitor. Nadia understood that her companion had
+not told, or could not tell, her all.</p>
+
+<p>On the 15th of September, three days later, the two reached
+the village of Kouitounskoe. The young girl suffered
+dreadfully.
+ Her aching feet could scarcely support her; but she fought, she
+struggled, against her weariness, and her only thought was this:
+"Since he cannot see me, I will go on till I drop."</p>
+
+<p>There were no obstacles on this part of the journey, no danger
+either since the departure of the Tartars, only much fatigue.
+ For three days it continued thus. It was plain that the third
+invading column was advancing rapidly in the East; that could be
+seen by the ruins which they left after them-- the cold cinders
+and the already decomposing corpses.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing to be seen in the West; the Emir's
+advance-guard had not yet appeared. Michael began to consider the
+various reasons which might have caused this delay.
+ Was a sufficient force of Russians directly menacing Tomsk or
+Krasnoiarsk? Did the third column, isolated from the others, run
+a risk of being cut off? If this was the case, it would be easy
+for the Grand Duke to defend Irkutsk, and any time gained against
+an invasion was a step towards repulsing it.
+ Michael sometimes let his thoughts run on these hopes, but he
+soon saw their improbability, and felt that the preservation of
+the Grand Duke depended alone on him.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia dragged herself along. Whatever might be her moral
+energy, her physical strength would soon fail her.
+ Michael knew it only too well. If he had not been blind, Nadia
+would have said to him, "Go, Michael, leave me in some hut!
+ Reach Irkutsk! Accomplish your mission! See my father!
+ Tell him where I am! Tell him that I wait for him, and you both
+will know where to find me! Start! I am not afraid!
+ I will hide myself from the Tartars! I will take care of myself
+for him, for you! Go, Michael! I can go no farther!"</p>
+
+<p>Many times Nadia was obliged to stop. Michael then took her in
+his strong arms and, having no longer to think of her fatigue,
+walked more rapidly and with his indefatigable step.</p>
+
+<p>On the 18th of September, at ten in the evening, Kimilteiskoe
+was at last entered. From the top of a hill, Nadia saw in the
+horizon a long light line. It was the Dinka River. A few
+lightning flashes were reflected in the water; summer lightning,
+without thunder.
+ Nadia led her companion through the ruined village.
+ The cinders were quite cold. The last of the Tartars had passed
+through at least five or six days before.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond the village, Nadia sank down on a stone bench.
+ "Shall we make a halt?" asked Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"It is night, Michael," answered Nadia. "Do you not want to
+rest a few hours?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would rather have crossed the Dinka," replied Michael, "I
+should like to put that between us and the Emir's advance-guard.
+But you can scarcely drag yourself along, my poor Nadia!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Michael," returned Nadia, seizing her companion's hand
+and drawing him forward.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three versts further the Dinka flowed across the
+Irkutsk road.
+ The young girl wished to attempt this last effort asked by her
+companion.
+ She found her way by the light from the flashes. They were then
+crossing a boundless desert, in the midst of which was lost the
+little river.
+ Not a tree nor a hillock broke the flatness. Not a breath
+disturbed the atmosphere, whose calmness would allow the
+slightest sound to travel an immense distance.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, Michael and Nadia stopped, as if their feet had been
+fast to the ground. The barking of a dog came across the
+steppe.
+ "Do you hear?" said Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>Then a mournful cry succeeded it--a despairing cry, like the
+last appeal of a human being about to die.</p>
+
+<p>"Nicholas! Nicholas!" cried the girl, with a foreboding of
+evil.
+ Michael, who was listening, shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Michael, come," said Nadia. And she who just now was
+dragging herself with difficulty along, suddenly recovered
+strength, under violent excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"We have left the road," said Michael, feeling that he was
+treading no longer on powdery soil but on short grass.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we must!" returned Nadia. "It was there, on the right,
+from which the cry came!"</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes they were not more than half a verst from the
+river.
+ A second bark was heard, but, although more feeble, it was
+certainly nearer. Nadia stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" said Michael. "It is Serko barking! . . . He has
+followed his master!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nicholas!" called the girl. Her cry was unanswered.</p>
+
+<p>Michael listened. Nadia gazed over the plain illumined now and
+again with electric light, but she saw nothing.
+ And yet a voice was again raised, this time murmuring in a
+plaintive tone, "Michael!"</p>
+
+<p>Then a dog, all bloody, bounded up to Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>It was Serko! Nicholas could not be far off! He alone could
+have murmured the name of Michael! Where was he?
+ Nadia had no strength to call again. Michael, crawling on the
+ground, felt about with his hands.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Serko uttered a fresh bark and darted towards a
+gigantic bird which had swooped down. It was a vulture. When
+Serko ran towards it, it rose, but returning struck at the dog.
+The latter leapt up at it.
+ A blow from the formidable beak alighted on his head, and this
+time Serko fell back lifeless on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment a cry of horror escaped Nadia. "There . . .
+there!"
+ she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>A head issued from the ground! She had stumbled against it in
+the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia fell on her knees beside it. Nicholas buried up to his
+neck, according to the atrocious Tartar custom, had been left in
+the steppe to die of thirst, and perhaps by the teeth of wolves
+or the beaks of birds of prey!</p>
+
+<p>Frightful torture for the victim imprisoned in the ground--
+the earth pressed down so that he cannot move, his arms bound to
+his body like those of a corpse in its coffin!
+ The miserable wretch, living in the mold of clay from which he
+is powerless to break out, can only long for the death which is
+so slow in coming!</p>
+
+<p>There the Tartars had buried their prisoner three days
+before!
+ For three days, Nicholas waited for the help which now came too
+late!
+ The vultures had caught sight of the head on a level with the
+ground, and for some hours the dog had been defending his master
+against these ferocious birds!</p>
+
+<p>Michael dug at the ground with his knife to release his
+friend!
+ The eyes of Nicholas, which till then had been closed,
+opened.</p>
+
+<p>He recognized Michael and Nadia. "Farewell, my friends!" he
+murmured.
+ "I am glad to have seen you again! Pray for me!"</p>
+
+<p>Michael continued to dig, though the ground, having been
+tightly rammed down, was as hard as stone, and he managed at last
+to get out the body of the unhappy man. He listened if his heart
+was still beating. . . . It was still!</p>
+
+<p>He wished to bury him, that he might not be left exposed; and
+the hole into which Nicholas had been placed when living, was
+enlarged, so that he might be laid in it--dead! The faithful
+Serko was laid by his master.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment, a noise was heard on the road, about half a
+verst distant. Michael Strogoff listened. It was evidently a
+detachment of horse advancing towards the Dinka. "Nadia,
+Nadia!"
+ he said in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, who was kneeling in prayer, arose. "Look, look!" said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"The Tartars!" she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed the Emir's advance-guard, passing rapidly along
+the road to Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>"They shall not prevent me from burying him!" said Michael.
+And he continued his work.</p>
+
+<p>Soon, the body of Nicholas, the hands crossed on the breast,
+was laid in the grave. Michael and Nadia, kneeling, prayed a last
+time for the poor fellow, inoffensive and good, who had paid for
+his devotion towards them with his life.</p>
+
+<p>"And now," said Michael, as he threw in the earth, "the wolves
+of the steppe will not devour him."</p>
+
+<p>Then he shook his fist at the troop of horsemen who were
+passing.
+ "Forward, Nadia!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>Michael could not follow the road, now occupied by the
+Tartars. He must cross the steppe and turn to Irkutsk. He had not
+now to trouble himself about crossing the Dinka. Nadia could not
+move, but she could see for him. He took her in his arms and went
+on towards the southwest of the province.</p>
+
+<p>A hundred and forty miles still remained to be traversed.
+ How was the distance to be performed? Should they not succumb to
+such fatigue? On what were they to live on the way?
+ By what superhuman energy were they to pass the slopes of the
+Sayansk Mountains? Neither he nor Nadia could answer this!</p>
+
+<p>And yet, twelve days after, on the 2d of October, at six
+o'clock in the evening, a wide sheet of water lay at Michael
+Strogoff's feet.
+ It was Lake Baikal.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER X BAIKAL AND ANGARA</h2>
+
+<p>LAKE BAIKAL is situated seventeen hundred feet above the level
+of the sea. Its length is about six hundred miles, its breadth
+seventy.
+ Its depth is not known. Madame de Bourboulon states that,
+according to the boatmen, it likes to be spoken of as "Madam
+Sea." If it is called "Sir Lake," it immediately lashes itself
+into fury.
+ However, it is reported and believed by the Siberians that a
+Russian is never drowned in it.</p>
+
+<p>This immense basin of fresh water, fed by more than three
+hundred rivers, is surrounded by magnificent volcanic
+mountains.
+ It has no other outlet than the Angara, which after passing
+Irkutsk throws itself into the Yenisei, a little above the town
+of Yeniseisk. As to the mountains which encase it, they form a
+branch of the Toungouzes, and are derived from the vast system of
+the Altai.</p>
+
+<p>
+ In this territory, subject to peculiar climatical conditions,
+the autumn appears to be absorbed in the precocious winter.
+ It was now the beginning of October. The sun set at five o'clock
+in the evening, and during the long nights the temperature fell
+to zero.
+ The first snows, which would last till summer, already whitened
+the summits of the neighboring hills. During the Siberian winter
+this inland sea is frozen over to a thickness of several feet,
+and is crossed by the sleighs of caravans.</p>
+
+<p>Either because there are people who are so wanting in
+politeness as to call it "Sir Lake," or for some more
+meteorological reason, Lake Baikal is subject to violent
+tempests. Its waves, short like those of all inland seas, are
+much feared by the rafts, prahms, and steamboats, which furrow it
+during the summer.</p>
+
+<p>It was the southwest point of the lake which Michael had now
+reached, carrying Nadia, whose whole life, so to speak, was
+concentrated in her eyes. But what could these two expect, in
+this wild region, if it was not to die of exhaustion and
+famine?
+ And yet, what remained of the long journey of four thousand
+miles for the Czar's courier to reach his end? Nothing but forty
+miles on the shore of the lake up to the mouth of the Angara, and
+sixty miles from the mouth of the Angara to Irkutsk; in all, a
+hundred miles, or three days' journey for a strong man, even on
+foot.</p>
+
+<p>Could Michael Strogoff still be that man?</p>
+
+<p>Heaven, no doubt, did not wish to put him to this trial.
+ The fatality which had hitherto pursued his steps seemed for a
+time to spare him. This end of the Baikal, this part of the
+steppe, which he believed to be a desert, which it usually is,
+was not so now.
+ About fifty people were collected at the angle formed by the end
+of the lake.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia immediately caught sight of this group, when Michael,
+carrying her in his arms, issued from the mountain pass.
+ The girl feared for a moment that it was a Tartar detachment,
+sent to beat the shores of the Baikal, in which case flight would
+have been impossible to them both. But Nadia was soon
+reassured.</p>
+
+<p>"Russians!" she exclaimed. And with this last effort, her eyes
+closed and her head fell on Michael's breast.</p>
+
+<p>But they had been seen, and some of these Russians, running to
+them, led the blind man and the girl to a little point at which
+was moored a raft.</p>
+
+<p>The raft was just going to start. These Russians were
+fugitives of different conditions, whom the same interest had
+united at Lake Baikal. Driven back by the Tartar scouts, they
+hoped to obtain a refuge at Irkutsk, but not being able to get
+there by land, the invaders having occupied both banks of the
+Angara, they hoped to reach it by descending the river which
+flows through the town.</p>
+
+<p>Their plan made Michael's heart leap; a last chance was before
+him, but he had strength to conceal this, wishing to keep his
+incognito more strictly than ever.</p>
+
+<p>The fugitives' plan was very simple. A current in the lake
+runs along by the upper bank to the mouth of the Angara; this
+current they hoped to utilize, and with its assistance to reach
+the outlet of Lake Baikal. From this point to Irkutsk, the rapid
+waters of the river would bear them along at a rate of eight
+miles an hour.
+ In a day and a half they might hope to be in sight of the
+town.</p>
+
+<p>No kind of boat was to be found; they had been obliged to make
+one; a raft, or rather a float of wood, similar to those which
+usually are drifted down Siberian rivers, was constructed. A
+forest of firs, growing on the bank, had supplied the necessary
+materials; the trunks, fastened together with osiers, made a
+platform on which a hundred people could have easily found
+room.</p>
+
+<p>On board this raft Michael and Nadia were taken. The girl had
+returned to herself; some food was given to her as well as to her
+companion.
+ Then, lying on a bed of leaves, she soon fell into a deep
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p>To those who questioned him, Michael Strogoff said nothing of
+what had taken place at Tomsk. He gave himself out as an
+inhabitant of Krasnoiarsk, who had not been able to get to
+Irkutsk before the Emir's troops arrived on the left bank of the
+Dinka, and he added that, very probably, the bulk of the Tartar
+forces had taken up a position before the Siberian capital.</p>
+
+<p>There was not a moment to be lost; besides, the cold was
+becoming more and more severe. During the night the temperature
+fell below zero; ice was already forming on the surface of the
+Baikal. Although the raft managed to pass easily over the lake,
+it might not be so easy between the banks of the Angara, should
+pieces of ice be found to block up its course.</p>
+
+<p>At eight in the evening the moorings were cast off, and the
+raft drifted in the current along the shore. It was steered by
+means of long poles, under the management of several muscular
+moujiks.
+ An old Baikal boatman took command of the raft.
+ He was a man of sixty-five, browned by the sun, and lake
+breezes.
+ A thick white beard flowed over his chest; a fur cap covered his
+head; his aspect was grave and austere. His large great-coat,
+fastened in at the waist, reached down to his heels.
+ This taciturn old fellow was seated in the stern, and issued his
+commands by gestures. Besides, the chief work consisted in
+keeping the raft in the current, which ran along the shore,
+without drifting out into the open.</p>
+
+<p>It has been already said that Russians of all conditions had
+found a place on the raft. Indeed, to the poor moujiks, the
+women, old men, and children, were joined two or three pilgrims,
+surprised on their journey by the invasion; a few monks, and a
+priest.
+ The pilgrims carried a staff, a gourd hung at the belt, and they
+chanted psalms in a plaintive voice: one came from the Ukraine,
+another from the Yellow sea, and a third from the Finland
+provinces.
+ This last, who was an aged man, carried at his waist a little
+padlocked collecting-box, as if it had been hung at a church
+door.
+ Of all that he collected during his long and fatiguing
+pilgrimage, nothing was for himself; he did not even possess the
+key of the box, which would only be opened on his return.</p>
+
+<p>The monks came from the North of the Empire. Three months
+before they had left the town of Archangel. They had visited the
+sacred islands near the coast of Carelia, the convent of
+Solovetsk, the convent of Troitsa, those of Saint Antony and
+Saint Theodosia, at Kiev, that of Kazan, as well as the church of
+the Old Believers, and they were now on their way to Irkutsk,
+wearing the robe, the cowl, and the clothes of serge.</p>
+
+<p>As to the papa, or priest, he was a plain village pastor, one
+of the six hundred thousand popular pastors which the Russian
+Empire contains.
+ He was clothed as miserably as the moujiks, not being above them
+in social position; in fact, laboring like a peasant on his plot
+of ground; baptis-ing, marrying, burying. He had been able to
+protect his wife and children from the brutality of the Tartars
+by sending them away into the Northern provinces.
+ He himself had stayed in his parish up to the last moment; then
+he was obliged to fly, and, the Irkutsk road being stopped, had
+come to Lake Baikal.</p>
+
+<p>These priests, grouped in the forward part of the raft, prayed
+at regular intervals, raising their voices in the silent night,
+and at the end of each sentence of their prayer, the "Slava
+Bogu," Glory to God! issued from their lips.</p>
+
+<p>No incident took place during the night. Nadia remained in a
+sort of stupor, and Michael watched beside her; sleep only
+overtook him at long intervals, and even then his brain did not
+rest.
+ At break of day, the raft, delayed by a strong breeze, which
+counteracted the course of the current, was still forty versts
+from the mouth of the Angara. It seemed probable that the
+fugitives could not reach it before three or four o'clock in the
+evening.
+ This did not trouble them; on the contrary, for they would then
+descend the river during the night, and the darkness would also
+favor their entrance into Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>The only anxiety exhibited at times by the old boatman was
+concerning the formation of ice on the surface of the water.
+ The night had been excessively cold; pieces of ice could be seen
+drifting towards the West. Nothing was to be dreaded from these,
+since they could not drift into the Angara, having already passed
+the mouth; but pieces from the Eastern end of the lake might be
+drawn by the current between the banks of the river; this would
+cause difficulty, possibly delay, and perhaps even an
+insurmountable obstacle which would stop the raft.</p>
+
+<p>Michael therefore took immense interest in ascertaining what
+was the state of the lake, and whether any large number of ice
+blocks appeared.
+ Nadia being now awake, he questioned her often, and she gave him
+an account of all that was going on.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the blocks were thus drifting, curious phenomena were
+taking place on the surface of the Baikal. Magnificent jets, from
+springs of boiling water, shot up from some of those artesian
+wells which Nature has bored in the very bed of the lake.
+ These jets rose to a great height and spread out in vapor, which
+was illuminated by the solar rays, and almost immediately
+condensed by the cold. This curious sight would have assuredly
+amazed a tourist traveling in peaceful times on this Siberian
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>At four in the evening, the mouth of the Angara was signaled
+by the old boatman, between the high granite rocks of the
+shore.
+ On the right bank could be seen the little port of
+Livenitchnaia, its church, and its few houses built on the bank.
+But the serious thing was that the ice blocks from the East were
+already drifting between the banks of the Angara, and
+consequently were descending towards Irkutsk. However, their
+number was not yet great enough to obstruct the course of the
+raft, nor the cold great enough to increase their number.</p>
+
+<p>The raft arrived at the little port and there stopped. The old
+boatman wished to put into harbor for an hour, in order to make
+some repairs.
+ The trunks threatened to separate, and it was important to
+fasten them more securely together to resist the rapid current of
+the Angara.</p>
+
+<p>The old boatman did not expect to receive any fresh fugitives
+at Livenitchnaia, and yet, the moment the raft touched, two
+passengers, issuing from a deserted house, ran as fast as they
+could towards the beach.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia seated on the raft, was abstractedly gazing at the
+shore.
+ A cry was about to escape her. She seized Michael's hand, who at
+that moment raised his head.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter, Nadia?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Our two traveling companions, Michael."</p>
+
+<p>"The Frenchman and the Englishman whom we met in the defiles
+of the Ural?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>Michael started, for the strict incognito which he wished to
+keep ran a risk of being betrayed. Indeed, it was no longer as
+Nicholas Korpanoff that Jolivet and Blount would now see him, but
+as the true Michael Strogoff, Courier of the Czar. The two
+correspondents had already met him twice since their separation
+at the Ichim post-house--the first time at the Zabediero camp,
+when he laid open Ivan Ogareff's face with the knout; the second
+time at Tomsk, when he was condemned by the Emir. They therefore
+knew who he was and what depended on him.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff rapidly made up his mind. "Nadia," said he,
+"when they step on board, ask them to come to me!"</p>
+
+<p>It was, in fact, Blount and Jolivet, whom the course of events
+had brought to the port of Livenitchnaia, as it had brought
+Michael Strogoff. As we know, after having been present at the
+entry of the Tartars into Tomsk, they had departed before the
+savage execution which terminated the fete.
+ They had therefore never suspected that their former traveling
+companion had not been put to death, but blinded by order of the
+Emir.</p>
+
+<p>Having procured horses they had left Tomsk the same evening,
+with the fixed determination of henceforward dating their letters
+from the Russian camp of Eastern Siberia. They proceeded by
+forced marches towards Irkutsk. They hoped to distance
+Feofar-Khan, and would certainly have done so, had it not been
+for the unexpected apparition of the third column, come from the
+South, up the valley of the Yenisei. They had been cut off, as
+had been Michael, before being able even to reach the Dinka, and
+had been obliged to go back to Lake Baikal.</p>
+
+<p>They had been in the place for three days in much perplexity,
+when the raft arrived. The fugitives' plan was explained to
+them.
+ There was certainly a chance that they might be able to pass
+under cover of the night, and penetrate into Irkutsk. They
+resolved to make the attempt.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide directly communicated with the old boatman, and asked a
+passage for himself and his companion, offering to pay anything
+he demanded, whatever it might be.</p>
+
+<p>"No one pays here," replied the old man gravely; "every one
+risks his life, that is all!"</p>
+
+<p>The two correspondents came on board, and Nadia saw them take
+their places in the forepart of the raft. Harry Blount was still
+the reserved Englishman, who had scarcely addressed a word to her
+during the whole passage over the Ural Mountains. Alcide Jolivet
+seemed to be rather more grave than usual, and it may be
+acknowledged that his gravity was justified by the
+circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>Jolivet had, as has been said, taken his seat on the raft,
+when he felt a hand laid on his arm. Turning, he recognized
+Nadia, the sister of the man who was no longer Nicholas
+Korpanoff, but Michael Strogoff, Courier of the Czar. He was
+about to make an exclamation of surprise when he saw the young
+girl lay her finger on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said Nadia. And with a careless air, Alcide rose and
+followed her, making a sign to Blount to accompany him.</p>
+
+<p>But if the surprise of the correspondents had been great at
+meeting Nadia on the raft it was boundless when they perceived
+Michael Strogoff, whom they had believed to be no longer
+living.</p>
+
+<p>Michael had not moved at their approach. Jolivet turned
+towards the girl. "He does not see you, gentlemen," said Nadia.
+"The Tartars have burnt out his eyes! My poor brother is
+blind!"</p>
+
+<p>A feeling of lively compassion exhibited itself on the faces
+of Blount and his companion. In a moment they were seated beside
+Michael, pressing his hand and waiting until he spoke to
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," said Michael, in a low voice, "you ought not to
+know who I am, nor what I am come to do in Siberia. I ask you to
+keep my secret.
+ Will you promise me to do so?"</p>
+
+<p>"On my honor," answered Jolivet.</p>
+
+<p>"On my word as a gentleman," added Blount.</p>
+
+<p>"Good, gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>"Can we be of any use to you?" asked Harry Blount. "Could we
+not help you to accomplish your task?"</p>
+
+<p>"I prefer to act alone," replied Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"But those blackguards have destroyed your sight," said
+Alcide.</p>
+
+<p>"I have Nadia, and her eyes are enough for me!"</p>
+
+<p>In half an hour the raft left the little port of
+Livenitchnaia, and entered the river. It was five in the evening
+and getting dusk.
+ The night promised to be dark and very cold also, for the
+temperature was already below zero.</p>
+
+<p>Alcide and Blount, though they had promised to keep Michael's
+secret, did not leave him. They talked in a low voice, and the
+blind man, adding what they told him to what he already knew, was
+able to form an exact idea of the state of things.
+ It was certain that the Tartars had actually invested Irkutsk,
+and that the three columns had effected a junction.
+ There was no doubt that the Emir and Ivan Ogareff were before
+the capital.</p>
+
+<p>But why did the Czar's courier exhibit such haste to get
+there, now that the Imperial letter could no longer be given by
+him to the Grand Duke, and when he did not even know the contents
+of it?
+ Alcide Jolivet and Blount could not understand it any more than
+Nadia had done.</p>
+
+<p>No one spoke of the past, except when Jolivet thought it his
+duty to say to Michael, "We owe you some apology for not shaking
+hands with you when we separated at Ichim."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you had reason to think me a coward!"</p>
+
+<p>"At any rate," added the Frenchman, "you knouted the face of
+that villain finely, and he will carry the mark of it for a long
+time!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, not a long time!" replied Michael quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour after leaving Livenitchnaia, Blount and his
+companion were acquainted with the cruel trials through which
+Michael and his companion had successively passed. They could not
+but heartily admire his energy, which was only equaled by the
+young girl's devotion.
+ Their opinion of Michael was exactly what the Czar had expressed
+at Moscow: "Indeed, this is a Man!"</p>
+
+<p>The raft swiftly threaded its way among the blocks of ice
+which were carried along in the current of the Angara. A moving
+panorama was displayed on both sides of the river, and, by an
+optical illusion, it appeared as if it was the raft which was
+motionless before a succession of picturesque scenes.
+ Here were high granite cliffs, there wild gorges, down which
+rushed a torrent; sometimes appeared a clearing with a still
+smoking village, then thick pine forests blazing.
+ But though the Tartars had left their traces on all sides, they
+themselves were not to be seen as yet, for they were more
+especially massed at the approaches to Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>All this time the pilgrims were repeating their prayers aloud,
+and the old boatman, shoving away the blocks of ice which pressed
+too near them, imperturbably steered the raft in the middle of
+the rapid current of the Angara.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XI BETWEEN TWO BANKS</h2>
+
+<p>BY eight in the evening, the country, as the state of the sky
+had foretold, was enveloped in complete darkness. The moon being
+new had not yet risen. From the middle of the river the banks
+were invisible.
+ The cliffs were confounded with the heavy, low-hanging
+clouds.
+ At intervals a puff of wind came from the east, but it soon died
+away in the narrow valley of the Angara.</p>
+
+<p>The darkness could not fail to favor in a considerable degree
+the plans of the fugitives. Indeed, although the Tartar outposts
+must have been drawn up on both banks, the raft had a good chance
+of passing unperceived. It was not likely either that the
+besiegers would have barred the river above Irkutsk, since they
+knew that the Russians could not expect any help from the south
+of the province.
+ Besides this, before long Nature would herself establish a
+barrier, by cementing with frost the blocks of ice accumulated
+between the two banks.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Perfect silence now reigned on board the raft. The voices of the
+pilgrims were no longer heard. They still prayed, but their
+prayer was but a murmur, which could not reach as far as either
+bank. The fugitives lay flat on the platform, so that the raft
+was scarcely above the level of the water.
+ The old boatman crouched down forward among his men, solely
+occupied in keeping off the ice blocks, a maneuver which was
+performed without noise.</p>
+
+<p>The drifting of the ice was a favorable circumstance so long
+as it did not offer an insurmountable obstacle to the passage of
+the raft.
+ If that object had been alone on the water, it would have run a
+risk of being seen, even in the darkness, but, as it was, it was
+confounded with these moving masses, of all shapes and sizes, and
+the tumult caused by the crashing of the blocks against each
+other concealed likewise any suspicious noises.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sharp frost. The fugitives suffered cruelly,
+having no other shelter than a few branches of birch.
+ They cowered down together, endeavoring to keep each other warm,
+the temperature being now ten degrees below freezing point.
+ The wind, though slight, having passed over the snow-clad
+mountains of the east, pierced them through and through.</p>
+
+<p>Michael and Nadia, lying in the afterpart of the raft, bore
+this increase of suffering without complaint.
+ Jolivet and Blount, placed near them, stood these first assaults
+of the Siberian winter as well as they could. No one now spoke,
+even in a low voice. Their situation entirely absorbed them.
+ At any moment an incident might occur, which they could not
+escape unscathed.</p>
+
+<p>For a man who hoped soon to accomplish his mission, Michael
+was singularly calm. Even in the gravest conjunctures, his energy
+had never abandoned him. He already saw the moment when he would
+be at last allowed to think of his mother, of Nadia, of himself!
+He now only dreaded one final unhappy chance; this was, that the
+raft might be completely barred by ice before reaching Irkutsk.
+He thought but of this, determined beforehand, if necessary, to
+attempt some bold stroke.</p>
+
+<p>Restored by a few hours' rest, Nadia had regained the physical
+energy which misery had sometimes overcome, although without ever
+having shaken her moral energy. She thought, too, that if Michael
+had to make any fresh effort to attain his end, she must be there
+to guide him.
+ But in proportion as she drew nearer to Irkutsk, the image of
+her father rose more and more clearly before her mind. She saw
+him in the invested town, far from those he loved, but, as she
+never doubted, struggling against the invaders with all the
+spirit of his patriotism.
+ In a few hours, if Heaven favored them, she would be in his
+arms, giving him her mother's last words, and nothing should ever
+separate them again.
+ If the term of Wassili Fedor's exile should never come to an
+end, his daughter would remain exiled with him. Then, by a
+natural transition, she came back to him who would have enabled
+her to see her father once more, to that generous companion, that
+"brother," who, the Tartars driven back, would retake the road to
+Moscow, whom she would perhaps never meet again!</p>
+
+<p>As to Alcide Jolivet and Harry Blount, they had one and the
+same thought, which was, that the situation was extremely
+dramatic, and that, well worked up, it would furnish a most
+deeply interesting article.
+ The Englishman thought of the readers of the Daily Telegraph,
+and the Frenchman of those of his Cousin Madeleine. At heart,
+both were not without feeling some emotion.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, so much the better!" thought Alcide Jolivet, "to move
+others, one must be moved one's self! I believe there is some
+celebrated verse on the subject, but hang me if I can recollect
+it!"
+ And with his well-practiced eyes he endeavored to pierce the
+gloom of the river.</p>
+
+<p>Every now and then a burst of light dispelling the darkness
+for a time, exhibited the banks under some fantastic aspect--
+either a forest on fire, or a still burning village.
+ The Angara was occasionally illuminated from one bank to the
+other.
+ The blocks of ice formed so many mirrors, which, reflecting the
+flames on every point and in every color, were whirled along by
+the caprice of the current. The raft passed unperceived in the
+midst of these floating masses.</p>
+
+<p>The danger was not at these points.</p>
+
+<p>But a peril of another nature menaced the fugitives. One that
+they could not foresee, and, above all, one that they could not
+avoid.
+ Chance discovered it to Alcide Jolivet in this way:--Lying at
+the right side of the raft, he let his hand hang over into the
+water.
+ Suddenly he was surprised by the impression made on it by the
+current.
+ It seemed to be of a slimy consistency, as if it had been made
+of mineral oil. Alcide, aiding his touch by his sense of smell,
+could not be mistaken. It was really a layer of liquid naphtha,
+floating on the surface of the river!</p>
+
+<p>Was the raft really floating on this substance, which is in
+the highest degree combustible? Where had this naphtha come
+from?
+ Was it a natural phenomenon taking place on the surface of the
+Angara, or was it to serve as an engine of destruction, put in
+motion by the Tartars? Did they intend to carry conflagration
+into Irkutsk?</p>
+
+<p>Such were the questions which Alcide asked himself, but he
+thought it best to make this incident known only to Harry Blount,
+and they both agreed in not alarming their companions by
+revealing to them this new danger.</p>
+
+<p>It is known that the soil of Central Asia is like a sponge
+impregnated with liquid hydrogen. At the port of Bakou, on the
+Persian frontier, on the Caspian Sea, in Asia Minor, in China, on
+the Yuen-Kiang, in the Burman Empire, springs of mineral oil rise
+in thousands to the surface of the ground.
+ It is an "oil country," similar to the one which bears this name
+in North America.</p>
+
+<p>During certain religious festivals, principally at the port of
+Bakou, the natives, who are fire-worshipers, throw liquid naphtha
+on the surface of the sea, which buoys it up, its density being
+inferior to that of water. Then at nightfall, when a layer of
+mineral oil is thus spread over the Caspian, they light it, and
+exhibit the matchless spectacle of an ocean of fire undulating
+and breaking into waves under the breeze.</p>
+
+<p>But what is only a sign of rejoicing at Bakou, might prove a
+fearful disaster on the waters of the Angara. Whether it was set
+on fire by malevolence or imprudence, in the twinkling of an eye
+a conflagration might spread beyond Irkutsk. On board the raft no
+imprudence was to be feared; but everything was to be dreaded
+from the conflagrations on both banks of the Angara, for should a
+lighted straw or even a spark blow into the water, it would
+inevitably set the whole current of naphtha in a blaze.</p>
+
+<p>The apprehensions of Jolivet and Blount may be better
+understood than described. Would it not be prudent, in face of
+this new danger, to land on one of the banks and wait there?
+ "At any rate," said Alcide, "whatever the danger may be, I know
+some one who will not land!"</p>
+
+<p>He alluded to Michael Strogoff.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, on glided the raft among the masses of ice
+which were gradually getting closer and closer together.
+ Up till then, no Tartar detachment had been seen, which showed
+that the raft was not abreast of the outposts.
+ At about ten o'clock, however, Harry Blount caught sight of a
+number of black objects moving on the ice blocks.
+ Springing from one to the other, they rapidly approached.</p>
+
+<p>"Tartars!" he thought. And creeping up to the old boatman, he
+pointed out to him the suspicious objects.</p>
+
+<p>The old man looked attentively. "They are only wolves!" said
+he.
+ "I like them better than Tartars. But we must defend ourselves,
+and without noise!"</p>
+
+<p>The fugitives would indeed have to defend themselves against
+these ferocious beasts, whom hunger and cold had sent roaming
+through the province. They had smelt out the raft, and would soon
+attack it.
+ The fugitives must struggle without using firearms, for they
+could not now be far from the Tartar posts. The women and
+children were collected in the middle of the raft, and the men,
+some armed with poles, others with their knives, stood prepared
+to repulse their assailants.
+ They did not make a sound, but the howls of the wolves filled
+the air.</p>
+
+<p>Michael did not wish to remain inactive. He lay down at the
+side attacked by the savage pack. He drew his knife, and every
+time that a wolf passed within his reach, his hand found out the
+way to plunge his weapon into its throat.
+ Neither were Jolivet and Blount idle, but fought bravely with
+the brutes. Their companions gallantly seconded them.
+ The battle was carried on in silence, although many of the
+fugitives received severe bites.</p>
+
+<p>The struggle did not appear as if it would soon terminate.
+ The pack was being continually reinforced from the right bank of
+the Angara. "This will never be finished!" said Alcide,
+brandishing his dagger, red with blood.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, half an hour after the commencement of the attack,
+the wolves were still coming in hundreds across the ice. The
+exhausted fugitives were getting weaker. The fight was going
+against them.
+ At that moment, a group of ten huge wolves, raging with hunger,
+their eyes glowing in the darkness like red coals, sprang onto
+the raft.
+ Jolivet and his companion threw themselves into the midst of the
+fierce beasts, and Michael was finding his way towards them, when
+a sudden change took place.</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments the wolves had deserted not only the raft,
+but also the ice on the river. All the black bodies dispersed,
+and it was soon certain that they had in all haste regained the
+shore.
+ Wolves, like other beasts of prey, require darkness for their
+proceedings, and at that moment a bright light illuminated the
+entire river.</p>
+
+<p>It was the blaze of an immense fire. The whole of the small
+town of Poshkavsk was burning. The Tartars were indeed there,
+finishing their work. From this point, they occupied both banks
+beyond Irkutsk. The fugitives had by this time reached the
+dangerous part of their voyage, and they were still twenty miles
+from the capital.</p>
+
+<p>It was now half past eleven. The raft continued to glide on
+amongst the ice, with which it was quite mingled, but gleams of
+light sometimes fell upon it. The fugitives stretched on the
+platform did not permit themselves to make a movement by which
+they might be betrayed.</p>
+
+<p>The conflagration was going on with frightful rapidity.
+ The houses, built of fir-wood, blazed like torches--a hundred
+and fifty flaming at once. With the crackling of the fire was
+mingled the yells of the Tartars. The old boatman, getting a
+foothold on a near piece of ice, managed to shove the raft
+towards the right bank, by doing which a distance of from three
+to four hundred feet divided it from the flames of Poshkavsk.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the fugitives, lighted every now and then by the
+glare, would have been undoubtedly perceived had not the
+incendiaries been too much occupied in their work of
+destruction.</p>
+
+<p>It may be imagined what were the apprehensions of Jolivet and
+Blount, when they thought of the combustible liquid on which the
+raft floated.
+ Sparks flew in millions from the houses, which resembled so many
+glowing furnaces. They rose among the volumes of smoke to a
+height of five or six hundred feet. On the right bank, the trees
+and cliffs exposed to the fire looked as if they likewise were
+burning. A spark falling on the surface of the Angara would be
+sufficient to spread the flames along the current, and to carry
+disaster from one bank to the other.
+ The result of this would be in a short time the destruction of
+the raft and of all those which it carried.</p>
+
+<p>But, happily, the breeze did not blow from that side.
+ It came from the east, and drove the flames towards the
+left.
+ It was just possible that the fugitives would escape this
+danger.
+ The blazing town was at last passed. Little by little the glare
+grew dimmer, the crackling became fainter, and the flames at last
+disappeared behind the high cliffs which arose at an abrupt turn
+of the river.</p>
+
+<p>By this time it was nearly midnight. The deep gloom again
+threw its protecting shadows over the raft. The Tartars were
+there, going to and fro near the river. They could not be seen,
+but they could be heard.
+ The fires of the outposts burned brightly.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime it had become necessary to steer more
+carefully among the blocks of ice. The old boatman stood up, and
+the moujiks resumed their poles. They had plenty of work, the
+management of the raft becoming more and more difficult as the
+river was further obstructed.</p>
+
+<p>Michael had crept forward; Jolivet followed; both listened to
+what the old boatman and his men were saying.</p>
+
+<p>"Look out on the right!"</p>
+
+<p>"There are blocks drifting on to us on the left!"</p>
+
+<p>"Fend! fend off with your boat-hook!"</p>
+
+<p>"Before an hour is past we shall be stopped!"</p>
+
+<p>"If it is God's will!" answered the old man. "Against His will
+there is nothing to be done."</p>
+
+<p>"You hear them," said Alcide.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Michael, "but God is with us!"</p>
+
+<p>The situation became more and more serious. Should the raft be
+stopped, not only would the fugitives not reach Irkutsk, but they
+would be obliged to leave their floating platform, for it would
+be very soon smashed to pieces in the ice.
+ The osier ropes would break, the fir trunks torn asunder would
+drift under the hard crust, and the unhappy people would have no
+refuge but the ice blocks themselves. Then, when day came, they
+would be seen by the Tartars, and massacred without mercy!</p>
+
+<p>Michael returned to the spot where Nadia was waiting for
+him.
+ He approached the girl, took her hand, and put to her the
+invariable question: "Nadia, are you ready?" to which she replied
+as usual, "I am ready!"</p>
+
+<p>For a few versts more the raft continued to drift amongst the
+floating ice. Should the river narrow, it would soon form an
+impassable barrier. Already they seemed to drift slower.
+ Every moment they encountered severe shocks or were compelled to
+make detours; now, to avoid running foul of a block, there to
+enter a channel, of which it was necessary to take advantage.
+ At length the stoppages became still more alarming.
+ There were only a few more hours of night. Could the fugitives
+not reach Irkutsk by five o'clock in the morning, they must lose
+all hope of ever getting there at all.</p>
+
+<p>At half-past one, notwithstanding all efforts, the raft came
+up against a thick barrier and stuck fast. The ice, which was
+drifting down behind it, pressed it still closer, and kept it
+motionless, as though it had been stranded.</p>
+
+<p>At this spot the Angara narrowed, it being half its usual
+breadth.
+ This was the cause of the accumulation of ice, which became
+gradually soldered together, under the double influence of the
+increased pressure and of the cold. Five hundred feet beyond, the
+river widened again, and the blocks, gradually detaching
+themselves from the floe, continued to drift towards Irkutsk. It
+was probable that had the banks not narrowed, the barrier would
+not have formed.
+ But the misfortune was irreparable, and the fugitives must give
+up all hope of attaining their object.</p>
+
+<p>Had they possessed the tools usually employed by whalers to
+cut channels through the ice-fields--had they been able to get
+through to where the river widened--they might have been
+saved.
+ But they had nothing which could make the least incision in the
+ice, hard as granite in the excessive frost.
+ What were they to do?</p>
+
+<p>At that moment several shots on the right bank startled the
+unhappy fugitives. A shower of balls fell on the raft.
+ The devoted passengers had been seen. Immediately afterwards
+shots were heard fired from the left bank. The fugitives, taken
+between two fires, became the mark of the Tartar
+sharpshooters.
+ Several were wounded, although in the darkness it was only by
+chance that they were hit.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Nadia," whispered Michael in the girl's ear.</p>
+
+<p>Without making a single remark, "ready for anything,"
+ Nadia took Michael's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"We must cross the barrier," he said in a low tone.
+ "Guide me, but let no one see us leave the raft."</p>
+
+<p>Nadia obeyed. Michael and she glided rapidly over the floe in
+the obscurity, only broken now and again by the flashes from the
+muskets. Nadia crept along in front of Michael. The shot fell
+around them like a tempest of hail, and pattered on the ice.
+ Their hands were soon covered with blood from the sharp and
+rugged ice over which they clambered, but still on they went.</p>
+
+<p>In ten minutes, the other side of the barrier was reached.
+ There the waters of the Angara again flowed freely.
+ Several pieces of ice, detached gradually from the floe, were
+swept along in the current down towards the town.
+ Nadia guessed what Michael wished to attempt. One of the blocks
+was only held on by a narrow strip.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said Nadia. And the two crouched on the piece of ice,
+which their weight detached from the floe.</p>
+
+<p>It began to drift. The river widened, the way was open.
+ Michael and Nadia heard the shots, the cries of distress, the
+yells of the Tartars. Then, little by little, the sounds of agony
+and of ferocious joy grew faint in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>"Our poor companions!" murmured Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>For half an hour the current hurried along the block of ice
+which bore Michael and Nadia. They feared every moment that it
+would give way beneath them. Swept along in the middle of the
+current, it was unnecessary to give it an oblique direction until
+they drew near the quays of Irkutsk. Michael, his teeth tight
+set, his ear on the strain, did not utter a word. Never had he
+been so near his object.
+ He felt that he was about to attain it!</p>
+
+<p>Towards two in the morning a double row of lights glittered on
+the dark horizon in which were confounded the two banks of the
+Angara. On the right hand were the lights of Irkutsk; on the
+left, the fires of the Tartar camp.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff was not more than half a verst from the
+town.
+ "At last!" he murmured.</p>
+
+<p>But suddenly Nadia uttered a cry.</p>
+
+<p>At the cry Michael stood up on the ice, which was
+wavering.
+ His hand was extended up the Angara. His face, on which a bluish
+light cast a peculiar hue, became almost fearful to look at, and
+then, as if his eyes had been opened to the bright blaze
+spreading across the river, "Ah!" he exclaimed, "then Heaven
+itself is against us!"</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XII IRKUTSK</h2>
+
+<p>IRKUTSK, the capital of Eastern Siberia, is a populous town,
+containing, in ordinary times, thirty thousand inhabitants.
+ On the right side of the Angara rises a hill, on which are built
+numerous churches, a lofty cathedral, and dwellings disposed in
+picturesque disorder.</p>
+
+<p>Seen at a distance, from the top of the mountain which rises
+at about twenty versts off along the Siberian highroad, this
+town, with its cupolas, its bell-towers, its steeples slender as
+minarets, its domes like pot-bellied Chinese jars, presents
+something of an oriental aspect. But this similarity vanishes as
+the traveler enters.</p>
+
+<p>The town, half Byzantine, half Chinese, becomes European as
+soon as he sees its macadamized roads, bordered with pavements,
+traversed by canals, planted with gigantic birches, its houses of
+brick and wood, some of which have several stories, the numerous
+equipages which drive along, not only tarantasses but broughams
+and coaches; lastly, its numerous inhabitants far advanced in
+civilization, to whom the latest Paris fashions are not
+unknown.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Being the refuge for all the Siberians of the province, Irkutsk
+was at this time very full. Stores of every kind had been
+collected in abundance. Irkutsk is the emporium of the
+innumerable kinds of merchandise which are exchanged between
+China, Central Asia, and Europe. The authorities had therefore no
+fear with regard to admitting the peasants of the valley of the
+Angara, and leaving a desert between the invaders and the
+town.</p>
+
+<p>Irkutsk is the residence of the governor-general of Eastern
+Siberia. Below him acts a civil governor, in whose hands is the
+administration of the province; a head of police, who has much to
+do in a town where exiles abound; and, lastly, a mayor, chief of
+the merchants, and a person of some importance, from his immense
+fortune and the influence which he exercises over the people.</p>
+
+<p>The garrison of Irkutsk was at that time composed of an
+infantry regiment of Cossacks, consisting of two thousand men,
+and a body of police wearing helmets and blue uniforms laced with
+silver.
+ Besides, as has been said, in consequence of the events which
+had occurred, the brother of the Czar had been shut up in the
+town since the beginning of the invasion.</p>
+
+<p>A journey of political importance had taken the Grand Duke to
+these distant provinces of Central Asia. After passing through
+the principal Siberian cities, the Grand Duke, who traveled en
+militaire rather than en prince, without any parade, accompanied
+by his officers, and escorted by a regiment of Cossacks, arrived
+in the Trans-Baikalcine provinces.
+ Nikolaevsk, the last Russian town situated on the shore of the
+Sea of Okhotsk, had been honored by a visit from him.
+ Arrived on the confines of the immense Muscovite Empire, the
+Grand Duke was returning towards Irkutsk, from which place he
+intended to retake the road to Moscow, when, sudden as a thunder
+clap, came the news of the invasion.</p>
+
+<p>He hastened to the capital, but only reached it just before
+communication with Russia had been interrupted. There was time to
+receive only a few telegrams from St. Petersburg and Moscow, and
+with difficulty to answer them before the wire was cut.
+ Irkutsk was isolated from the rest of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke had now only to prepare for resistance, and
+this he did with that determination and coolness of which, under
+other circumstances, he had given incontestable proofs.
+ The news of the taking of Ichim, Omsk, and Tomsk, successively
+reached Irkutsk. It was necessary at any price to save the
+capital of Siberia. Reinforcements could not be expected for some
+time. The few troops scattered about in the provinces of Siberia
+could not arrive in sufficiently large numbers to arrest the
+progress of the Tartar columns.
+ Since therefore it was impossible for Irkutsk to escape attack,
+the most important thing to be done was to put the town in a
+state to sustain a siege of some duration.</p>
+
+<p>The preparations were begun on the day Tomsk fell into the
+hands of the Tartars. At the same time with this last news, the
+Grand Duke heard that the Emir of Bokhara and the allied Khans
+were directing the invasion in person, but what he did not know
+was, that the lieutenant of these barbarous chiefs was Ivan
+Ogareff, a Russian officer whom he had himself reduced to the
+ranks, but with whose person he was not acquainted.</p>
+
+<p>First of all, as we have seen, the inhabitants of the province
+of Irkutsk were compelled to abandon the towns and villages.
+Those who did not take refuge in the capital had to retire beyond
+Lake Baikal, a district to which the invasion would probably not
+extend its ravages.
+ The harvests of corn and fodder were collected and stored up in
+the town, and Irkutsk, the last bulwark of the Muscovite power in
+the Far East, was put in a condition to resist the enemy for a
+lengthened period.</p>
+
+<p>Irkutsk, founded in 1611, is situated at the confluence of the
+Irkut and the Angara, on the right bank of the latter river.
+ Two wooden draw-bridges, built on piles, connected the town with
+its suburbs on the left bank. On this side, defence was easy.
+ The suburbs were abandoned, the bridges destroyed.
+ The Angara being here very wide, it would not be possible to
+pass it under the fire of the besieged.</p>
+
+<p>But the river might be crossed both above and below the town,
+and consequently, Irkutsk ran a risk of being attacked on its
+east side, on which there was no wall to protect it.</p>
+
+<p>The whole population were immediately set to work on the
+fortifications.
+ They labored day and night. The Grand Duke observed with
+satisfaction the zeal exhibited by the people in the work, whom
+ere long he would find equally courageous in the defense.
+Soldiers, merchants, exiles, peasants, all devoted themselves to
+the common safety. A week before the Tartars appeared on the
+Angara, earth-works had been raised.
+ A fosse, flooded by the waters of the Angara, was dug between
+the scarp and counterscarp. The town could not now be taken by a
+coup de main.
+ It must be invested and besieged.</p>
+
+<p>The third Tartar column--the one which came up the valley of
+the Yenisei on the 24th of September--appeared in sight of
+Irkutsk. It immediately occupied the deserted suburbs, every
+building in which had been destroyed so as not to impede the fire
+of the Grand Duke's guns, unfortunately but few in number and of
+small caliber.
+ The Tartar troops as they arrived organized a camp on the bank
+of the Angara, whilst waiting the arrival of the two other
+columns, commanded by the Emir and his allies.</p>
+
+<p>The junction of these different bodies was effected on the
+25th of September, in the Angara camp, and the whole of the
+invading army, except the garrisons left in the principal
+conquered towns, was concentrated under the command of
+Feofar-Khan.</p>
+
+<p>The passage of the Angara in front of Irkutsk having been
+regarded by Ogareff as impracticable, a strong body of troops
+crossed, several versts up the river, by means of bridges formed
+with boats.
+ The Grand Duke did not attempt to oppose the enemy in their
+passage.
+ He could only impede, not prevent it, having no field-artillery
+at his disposal, and he therefore remained in Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>The Tartars now occupied the right bank of the river; then,
+advancing towards the town, they burnt, in passing, the
+summer-house of the governor-general, and at last having entirely
+invested Irkutsk, took up their positions for the siege.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff, who was a clever engineer, was perfectly
+competent to direct a regular siege; but he did not possess the
+materials for operating rapidly. He was disappointed too in the
+chief object of all his efforts--the surprise of Irkutsk. Things
+had not turned out as he hoped. First, the march of the Tartar
+army was delayed by the battle of Tomsk; and secondly, the
+preparations for the defense were made far more rapidly than he
+had supposed possible; these two things had balked his plans.
+ He was now under the necessity of instituting a regular siege of
+the town.</p>
+
+<p>However, by his suggestion, the Emir twice attempted the
+capture of the place, at the cost of a large sacrifice of
+men.
+ He threw soldiers on the earth-works which presented any weak
+point; but these two assaults were repulsed with the greatest
+courage.
+ The Grand Duke and his officers did not spare themselves on this
+occasion. They appeared in person; they led the civil population
+to the ramparts. Citizens and peasants both did their duty.</p>
+
+<p>At the second attack, the Tartars managed to force one of the
+gates.
+ A fight took place at the head of Bolchaia Street, two versts
+long, on the banks of the Angara. But the Cossacks, the police,
+the citizens, united in so fierce a resistance that the Tartars
+were driven out.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff then thought of obtaining by stratagem what he
+could not gain by force. We have said that his plan was to
+penetrate into the town, make his way to the Grand Duke, gain his
+confidence, and, when the time came, give up the gates to the
+besiegers; and, that done, wreak his vengeance on the brother of
+the Czar. The Tsigane Sangarre, who had accompanied him to the
+Angara, urged him to put this plan in execution.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, it was necessary to act without delay.
+ The Russian troops from the government of Yakutsk were advancing
+towards Irkutsk. They had concentrated along the upper course of
+the Lena. In six days they would arrive.
+ Therefore, before six days had passed, Irkutsk must be
+betrayed.
+ Ogareff hesitated no longer.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, the 2d of October, a council of war was held in
+the grand saloon of the palace of the governor-general. This
+palace, standing at the end of Bolchaia Street, overlooked the
+river.
+ From its windows could be seen the camp of the Tartars, and had
+the invaders possessed guns of wider range, they would have
+rendered the palace uninhabitable.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke, General Voranzoff, the governor of the town,
+and the chief of the merchants, with several officers, had
+collected to determine upon various proposals.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," said the Grand Duke, "you know our situation
+exactly.
+ I have the firm hope that we shall be able to hold out until the
+arrival of the Yakutsk troops. We shall then be able to drive off
+these barbarian hordes, and it will not be my fault if they do
+not pay dearly for this invasion of the Muscovite territory."</p>
+
+<p>"Your Highness knows that all the population of Irkutsk may be
+relied on,"
+ said General Voranzoff.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, general," replied the Grand Duke, "and I do justice to
+their patriotism. Thanks to God, they have not yet been subjected
+to the horrors of epidemic and famine, and I have reason to hope
+that they will escape them; but I cannot admire their courage on
+the ramparts enough.
+ You hear my words, Sir Merchant, and I beg you to repeat such to
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank your Highness in the name of the town," answered the
+merchant chief. "May I ask you what is the most distant date when
+we may expect the relieving army?"</p>
+
+<p>"Six days at most, sir," replied the Grand Duke. "A brave and
+clever messenger managed this morning to get into the town, and
+he told me that fifty thousand Russians under General Kisselef,
+are advancing by forced marches. Two days ago, they were on the
+banks of the Lena, at Kirensk, and now, neither frost nor snow
+will keep them back.
+ Fifty thousand good men, taking the Tartars on the flank, will
+soon set us free."</p>
+
+<p>"I will add," said the chief of the merchants, "that we shall
+be ready to execute your orders, any day that your Highness may
+command a sortie."</p>
+
+<p>"Good, sir," replied the Grand Duke. "Wait till the heads of
+the relieving columns appear on the heights, and we will speedily
+crush these invaders."</p>
+
+<p>Then turning to General Voranzoff, "To-morrow," said he, "we
+will visit the works on the right bank. Ice is drifting down the
+Angara, which will not be long in freezing, and in that case the
+Tartars might perhaps cross."</p>
+
+<p>"Will your Highness allow me to make an observation?"
+ said the chief of the merchants.</p>
+
+<p>"Do so, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I have more than once seen the temperature fall to thirty and
+forty degrees below zero, and the Angara has still carried down
+drifting ice without entirely freezing.
+ This is no doubt owing to the swiftness of its current.
+ If therefore the Tartars have no other means of crossing the
+river, I can assure your Highness that they will not enter
+Irkutsk in that way."</p>
+
+<p>The governor-general confirmed this assertion.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a fortunate circumstance," responded the Grand
+Duke.
+ "Nevertheless, we must hold ourselves ready for any
+emergency."</p>
+
+<p>He then, turning towards the head of the police, asked, "Have
+you nothing to say to me, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have your Highness," answered the head of police, "a
+petition which is addressed to you through me."</p>
+
+<p>"Addressed by whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the Siberian exiles, whom, as your Highness knows, are in
+the town to the number of five hundred."</p>
+
+<p>The political exiles, distributed over the province, had been
+collected in Irkutsk, from the beginning of the invasion.
+ They had obeyed the order to rally in the town, and leave the
+villages where they exercised their different professions, some
+doctors, some professors, either at the Gymnasium, or at the
+Japanese School, or at the School of Navigation. The Grand Duke,
+trusting like the Czar in their patriotism, had armed them, and
+they had thoroughly proved their bravery.</p>
+
+<p>"What do the exiles ask?" said the Grand Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"They ask the consent of your Highness," answered the head of
+police, "to their forming a special corps and being placed in the
+front of the first sortie."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the Grand Duke with an emotion which he did not
+seek to hide, "these exiles are Russians, and it is their right
+to fight for their country!"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe I may assure your Highness," said the
+governor-general, "you will have no better soldiers."</p>
+
+<p>"But they must have a chief," said the Grand Duke, "who will
+he be?"</p>
+
+<p>"They wish to recommend to your Highness," said the head of
+police, "one of their number, who has distinguished himself on
+several occasions."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he a Russian?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, a Russian from the Baltic provinces."</p>
+
+<p>"His name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is Wassili Fedor."</p>
+
+<p>This exile was Nadia's father. Wassili Fedor, as we have
+already said, followed his profession of a medical man in
+Irkutsk. He was clever and charitable, and also possessed the
+greatest courage and most sincere patriotism. All the time which
+he did not devote to the sick he employed in organizing the
+defense.
+ It was he who had united his companions in exile in the common
+cause.
+ The exiles, till then mingled with the population, had behaved
+in such a way as to draw on themselves the attention of the Grand
+Duke. In several sorties, they had paid with their blood their
+debt to holy Russia--holy as they believe, and adored by her
+children!
+ Wassili Fedor had behaved heroically; his name had been
+mentioned several times, but he never asked either thanks or
+favors, and when the exiles of Irkutsk thought of forming
+themselves into a special corps, he was ignorant of their
+intention of choosing him for their captain.</p>
+
+<p>When the head of police mentioned this name, the Grand Duke
+answered that it was not unknown to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," remarked General Voranzoff, "Wassili Fedor is a man
+of worth and courage. His influence over his companions has
+always been very great."</p>
+
+<p>"How long has he been at Irkutsk?" asked the Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"For two years."</p>
+
+<p>"And his conduct?"</p>
+
+<p>"His conduct," answered the head of police, "is that of a man
+obedient to the special laws which govern him."</p>
+
+<p>"General," said the Grand Duke, "General, be good enough to
+present him to me immediately."</p>
+
+<p>The orders of the Grand Duke were obeyed, and before half an
+hour had passed, Fedor was introduced into his presence.
+ He was a man over forty, tall, of a stern and sad
+countenance.
+ One felt that his whole life was summed up in a single word--
+strife--he had striven and suffered. His features bore a marked
+resemblance to those of his daughter, Nadia Fedor.</p>
+
+<p>This Tartar invasion had severely wounded him in his tenderest
+affections, and ruined the hope of the father, exiled eight
+thousand versts from his native town. A letter had apprised him
+of the death of his wife, and at the same time of the departure
+of his daughter, who had obtained from the government an
+authorization to join him at Irkutsk. Nadia must have left Riga
+on the 10th of July. The invasion had begun on the 15th of July;
+if at that time Nadia had passed the frontier, what could have
+become of her in the midst of the invaders?
+ The anxiety of the unhappy father may be supposed when, from
+that time, he had no further news of his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>Wassili Fedor entered the presence of the Grand Duke, bowed,
+and waited to be questioned.</p>
+
+<p>"Wassili Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "your companions in
+exile have asked to be allowed to form a select corps.
+ They are not ignorant that in this corps they must make up their
+minds to be killed to the last man?"</p>
+
+<p>"They are not ignorant of it," replied Fedor.</p>
+
+<p>"They wish to have you for their captain."</p>
+
+<p>"I, your Highness?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you consent to be placed at their head?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if it is for the good of Russia."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "you are no longer an
+exile."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, your Highness, but can I command those who are so
+still?"</p>
+
+<p>"They are so no longer!" The brother of the Czar had granted a
+pardon to all Fedor's companions in exile, now his companions in
+arms!</p>
+
+<p>Wassili Fedor wrung, with emotion, the hand which the Grand
+Duke held out to him, and retired.</p>
+
+<p>The latter, turned to his officers, "The Czar will not refuse
+to ratify that pardon," said he, smiling; "we need heroes to
+defend the capital of Siberia, and I have just made some."</p>
+
+<p>This pardon, so generously accorded to the exiles of Irkutsk,
+was indeed an act of real justice and sound policy.</p>
+
+<p>It was now night. Through the windows of the palace burned the
+fires of the Tartar camp, flickering beyond the Angara. Down the
+river drifted numerous blocks of ice, some of which stuck on the
+piles of the old bridges; others were swept along by the current
+with great rapidity. It was evident, as the merchant had
+observed, that it would be very difficult for the Angara to
+freeze all over.
+ The defenders of Irkutsk had not to dread being attacked on that
+side.
+ Ten o'clock had just struck. The Grand Duke was about to dismiss
+his officers and retire to his apartments, when a tumult was
+heard outside the palace.</p>
+
+<p>Almost immediately the door was thrown open, an aide-de-camp
+appeared, and advanced rapidly towards the Grand Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Highness," said he, "a courier from the Czar!"</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII THE CZAR'S COURIER</h2>
+
+<p>ALL the members of the council simultaneously started
+forward.
+ A courier from the Czar arrived in Irkutsk! Had these officers
+for a moment considered the improbability of this fact, they
+would certainly not have credited what they heard.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke advanced quickly to his aide-de-camp. "This
+courier!"
+ he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>A man entered. He appeared exhausted with fatigue.
+ He wore the dress of a Siberian peasant, worn into tatters, and
+exhibiting several shot-holes. A Muscovite cap was on his
+head.
+ His face was disfigured by a recently-healed scar.
+ The man had evidently had a long and painful journey; his shoes
+being in a state which showed that he had been obliged to make
+part of it on foot.</p>
+
+<p>
+ "His Highness the Grand Duke?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke went up to him. "You are a courier from the
+Czar?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"You come?"</p>
+
+<p>"From Moscow."</p>
+
+<p>"You left Moscow?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the 15th of July."</p>
+
+<p>"Your name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Michael Strogoff."</p>
+
+<p>It was Ivan Ogareff. He had taken the designation of the man
+whom he believed that he had rendered powerless. Neither the
+Grand Duke nor anyone knew him in Irkutsk, and he had not even to
+disguise his features.
+ As he was in a position to prove his pretended identity, no one
+could have any reason for doubting him. He came, therefore,
+sustained by his iron will, to hasten by treason and
+assassination the great object of the invasion.</p>
+
+<p>After Ogareff had replied, the Grand Duke signed to all his
+officers to withdraw. He and the false Michael Strogoff remained
+alone in the saloon.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke looked at Ivan Ogareff for some moments with
+extreme attention. Then he said, "On the 15th of July you were at
+Moscow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your Highness; and on the night of the 14th I saw His
+Majesty the Czar at the New Palace."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you a letter from the Czar?"</p>
+
+<p>"Here it is."</p>
+
+<p>And Ivan Ogareff handed to the Grand Duke the Imperial letter,
+crumpled to almost microscopic size.</p>
+
+<p>"Was the letter given you in this state?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, your Highness, but I was obliged to tear the envelope,
+the better to hide it from the Emir's soldiers."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you taken prisoner by the Tartars?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your Highness, I was their prisoner for several
+days,"
+ answered Ogareff. "That is the reason that, having left Moscow
+on the 15th of July, as the date of that letter shows, I only
+reached Irkutsk on the 2d of October, after traveling
+seventy-nine days."</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke took the letter. He unfolded it and recognized
+the Czar's signature, preceded by the decisive formula, written
+by his brother's hand. There was no possible doubt of the
+authenticity of this letter, nor of the identity of the courier.
+Though Ogareff's countenance had at first inspired the Grand Duke
+with some distrust, he let nothing of it appear, and it soon
+vanished.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke remained for a few minutes without
+speaking.
+ He read the letter slowly, so as to take in its meaning
+fully.
+ "Michael Strogoff, do you know the contents of this letter?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your Highness. I might have been obliged to destroy it,
+to prevent its falling into the hands of the Tartars, and should
+such have been the case, I wished to be able to bring the
+contents of it to your Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"You know that this letter enjoins us all to die, rather than
+give up the town?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it."</p>
+
+<p>"You know also that it informs me of the movements of the
+troops which have combined to stop the invasion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your Highness, but the movements have failed."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean that Ichim, Omsk, Tomsk, to speak only of the more
+important towns of the two Siberias, have been successively
+occupied by the soldiers of Feofar-Khan."</p>
+
+<p>"But there has been fighting? Have not our Cossacks met the
+Tartars?"</p>
+
+<p>"Several times, your Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"And they were repulsed?"</p>
+
+<p>"They were not in sufficient force to oppose the enemy."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did the encounters take place?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Kolyvan, at Tomsk." Until now, Ogareff had only spoken the
+truth, but, in the hope of troubling the defenders of Irkutsk by
+exaggerating the defeats, he added, "And a third time before
+Krasnoiarsk."</p>
+
+<p>"And what of this last engagement?" asked the Grand Duke,
+through whose compressed lips the words could scarcely pass.</p>
+
+<p>"It was more than an engagement, your Highness," answered
+Ogareff; "it was a battle."</p>
+
+<p>"A battle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Twenty thousand Russians, from the frontier provinces and the
+government of Tobolsk, engaged with a hundred and fifty thousand
+Tartars, and, notwithstanding their courage, were
+overwhelmed."</p>
+
+<p>"You lie!" exclaimed the Grand Duke, endeavoring in vain to
+curb his passion.</p>
+
+<p>"I speak the truth, your Highness," replied Ivan Ogareff
+coldly.
+ "I was present at the battle of Krasnoiarsk, and it was there I
+was made prisoner!"</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke grew calmer, and by a significant gesture he
+gave Ogareff to understand that he did not doubt his
+veracity.
+ "What day did this battle of Krasnoiarsk take place?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"On the 2d of September."</p>
+
+<p>"And now all the Tartar troops are concentrated here?"</p>
+
+<p>"All."</p>
+
+<p>"And you estimate them?"</p>
+
+<p>"At about four hundred thousand men."</p>
+
+<p>Another exaggeration of Ogareff's in the estimate of the
+Tartar army, with the same object as before.</p>
+
+<p>"And I must not expect any help from the West provinces?"
+ asked the Grand Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"None, your Highness, at any rate before the end of the
+winter."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, hear this, Michael Strogoff. Though I must expect no
+help either from the East or from the West, even were these
+barbarians six hundred thousand strong, I will never give up
+Irkutsk!"</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff's evil eye slightly contracted. The traitor thought to
+himself that the brother of the Czar did not reckon the result of
+treason.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke, who was of a nervous temperament, had great
+difficulty in keeping calm whilst hearing this disastrous
+news.
+ He walked to and fro in the room, under the gaze of Ogareff, who
+eyed him as a victim reserved for vengeance. He stopped at the
+windows, he looked forth at the fires in the Tartar camp, he
+listened to the noise of the ice-blocks drifting down the
+Angara.</p>
+
+<p>A quarter of an hour passed without his putting any more
+questions.
+ Then taking up the letter, he re-read a passage and said, "You
+know that in this letter I am warned of a traitor, of whom I must
+beware?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"He will try to enter Irkutsk in disguise; gain my confidence,
+and betray the town to the Tartars."</p>
+
+<p>"I know all that, your Highness, and I know also that Ivan
+Ogareff has sworn to revenge himself personally on the Czar's
+brother."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is said that the officer in question was condemned by the
+Grand Duke to a humiliating degradation."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I remember. But it is a proof that the villain, who
+could afterwards serve against his country and head an invasion
+of barbarians, deserved it."</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty the Czar," said Ogareff, "was particularly
+anxious that you should be warned of the criminal projects of
+Ivan Ogareff against your person."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; of that the letter informs me."</p>
+
+<p>"And His Majesty himself spoke to me of it, telling me I was
+above all things to beware of the traitor."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you meet with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, your Highness, after the battle of Krasnoiarsk. If he
+had only guessed that I was the bearer of a letter addressed to
+your Highness, in which his plans were revealed, I should not
+have got off so easily."</p>
+
+<p>"No; you would have been lost!" replied the Grand Duke. "And
+how did you manage to escape?"</p>
+
+<p>"By throwing myself into the Irtych."</p>
+
+<p>"And how did you enter Irkutsk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Under cover of a sortie, which was made this evening to
+repulse a Tartar detachment. I mingled with the defenders of the
+town, made myself known, and was immediately conducted before
+your Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"Good, Michael Strogoff," answered the Grand Duke. "You have
+shown courage and zeal in your difficult mission. I will not
+forget you.
+ Have you any favor to ask?"</p>
+
+<p>"None; unless it is to be allowed to fight at the side of your
+Highness," replied Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>"So be it, Strogoff. I attach you from to-day to my person,
+and you shall be lodged in the palace."</p>
+
+<p>"And if according to his intention, Ivan Ogareff should
+present himself to your Highness under a false name?"</p>
+
+<p>"We will unmask him, thanks to you, who know him, and I will
+make him die under the knout. Go!"</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff gave a military salute, not forgetting that he was a
+captain of the couriers of the Czar, and retired.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff had so far played his unworthy part with success.
+ The Grand Duke's entire confidence had been accorded him.
+ He could now betray it whenever it suited him.
+ He would inhabit the very palace. He would be in the secret of
+all the operations for the defense of the town.
+ He thus held the situation in his hand, as it were.
+ No one in Irkutsk knew him, no one could snatch off his
+mask.
+ He resolved therefore to set to work without delay.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, time pressed. The town must be captured before the
+arrival of the Russians from the North and East, and that was
+only a question of a few days. The Tartars once masters of
+Irkutsk, it would not be easy to take it again from them.
+ At any rate, even if they were obliged to abandon it later, they
+would not do so before they had utterly destroyed it, and before
+the head of the Grand Duke had rolled at the feet of
+Feofar-Khan.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff, having every facility for seeing, observing, and
+acting, occupied himself the next day with visiting the
+ramparts.
+ He was everywhere received with cordial congratulations from
+officers, soldiers, and citizens. To them this courier from the
+Czar was a link which connected them with the empire.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff recounted, with an assurance which never failed,
+numerous fictitious events of his journey. Then, with the cunning
+for which he was noted, without dwelling too much on it at first,
+he spoke of the gravity of the situation, exaggerating the
+success of the Tartars and the numbers of the barbarian forces,
+as he had when speaking to the Grand Duke. According to him, the
+expected succors would be insufficient, if ever they arrived at
+all, and it was to be feared that a battle fought under the walls
+of Irkutsk would be as fatal as the battles of Kolyvan, Tomsk,
+and Krasnoiarsk.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff was not too free in these insinuations.
+ He wished to allow them to sink gradually into the minds of the
+defenders of Irkutsk. He pretended only to answer with reluctance
+when much pressed with questions.
+ He always added that they must fight to the last man, and blow
+up the town rather than yield!</p>
+
+<p>These false statements would have done more harm had it been
+possible; but the garrison and the population of Irkutsk were too
+patriotic to let themselves be moved. Of all the soldiers and
+citizens shut up in this town, isolated at the extremity of the
+Asiatic world, not one dreamed of even speaking of a
+capitulation. The contempt of the Russians for these barbarians
+was boundless.</p>
+
+<p>No one suspected the odious part played by Ivan Ogareff; no
+one guessed that the pretended courier of the Czar was a
+traitor.
+ It occurred very naturally that on his arrival in Irkutsk, a
+frequent intercourse was established between Ogareff and one of
+the bravest defenders of the town, Wassili Fedor. We know what
+anxiety this unhappy father suffered. If his daughter, Nadia
+Fedor, had left Russia on the date fixed by the last letter he
+had received from Riga, what had become of her?
+ Was she still trying to cross the invaded provinces, or had she
+long since been taken prisoner? The only alleviation to Wassili
+Fedor's anxiety was when he could obtain an opportunity of
+engaging in battle with the Tartars-- opportunities which came
+too seldom for his taste.
+ The very evening the pretended courier arrived, Wassili Fedor
+went to the governor-general's palace and, acquainting Ogareff
+with the circumstances under which his daughter must have left
+European Russia, told him all his uneasiness about her.
+ Ogareff did not know Nadia, although he had met her at Ichim on
+the day she was there with Michael Strogoff; but then, he had not
+paid more attention to her than to the two reporters, who at the
+same time were in the post-house; he therefore could give Wassili
+Fedor no news of his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"But at what time," asked Ogareff, "must your daughter have
+left the Russian territory?"</p>
+
+<p>"About the same time that you did," replied Fedor.</p>
+
+<p>"I left Moscow on the 15th of July."</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia must also have quitted Moscow at that time.
+ Her letter told me so expressly."</p>
+
+<p>"She was in Moscow on the 15th of July?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, certainly, by that date."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it was impossible for her--But no, I am mistaken-- I was
+confusing dates. Unfortunately, it is too probable that your
+daughter must have passed the frontier, and you can only have one
+hope, that she stopped on learning the news of the Tartar
+invasion!"</p>
+
+<p>The father's head fell! He knew Nadia, and he knew too well
+that nothing would have prevented her from setting out.
+ Ivan Ogareff had just committed gratuitously an act of real
+cruelty.
+ With a word he might have reassured Fedor. Although Nadia had
+passed the frontier under circumstances with which we are
+acquainted, Fedor, by comparing the date on which his daughter
+would have been at Nijni-Novgorod, and the date of the
+proclamation which forbade anyone to leave it, would no doubt
+have concluded thus: that Nadia had not been exposed to the
+dangers of the invasion, and that she was still, in spite of
+herself, in the European territory of the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff obedient to his nature, a man who was never touched by
+the sufferings of others, might have said that word.
+ He did not say it. Fedor retired with his heart broken.
+ In that interview his last hope was crushed.</p>
+
+<p>During the two following days, the 3rd and 4th of October, the
+Grand Duke often spoke to the pretended Michael Strogoff, and
+made him repeat all that he had heard in the Imperial Cabinet of
+the New Palace. Ogareff, prepared for all these questions,
+replied without the least hesitation. He intentionally did not
+conceal that the Czar's government had been utterly surprised by
+the invasion, that the insurrection had been prepared in the
+greatest possible secrecy, that the Tartars were already masters
+of the line of the Obi when the news reached Moscow, and lastly,
+that none of the necessary preparations were completed in the
+Russian provinces for sending into Siberia the troops requisite
+for repulsing the invaders.</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff, being entirely free in his movements, began to
+study Irkutsk, the state of its fortifications, their weak
+points, so as to profit subsequently by his observations, in the
+event of being prevented from consummating his act of
+treason.
+ He examined particularly the Bolchaia Gate, the one he wished to
+deliver up.</p>
+
+<p>Twice in the evening he came upon the glacis of this gate.
+ He walked up and down, without fear of being discovered by the
+besiegers, whose nearest posts were at least a mile from the
+ramparts.
+ He fancied that he was recognized by no one, till he caught
+sight of a shadow gliding along outside the earthworks.
+ Sangarre had come at the risk of her life for the purpose of
+putting herself in communication with Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>For two days the besieged had enjoyed a tranquillity to which
+the Tartars had not accustomed them since the commencement of the
+investment.
+ This was by Ogareff's orders. Feofar-Khan's lieutenant wished
+that all attempts to take the town by force should be
+suspended.
+ He hoped the watchfulness of the besieged would relax. At any
+rate, several thousand Tartars were kept in readiness at the
+outposts, to attack the gate, deserted, as Ogareff anticipated
+that it would be, by its defenders, whenever he should summon the
+besiegers to the assault.</p>
+
+<p>This he could not now delay in doing. All must be over by the
+time that the Russian troops should come in sight of Irkutsk.
+Ogareff's arrangements were made, and on this evening a note fell
+from the top of the earthworks into Sangarre's hands.</p>
+
+<p>On the next day, that is to say during the hours of darkness
+from the 5th to the 6th of October, at two o'clock in the
+morning, Ivan Ogareff had resolved to deliver up Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV THE NIGHT OF THE FIFTH OF OCTOBER</h2>
+
+<p>IVAN OGAREFF'S plan had been contrived with the greatest care,
+and except for some unforeseen accident he believed that it must
+succeed.
+ It was of importance that the Bolchaia Gate should be unguarded
+or only feebly held when he gave it up. The attention of the
+besieged was therefore to be drawn to another part of the
+town.
+ A diversion was agreed upon with the Emir.</p>
+
+<p>This diversion was to be effected both up and down the river,
+on the Irkutsk bank. The attack on these two points was to be
+conducted in earnest, and at the same time a feigned attempt at
+crossing the Angara from the left bank was to be made.
+ The Bolchaia Gate, would be probably deserted, so much the more
+because on this side the Tartar outposts having drawn back, would
+appear to have broken up.</p>
+
+<p>
+ It was the 5th of October. In four and twenty hours, the capital
+of Eastern Siberia would be in the hands of the Emir, and the
+Grand Duke in the power of Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>During the day, an unusual stir was going on in the Angara
+camp.
+ From the windows of the palace important preparations on the
+opposite shore could be distinctly seen.
+ Numerous Tartar detachments were converging towards the camp,
+and from hour to hour reinforced the Emir's troops.
+ These movements, intended to deceive the besieged, were
+conducted in the most open manner possible before their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff had warned the Grand Duke that an attack was to be
+feared.
+ He knew, he said, that an assault was to be made, both above and
+below the town, and he counselled the Duke to reinforce the two
+directly threatened points. Accordingly, after a council of war
+had been held in the palace, orders were issued to concentrate
+the defense on the bank of the Angara and at the two ends of the
+town, where the earthworks protected the river.</p>
+
+<p>This was exactly what Ogareff wished. He did not expect that
+the Bolchaia Gate would be left entirely without defenders, but
+that there would only be a small number. Besides, Ogareff meant
+to give such importance to the diversion, that the Grand Duke
+would be obliged to oppose it with all his available forces.
+ The traitor planned also to produce so frightful a catastrophe
+that terror must inevitably overwhelm the hearts of the
+besieged.</p>
+
+<p>All day the garrison and population of Irkutsk were on the
+alert.
+ The measures to repel an attack on the points hitherto
+unassailed had been taken. The Grand Duke and General Voranzoff
+visited the posts, strengthened by their orders. Wassili Fedor's
+corps occupied the North of the town, but with orders to throw
+themselves where the danger was greatest. The right bank of the
+Angara had been protected with the few guns possessed by the
+defenders. With these measures, taken in time, thanks to the
+advice so opportunely given by Ivan Ogareff, there was good
+reason to hope that the expected attack would be repulsed.
+ In that case the Tartars, momentarily discouraged, would no
+doubt not make another attempt against the town for several
+days.
+ Now the troops expected by the Grand Duke might arrive at any
+hour.
+ The safety or the loss of Irkutsk hung only by a thread.</p>
+
+<p>On this day, the sun which had risen at twenty minutes to six,
+set at forty minutes past five, having traced its diurnal arc for
+eleven hours above the horizon. The twilight would struggle with
+the night for another two hours. Then it would be intensely dark,
+for the sky was cloudy, and there would be no moon.
+ This gloom would favor the plans of Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>For a few days already a sharp frost had given warning of the
+approaching rigor of the Siberian winter, and this evening it was
+especially severe. The Russians posted by the bank of the Angara,
+obliged to conceal their position, lighted no fires.
+ They suffered cruelly from the low temperature. A few feet below
+them, the ice in large masses drifted down the current.
+ All day these masses had been seen passing rapidly between the
+two banks.</p>
+
+<p>This had been considered by the Grand Duke and his officers as
+fortunate.
+ Should the channel of the Angara continue to be thus obstructed,
+the passage must be impracticable. The Tartars could use neither
+rafts nor boats. As to their crossing the river on the ice, that
+was not possible. The newly-frozen plain could not bear the
+weight of an assaulting column.</p>
+
+<p>This circumstance, as it appeared favorable to the defenders
+of Irkutsk, Ogareff might have regretted. He did not do so,
+however.
+ The traitor knew well that the Tartars would not try to pass the
+Angara, and that, on its side at least, their attempt was only a
+feint.</p>
+
+<p>About ten in the evening, the state of the river sensibly
+improved, to the great surprise of the besieged and still more to
+their disadvantage.
+ The passage till then impracticable, became all at once
+possible.
+ The bed of the Angara was clear. The blocks of ice, which had
+for some days drifted past in large numbers, disappeared down the
+current, and five or six only now occupied the space between the
+banks.
+ The Russian officers reported this change in the river to the
+Grand Duke. They suggested that it was probably caused by the
+circumstance that in some narrower part of the Angara, the blocks
+had accumulated so as to form a barrier.</p>
+
+<p>We know this was the case. The passage of the Angara was thus
+open to the besiegers. There was great reason for the Russians to
+be on their guard.</p>
+
+<p>Up to midnight nothing had occurred. On the Eastern side,
+beyond the Bolchaia Gate, all was quiet. Not a glimmer was seen
+in the dense forest, which appeared confounded on the horizon
+with the masses of clouds hanging low down in the sky.
+ Lights flitting to and fro in the Angara camp, showed that a
+considerable movement was taking place. From a verst above and
+below the point where the scarp met the river's bank, came a dull
+murmur, proving that the Tartars were on foot, expecting some
+signal.
+ An hour passed. Nothing new.</p>
+
+<p>The bell of the Irkutsk cathedral was about to strike two
+o'clock in the morning, and not a movement amongst the besiegers
+had yet shown that they were about to commence the assault. The
+Grand Duke and his officers began to suspect that they had been
+mistaken.
+ Had it really been the Tartars' plan to surprise the town?
+ The preceding nights had not been nearly so quiet--musketry
+rattling from the outposts, shells whistling through the air; and
+this time, nothing. The officers waited, ready to give their
+orders, according to circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>We have said that Ogareff occupied a room in the palace.
+ It was a large chamber on the ground floor, its windows opening
+on a side terrace. By taking a few steps along this terrace, a
+view of the river could be obtained.</p>
+
+<p>Profound darkness reigned in the room. Ogareff stood by a
+window, awaiting the hour to act. The signal, of course, could
+come from him, alone. This signal once given, when the greater
+part of the defenders of Irkutsk would be summoned to the points
+openly attacked, his plan was to leave the palace and hurry to
+the Bolchaia Gate. If it was unguarded, he would open it; or at
+least he would direct the overwhelming mass of its assailants
+against the few defenders.</p>
+
+<p>He now crouched in the shadow, like a wild beast ready to
+spring on its prey. A few minutes before two o'clock, the Grand
+Duke desired that Michael Strogoff--which was the only name they
+could give to Ivan Ogareff--should be brought to him.
+ An aide-de-camp came to the room, the door of which was
+closed.
+ He called.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff, motionless near the window, and invisible in the
+shade did not answer. The Grand Duke was therefore informed that
+the Czar's courier was not at that moment in the palace.</p>
+
+<p>Two o'clock struck. Now was the time to cause the diversion
+agreed upon with the Tartars, waiting for the assault.
+ Ivan Ogareff opened the window and stationed himself at the
+North angle of the side terrace.</p>
+
+<p>Below him flowed the roaring waters of the Angara. Ogareff
+took a match from his pocket, struck it and lighted a small bunch
+of tow, impregnated with priming powder, which he threw into the
+river.</p>
+
+<p>It was by the orders of Ivan Ogareff that the torrents of
+mineral oil had been thrown on the surface of the Angara! There
+are numerous naphtha springs above Irkutsk, on the right bank,
+between the suburb of Poshkavsk and the town. Ogareff had
+resolved to employ this terrible means to carry fire into
+Irkutsk. He therefore took possession of the immense reservoirs
+which contained the combustible liquid.
+ It was only necessary to demolish a piece of wall in order to
+allow it to flow out in a vast stream.</p>
+
+<p>This had been done that night, a few hours previously, and
+this was the reason that the raft which carried the true Courier
+of the Czar, Nadia, and the fugitives, floated on a current of
+mineral oil.
+ Through the breaches in these reservoirs of enormous dimensions
+rushed the naphtha in torrents, and, following the inclination of
+the ground, it spread over the surface of the river, where its
+density allowed it to float. This was the way Ivan Ogareff
+carried on warfare!
+ Allied with Tartars, he acted like a Tartar, and against his own
+countrymen!</p>
+
+<p>The tow had been thrown on the waters of the Angara. In an
+instant, with electrical rapidity, as if the current had been of
+alcohol, the whole river was in a blaze above and below the
+town.
+ Columns of blue flames ran between the two banks. Volumes of
+vapor curled up above. The few pieces of ice which still drifted
+were seized by the burning liquid, and melted like wax on the top
+of a furnace, the evaporated water escaping in shrill hisses.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment, firing broke out on the North and South of
+the town.
+ The enemy's batteries discharged their guns at random.
+ Several thousand Tartars rushed to the assault of the
+earth-works.
+ The houses on the bank, built of wood, took fire in every
+direction.
+ A bright light dissipated the darkness of the night.</p>
+
+<p>"At last!" said Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>He had good reason for congratulating himself. The diversion
+which he had planned was terrible. The defenders of Irkutsk found
+themselves between the attack of the Tartars and the fearful
+effects of fire.
+ The bells rang, and all the able-bodied of the population ran,
+some towards the points attacked, and others towards the houses
+in the grasp of the flames, which it seemed too probable would
+ere long envelop the whole town.</p>
+
+<p>The Gate of Bolchaia was nearly free. Only a very small guard
+had been left there. And by the traitor's suggestion, and in
+order that the event might be explained apart from him, as if by
+political hate, this small guard had been chosen from the little
+band of exiles.</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff re-entered his room, now brilliantly lighted by the
+flames from the Angara; then he made ready to go out.
+ But scarcely had he opened the door, when a woman rushed into
+the room, her clothes drenched, her hair in disorder.</p>
+
+<p>"Sangarre!" exclaimed Ogareff, in the first moment of
+surprise, and not supposing that it could be any other woman than
+the gypsy.</p>
+
+<p>It was not Sangarre; it was Nadia!</p>
+
+<p>At the moment when, floating on the ice, the girl had uttered
+a cry on seeing the fire spreading along the current, Michael had
+seized her in his arms, and plunged with her into the river
+itself to seek a refuge in its depths from the flames.
+ The block which bore them was not thirty fathoms from the first
+quay of Irkutsk.</p>
+
+<p>Swimming beneath the water, Michael managed to get a footing
+with Nadia on the quay. Michael Strogoff had reached his
+journey's end!
+ He was in Irkutsk!</p>
+
+<p>"To the governor's palace!" said he to Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>In less than ten minutes, they arrived at the entrance to the
+palace.
+ Long tongues of flame from the Angara licked its walls, but were
+powerless to set it on fire. Beyond the houses on the bank were
+in a blaze.</p>
+
+<p>The palace being open to all, Michael and Nadia entered
+without difficulty. In the confusion, no one remarked them,
+although their garments were dripping. A crowd of officers coming
+for orders, and of soldiers running to execute them, filled the
+great hall on the ground floor. There, in a sudden eddy of the
+confused multitude, Michael and the young girl were separated
+from each other.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia ran distracted through the passages, calling her
+companion, and asking to be taken to the Grand Duke. A door into
+a room flooded with light opened before her. She entered, and
+found herself suddenly face to face with the man whom she had met
+at Ichim, whom she had seen at Tomsk; face to face with the one
+whose villainous hand would an instant later betray the town!</p>
+
+<p>"Ivan Ogareff!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>On hearing his name pronounced, the wretch started. His real
+name known, all his plans would be balked. There was but one
+thing to be done: to kill the person who had just uttered it.
+Ogareff darted at Nadia; but the girl, a knife in her hand,
+retreated against the wall, determined to defend herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Ivan Ogareff!" again cried Nadia, knowing well that so
+detested a name would soon bring her help.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Be silent!" hissed out the traitor between his clenched
+teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"Ivan Ogareff!" exclaimed a third time the brave young girl,
+in a voice to which hate had added ten-fold strength.</p>
+
+<p>Mad with fury, Ogareff, drawing a dagger from his belt, again
+rushed at Nadia and compelled her to retreat into a corner of the
+room.
+ Her last hope appeared gone, when the villain, suddenly lifted
+by an irresistible force, was dashed to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Michael!" cried Nadia.</p>
+
+<p>It was Michael Strogoff. Michael had heard Nadia's call.
+ Guided by her voice, he had just in time reached Ivan Ogareff's
+room, and entered by the open door.</p>
+
+<p>"Fear nothing, Nadia," said he, placing himself between her
+and Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" cried the girl, "take care, brother! The traitor is
+armed!
+ He can see!"</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff rose, and, thinking he had an immeasurable advantage
+over the blind man leaped upon him. But with one hand, the blind
+man grasped the arm of his enemy, seized his weapon, and hurled
+him again to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Pale with rage and shame, Ogareff remembered that he wore a
+sword.
+ He drew it and returned a second time to the charge.
+ A blind man! Ogareff had only to deal with a blind man!
+ He was more than a match for him!</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, terrified at the danger which threatened her companion
+ran to the door calling for help!</p>
+
+<p>"Close the door, Nadia!" said Michael. "Call no one, and leave
+me alone!
+ The Czar's courier has nothing to fear to-day from this
+villain!
+ Let him come on, if he dares! I am ready for him."</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Ogareff, gathering himself together like a
+tiger about to spring, uttered not a word. The noise of his
+footsteps, his very breathing, he endeavored to conceal from the
+ear of the blind man.
+ His object was to strike before his opponent was aware of his
+approach, to strike him with a deadly blow.</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, terrified and at the same time confident, watched this
+terrible scene with involuntary admiration. Michael's calm
+bearing seemed to have inspired her. Michael's sole weapon was
+his Siberian knife.
+ He did not see his adversary armed with a sword, it is true; but
+Heaven's support seemed to be afforded him. How, almost without
+stirring, did he always face the point of the sword?</p>
+
+<p>Ivan Ogareff watched his strange adversary with visible
+anxiety.
+ His superhuman calm had an effect upon him. In vain, appealing
+to his reason, did he tell himself that in so unequal a combat
+all the advantages were on his side. The immobility of the blind
+man froze him.
+ He had settled on the place where he would strike his
+victim.
+ He had fixed upon it! What, then, hindered him from putting an
+end to his blind antagonist?</p>
+
+<p>At last, with a spring he drove his sword full at Michael's
+breast.
+ An imperceptible movement of the blind man's knife turned aside
+the blow.
+ Michael had not been touched, and coolly he awaited a second
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>Cold drops stood on Ogareff's brow. He drew back a step, then
+again leaped forward. But as had the first, this second attempt
+failed.
+ The knife had simply parried the blow from the traitor's useless
+sword.</p>
+
+<p>Mad with rage and terror before this living statue, he gazed
+into the wide-open eyes of the blind man.
+ Those eyes which seemed to pierce to the bottom of his soul, and
+yet which did not, could not, see--exercised a sort of dreadful
+fascination over him.</p>
+
+<p>All at once, Ogareff uttered a cry. A sudden light flashed
+across his brain. "He sees!" he exclaimed, "he sees!"
+ And like a wild beast trying to retreat into its den, step by
+step, terrified, he drew back to the end of the room.</p>
+
+<p>Then the statue became animated, the blind man walked straight
+up to Ivan Ogareff, and placing himself right before him, "Yes, I
+see!"
+ said he. "I see the mark of the knout which I gave you, traitor
+and coward! I see the place where I am about to strike you!
+ Defend your life! It is a duel I deign to offer you!
+ My knife against your sword!"</p>
+
+<p>"He sees!" said Nadia. "Gracious Heaven, is it possible!"</p>
+
+<p>Ogareff felt that he was lost. But mustering all his courage,
+he sprang forward on his impassible adversary. The two blades
+crossed, but at a touch from Michael's knife, wielded in the hand
+of the Siberian hunter, the sword flew in splinters, and the
+wretch, stabbed to the heart, fell lifeless on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>At the same moment, the door was thrown open. The Grand Duke,
+accompanied by some of his officers, appeared on the
+threshold.
+ The Grand Duke advanced. In the body lying on the ground, he
+recognized the man whom he believed to be the Czar's courier.</p>
+
+<p>Then, in a threatening voice, "Who killed that man?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I," replied Michael.</p>
+
+<p>One of the officers put a pistol to his temple, ready to
+fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Your name?" asked the Grand Duke, before giving the order for
+his brains to be blown out.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Highness," answered Michael, "ask me rather the name of
+the man who lies at your feet!"</p>
+
+<p>"That man, I know him! He is a servant of my brother!
+ He is the Czar's courier!"</p>
+
+<p>"That man, your Highness, is not a courier of the Czar! He is
+Ivan Ogareff!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ivan Ogareff!" exclaimed the Grand Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Ivan the Traitor!"</p>
+
+<p>"But who are you, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Michael Strogoff!"</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XV CONCLUSION</h2>
+
+<p>MICHAEL STROGOFF was not, had never been, blind. A purely
+human phenomenon, at the same time moral and physical, had
+neutralized the action of the incandescent blade which Feofar's
+executioner had passed before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It may be remembered, that at the moment of the execution,
+Marfa Strogoff was present, stretching out her hands towards her
+son.
+ Michael gazed at her as a son would gaze at his mother, when it
+is for the last time. The tears, which his pride in vain
+endeavored to subdue, welling up from his heart, gathered under
+his eyelids, and volatiliz-ing on the cornea, had saved his
+sight.
+ The vapor formed by his tears interposing between the glowing
+saber and his eyeballs, had been sufficient to annihilate the
+action of the heat. A similar effect is produced, when a workman
+smelter, after dipping his hand in vapor, can with impunity hold
+it over a stream of melted iron.</p>
+
+<p>
+ Michael had immediately understood the danger in which he would
+be placed should he make known his secret to anyone.
+ He at once saw, on the other hand, that he might make use of his
+supposed blindness for the accomplishment of his designs.
+ Because it was believed that he was blind, he would be allowed
+to go free. He must therefore be blind, blind to all, even to
+Nadia, blind everywhere, and not a gesture at any moment must let
+the truth be suspected. His resolution was taken.
+ He must risk his life even to afford to all he might meet the
+proof of his want of sight. We know how perfectly he acted the
+part he had determined on.</p>
+
+<p>His mother alone knew the truth, and he had whispered it to
+her in Tomsk itself, when bending over her in the dark he covered
+her with kisses.</p>
+
+<p>When Ogareff had in his cruel irony held the Imperial letter
+before the eyes which he believed were destroyed, Michael had
+been able to read, and had read the letter which disclosed the
+odious plans of the traitor.
+ This was the reason of the wonderful resolution he exhibited
+during the second part of his journey. This was the reason of his
+unalterable longing to reach Irkutsk, so as to perform his
+mission by word of mouth.
+ He knew that the town would be betrayed! He knew that the life
+of the Grand Duke was threatened! The safety of the Czar's
+brother and of Siberia was in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>This story was told in a few words to the Grand Duke, and
+Michael repeated also--and with what emotion!--the part Nadia had
+taken in these events.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is this girl?" asked the Grand Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"The daughter of the exile, Wassili Fedor," replied
+Michael.</p>
+
+<p>"The daughter of Captain Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "has
+ceased to be the daughter of an exile. There are no longer exiles
+in Irkutsk."</p>
+
+<p>Nadia, less strong in joy than she had been in grief, fell on
+her knees before the Grand Duke, who raised her with one hand,
+while he extended the other to Michael.</p>
+
+<p>An hour after, Nadia was in her father's arms.
+ Michael Strogoff, Nadia, and Wassili Fedor were united.
+ This was the height of happiness to them all.</p>
+
+<p>The Tartars had been repulsed in their double attack on the
+town.
+ Wassili Fedor, with his little band, had driven back the first
+assailants who presented themselves at the Bolchaia Gate,
+expecting to find it open and which, by an instinctive feeling,
+often arising from sound judgment, he had determined to remain at
+and defend.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time as the Tartars were driven back the besieged
+had mastered the fire. The liquid naphtha having rapidly burnt to
+the surface of the water, the flames did not go beyond the houses
+on the shore, and left the other quarters of the town
+uninjured.
+ Before daybreak the troops of Feofar-Khan had retreated into
+their camp, leaving a large number of dead on and below the
+ramparts.</p>
+
+<p>Among the dead was the gypsy Sangarre, who had vainly
+endeavored to join Ivan Ogareff.</p>
+
+<p>For two days the besiegers attempted no fresh assault.
+ They were discouraged by the death of Ogareff. This man was the
+mainspring of the invasion, and he alone, by his plots long since
+contrived, had had sufficient influence over the khans and their
+hordes to bring them to the conquest of Asiatic Russia.</p>
+
+<p>However, the defenders of Irkutsk kept on their guard, and the
+investment still continued; but on the 7th of October, at
+daybreak, cannon boomed out from the heights around Irkutsk. It
+was the succoring army under the command of General Kisselef, and
+it was thus that he made known his welcome arrival to the Grand
+Duke.</p>
+
+<p>The Tartars did not wait to be attacked. Not daring to run the
+risk of a battle under the walls of Irkutsk, they immediately
+broke up the Angara camp. Irkutsk was at last relieved.</p>
+
+<p>With the first Russian soldiers, two of Michael's friends
+entered the city. They were the inseparable Blount and Jolivet.
+On gaining the right bank of the Angara by means of the icy
+barrier, they had escaped, as had the other fugitives, before the
+flames had reached their raft.
+ This had been noted by Alcide Jolivet in his book in this way:
+"Ran a narrow chance of being finished up like a lemon in a bowl
+of punch!"</p>
+
+<p>Their joy was great on finding Nadia and Michael safe and
+sound; above all, when they learnt that their brave companion was
+not blind.
+ Harry Blount inscribed this observation: "Red-hot iron is
+insufficient in some cases to destroy the sensibility of the
+optic nerve."</p>
+
+<p>Then the two correspondents, settled for a time in Irkutsk,
+busied themselves in putting the notes and impressions of their
+journey in order. Thence were sent to London and Paris two
+interesting articles relative to the Tartar invasion, and
+which--a rare thing-- did not contradict each other even on the
+least important points.</p>
+
+<p>The remainder of the campaign was unfortunate to the Emir and
+his allies.
+ This invasion, futile as all which attack the Russian Colossus
+must be, was very fatal to them. They soon found themselves cut
+off by the Czar's troops, who retook in succession all the
+conquered towns.
+ Besides this, the winter was terrible, and, decimated by the
+cold, only a small part of these hordes returned to the steppes
+of Tartary.</p>
+
+<p>The Irkutsk road, by way of the Ural Mountains, was now
+open.
+ The Grand Duke was anxious to return to Moscow, but he delayed
+his journey to be present at a touching ceremony, which took
+place a few days after the entry of the Russian troops.</p>
+
+<p>Michael Strogoff sought Nadia, and in her father's presence
+said to her, "Nadia, my sister still, when you left Riga to come
+to Irkutsk, did you leave it with any other regret than that for
+your mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," replied Nadia, "none of any sort whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, nothing of your heart remains there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, brother."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Nadia," said Michael, "I think that God, in allowing us
+to meet, and to go through so many severe trials together, must
+have meant us to be united forever."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said Nadia, falling into Michael's arms. Then turning
+towards Wassili Fedor, "My father," said she, blushing.</p>
+
+<p>"Nadia," said Captain Fedor, "it will be my joy to call you
+both my children!"</p>
+
+<p>The marriage ceremony took place in Irkutsk cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>Jolivet and Blount very naturally assisted at this marriage,
+of which they wished to give an account to their readers.</p>
+
+<p>"And doesn't it make you wish to imitate them?" asked Alcide
+of his friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh!" said Blount. "Now if I had a cousin like you--"</p>
+
+<p>"My cousin isn't to be married!" answered Alcide,
+laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better," returned Blount, "for they speak of
+difficulties arising between London and Pekin. Have you no wish
+to go and see what is going on there?"</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, my dear Blount!" exclaimed Alcide Jolivet, "I was
+just going to make the same proposal to you."</p>
+
+<p>And that was how the two inseparables set off for China.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after the ceremony, Michael and Nadia Strogoff,
+accompanied by Wassili Fedor, took the route to Europe. The road
+so full of suffering when going, was a road of joy in
+returning.
+ They traveled swiftly, in one of those sleighs which glide like
+an express train across the frozen steppes of Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>However, when they reached the banks of the Dinka, just before
+Birskoe, they stopped for a while. Michael found the place where
+he had buried poor Nicholas. A cross was erected there, and Nadia
+prayed a last time on the grave of the humble and heroic friend,
+whom neither of them would ever forget.</p>
+
+<p>At Omsk, old Marfa awaited them in the little house of the
+Strogoffs. She clasped passionately in her arms the girl whom in
+her heart she had already a hundred times called "daughter."
+ The brave old Siberian, on that day, had the right to recognize
+her son and say she was proud of him.</p>
+
+<p>After a few days passed at Omsk, Michael and Nadia entered
+Europe, and, Wassili Fedor settling down in St. Petersburg,
+neither his son nor his daughter had any occasion to leave him,
+except to go and see their old mother.</p>
+
+<p>The young courier was received by the Czar, who attached him
+specially to his own person, and gave him the Cross of St.
+George. In the course of time, Michael Strogoff reached a high
+station in the Empire. But it is not the history of his success,
+but the history of his trials, which deserves to be related.</p>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Michael Strogoff, by Jules Verne
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MICHAEL STROGOFF ***
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Michael Strogoff, by Jules Verne
+#10 in our series by Jules Verne
+
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
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+Michael Strogoff
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+by Jules Verne
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+August, 1999 [Etext #1842]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Michael Strogoff, by Jules Verne
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+
+
+
+Michael Strogoff
+
+or
+
+The Courier of the Czar
+
+by Jules Verne
+
+
+
+Michael Strogoff
+
+BOOK I
+
+CHAPTER I A FETE AT THE NEW PALACE
+
+"SIRE, a fresh dispatch."
+
+"Whence?"
+
+"From Tomsk?"
+
+"Is the wire cut beyond that city?"
+
+"Yes, sire, since yesterday."
+
+"Telegraph hourly to Tomsk, General, and keep me informed
+of all that occurs."
+
+"Sire, it shall be done," answered General Kissoff.
+
+These words were exchanged about two hours after midnight,
+at the moment when the fete given at the New Palace was at
+the height of its splendor.
+
+During the whole evening the bands of the Preobra-jensky and Paulowsky
+regiments had played without cessation polkas, mazurkas, schottisches,
+and waltzes from among the choicest of their repertoires.
+Innumerable couples of dancers whirled through the magnificent saloons
+of the palace, which stood at a few paces only from the "old house
+of stones"--in former days the scene of so many terrible dramas,
+the echoes of whose walls were this night awakened by the gay strains
+of the musicians.
+
+The grand-chamberlain of the court, was, besides, well seconded
+in his arduous and delicate duties. The grand-dukes and their
+aides-de-camp, the chamberlains-in-waiting and other officers of
+the palace, presided personally in the arrangement of the dances.
+The grand duchesses, covered with diamonds, the ladies-in-waiting
+in their most exquisite costumes, set the example to the wives
+of the military and civil dignitaries of the ancient "city
+of white stone." When, therefore, the signal for the "polonaise"
+resounded through the saloons, and the guests of all ranks took
+part in that measured promenade, which on occasions of this kind
+has all the importance of a national dance, the mingled costumes,
+the sweeping robes adorned with lace, and uniforms covered with orders,
+presented a scene of dazzling splendor, lighted by hundreds of lusters
+multiplied tenfold by the numerous mirrors adorning the walls.
+
+The grand saloon, the finest of all those contained in the New Palace,
+formed to this procession of exalted personages and splendidly
+dressed women a frame worthy of the magnificence they displayed.
+The rich ceiling, with its gilding already softened by the touch
+of time, appeared as if glittering with stars. The embroidered
+drapery of the curtains and doors, falling in gorgeous folds,
+assumed rich and varied hues, broken by the shadows of the heavy
+masses of damask.
+
+Through the panes of the vast semicircular bay-windows
+the light, with which the saloons were filled, shone forth
+with the brilliancy of a conflagration, vividly illuminating
+the gloom in which for some hours the palace had been shrouded.
+The attention of those of the guests not taking
+part in the dancing was attracted by the contrast.
+Resting in the recesses of the windows, they could discern,
+standing out dimly in the darkness, the vague outlines of the
+countless towers, domes, and spires which adorn the ancient city.
+Below the sculptured balconies were visible numerous sentries,
+pacing silently up and down, their rifles carried horizontally
+on the shoulder, and the spikes of their helmets glittering
+like flames in the glare of light issuing from the palace.
+The steps also of the patrols could be heard beating
+time on the stones beneath with even more regularity
+than the feet of the dancers on the floor of the saloon.
+From time to time the watchword was repeated from post to post,
+and occasionally the notes of a trumpet, mingling with
+the strains of the orchestra, penetrated into their midst.
+Still farther down, in front of the facade, dark masses
+obscured the rays of light which proceeded from the windows
+of the New Palace. These were boats descending the course
+of a river, whose waters, faintly illumined by a few lamps,
+washed the lower portion of the terraces.
+
+The principal personage who has been mentioned, the giver of the fete,
+and to whom General Kissoff had been speaking in that tone
+of respect with which sovereigns alone are usually addressed,
+wore the simple uniform of an officer of chasseurs of the guard.
+This was not affectation on his part, but the custom of a man
+who cared little for dress, his contrasting strongly with the
+gorgeous costumes amid which he moved, encircled by his escort
+of Georgians, Cossacks, and Circassians--a brilliant band,
+splendidly clad in the glittering uniforms of the Caucasus.
+
+This personage, of lofty stature, affable demeanor,
+and physiognomy calm, though bearing traces of anxiety,
+moved from group to group, seldom speaking, and appearing to pay
+but little attention either to the merriment of the younger guests
+or the graver remarks of the exalted dignitaries or members
+of the diplomatic corps who represented at the Russian court
+the principal governments of Europe. Two or three of these
+astute politicians--physiognomists by virtue of their profession--
+failed not to detect on the countenance of their host symptoms
+of disquietude, the source of which eluded their penetration;
+but none ventured to interrogate him on the subject.
+
+It was evidently the intention of the officer of chasseurs that his
+own anxieties should in no way cast a shade over the festivities;
+and, as he was a personage whom almost the population of a world
+in itself was wont to obey, the gayety of the ball was not for
+a moment checked.
+
+Nevertheless, General Kissoff waited until the officer to whom
+he had just communicated the dispatch forwarded from Tomsk should give
+him permission to withdraw; but the latter still remained silent.
+He had taken the telegram, he had read it carefully,
+and his visage became even more clouded than before.
+Involuntarily he sought the hilt of his sword, and then
+passed his hand for an instant before his eyes, as though,
+dazzled by the brilliancy of the light, he wished to shade them,
+the better to see into the recesses of his own mind.
+
+"We are, then," he continued, after having drawn General Kissoff
+aside towards a window, "since yesterday without intelligence
+from the Grand Duke?"
+
+"Without any, sire; and it is to be feared that in a short time
+dispatches will no longer cross the Siberian frontier."
+
+"But have not the troops of the provinces of Amoor and Irkutsk,
+as those also of the Trans-Balkan territory, received orders
+to march immediately upon Irkutsk?"
+
+"The orders were transmitted by the last telegram we were able
+to send beyond Lake Baikal."
+
+"And the governments of Yeniseisk, Omsk, Semipolatinsk,
+and Tobolsk--are we still in direct communication with them
+as before the insurrection?"
+
+"Yes, sire; our dispatches have reached them, and we are assured
+at the present moment that the Tartars have not advanced beyond
+the Irtish and the Obi."
+
+"And the traitor Ivan Ogareff, are there no tidings of him?"
+
+"None," replied General Kissoff. "The head of the police cannot
+state whether or not he has crossed the frontier."
+
+"Let a description of him be immediately dispatched to
+Nijni-Novgorod, Perm, Ekaterenburg, Kasirnov, Tioumen, Ishim, Omsk, Tomsk,
+and to all the telegraphic stations with which communication
+is yet open."
+
+"Your majesty's orders shall be instantly carried out."
+
+"You will observe the strictest silence as to this."
+
+The General, having made a sign of respectful assent, bowing low,
+mingled with the crowd, and finally left the apartments without
+his departure being remarked.
+
+The officer remained absorbed in thought for a few moments, when,
+recovering himself, he went among the various groups in the saloon,
+his countenance reassuming that calm aspect which had for an
+instant been disturbed.
+
+Nevertheless, the important occurrence which had occasioned
+these rapidly exchanged words was not so unknown as the officer
+of the chasseurs of the guard and General Kissoff had
+possibly supposed. It was not spoken of officially, it is true,
+nor even officiously, since tongues were not free; but a few
+exalted personages had been informed, more or less exactly,
+of the events which had taken place beyond the frontier.
+At any rate, that which was only slightly known, that which was not
+matter of conversation even between members of the corps diplomatique,
+two guests, distinguished by no uniform, no decoration,
+at this reception in the New Palace, discussed in a low voice,
+and with apparently very correct information.
+
+By what means, by the exercise of what acuteness had these two ordinary
+mortals ascertained that which so many persons of the highest rank
+and importance scarcely even suspected? It is impossible to say.
+Had they the gifts of foreknowledge and foresight? Did they
+possess a supplementary sense, which enabled them to see beyond
+that limited horizon which bounds all human gaze? Had they obtained
+a peculiar power of divining the most secret events? Was it owing
+to the habit, now become a second nature, of living on information,
+that their mental constitution had thus become really transformed?
+It was difficult to escape from this conclusion.
+
+Of these two men, the one was English, the other French; both were tall
+and thin, but the latter was sallow as are the southern Provencals,
+while the former was ruddy like a Lancashire gentleman.
+The Anglo-Norman, formal, cold, grave, parsimonious of gestures
+and words, appeared only to speak or gesticulate under
+the influence of a spring operating at regular intervals.
+The Gaul, on the contrary, lively and petulant, expressed himself
+with lips, eyes, hands, all at once, having twenty different
+ways of explaining his thoughts, whereas his interlocutor seemed
+to have only one, immutably stereotyped on his brain.
+
+The strong contrast they presented would at once have struck the most
+superficial observer; but a physiognomist, regarding them closely,
+would have defined their particular characteristics by saying,
+that if the Frenchman was "all eyes," the Englishman was "all ears."
+
+In fact, the visual apparatus of the one had been singularly
+perfected by practice. The sensibility of its retina must
+have been as instantaneous as that of those conjurors who
+recognize a card merely by a rapid movement in cutting the pack
+or by the arrangement only of marks invisible to others.
+The Frenchman indeed possessed in the highest degree what may
+be called "the memory of the eye."
+
+The Englishman, on the contrary, appeared especially organized
+to listen and to hear. When his aural apparatus had been once
+struck by the sound of a voice he could not forget it, and after ten
+or even twenty years he would have recognized it among a thousand.
+His ears, to be sure, had not the power of moving as freely
+as those of animals who are provided with large auditory flaps;
+but, since scientific men know that human ears possess, in fact,
+a very limited power of movement, we should not be far wrong
+in affirming that those of the said Englishman became erect,
+and turned in all directions while endeavoring to gather
+in the sounds, in a manner apparent only to the naturalist.
+It must be observed that this perfection of sight and hearing
+was of wonderful assistance to these two men in their vocation,
+for the Englishman acted as correspondent of the Daily Telegraph,
+and the Frenchman, as correspondent of what newspaper,
+or of what newspapers, he did not say; and when asked,
+he replied in a jocular manner that he corresponded with "his
+cousin Madeleine." This Frenchman, however, neath his
+careless surface, was wonderfully shrewd and sagacious.
+Even while speaking at random, perhaps the better to hide his desire
+to learn, he never forgot himself. His loquacity even helped him
+to conceal his thoughts, and he was perhaps even more discreet
+than his confrere of the Daily Telegraph. Both were present
+at this fete given at the New Palace on the night of the 15th
+of July in their character of reporters.
+
+It is needless to say that these two men were devoted to their mission
+in the world--that they delighted to throw themselves in the track
+of the most unexpected intelligence--that nothing terrified or
+discouraged them from succeeding--that they possessed the imperturbable
+sang froid and the genuine intrepidity of men of their calling.
+Enthusiastic jockeys in this steeplechase, this hunt after information,
+they leaped hedges, crossed rivers, sprang over fences, with the ardor
+of pure-blooded racers, who will run "a good first" or die!
+
+Their journals did not restrict them with regard to money--
+the surest, the most rapid, the most perfect element of information
+known to this day. It must also be added, to their honor,
+that neither the one nor the other ever looked over or listened
+at the walls of private life, and that they only exercised
+their vocation when political or social interests were at stake.
+In a word, they made what has been for some years called "the
+great political and military reports."
+
+It will be seen, in following them, that they had generally an
+independent mode of viewing events, and, above all, their consequences,
+each having his own way of observing and appreciating.
+
+The French correspondent was named Alcide Jolivet. Harry Blount
+was the name of the Englishman. They had just met for the first time
+at this fete in the New Palace, of which they had been ordered to give
+an account in their papers. The dissimilarity of their characters,
+added to a certain amount of jealousy, which generally exists
+between rivals in the same calling, might have rendered them
+but little sympathetic. However, they did not avoid each other,
+but endeavored rather to exchange with each other the chat of the day.
+They were sportsmen, after all, hunting on the same ground.
+That which one missed might be advantageously secured by the other,
+and it was to their interest to meet and converse.
+
+This evening they were both on the look out; they felt, in fact,
+that there was something in the air.
+
+"Even should it be only a wildgoose chase," said Alcide Jolivet
+to himself, "it may be worth powder and shot."
+
+The two correspondents therefore began by cautiously sounding each other.
+
+"Really, my dear sir, this little fete is charming!"
+said Alcide Jolivet pleasantly, thinking himself obliged to begin
+the conversation with this eminently French phrase.
+
+"I have telegraphed already, 'splendid!'" replied Harry Blount calmly,
+employing the word specially devoted to expressing admiration by all
+subjects of the United Kingdom.
+
+"Nevertheless," added Alcide Jolivet, "I felt compelled to remark
+to my cousin--"
+
+"Your cousin?" repeated Harry Blount in a tone of surprise,
+interrupting his brother of the pen.
+
+"Yes," returned Alcide Jolivet, "my cousin Madeleine. It is with her
+that I correspond, and she likes to be quickly and well informed,
+does my cousin. I therefore remarked to her that, during this fete,
+a sort of cloud had appeared to overshadow the sovereign's brow."
+
+"To me, it seemed radiant," replied Harry Blount, who perhaps,
+wished to conceal his real opinion on this topic.
+
+"And, naturally, you made it 'radiant,' in the columns of
+the Daily Telegraph."
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Do you remember, Mr. Blount, what occurred at Zakret in 1812?"
+
+"I remember it as well as if I had been there, sir,"
+replied the English correspondent.
+
+"Then," continued Alcide Jolivet, "you know that, in the middle of a
+fete given in his honor, it was announced to the Emperor Alexander
+that Napoleon had just crossed the Niemen with the vanguard of
+the French army. Nevertheless the Emperor did not leave the fete,
+and notwithstanding the extreme gravity of intelligence which might cost
+him his empire, he did not allow himself to show more uneasiness."
+
+"Than our host exhibited when General Kissoff informed him
+that the telegraphic wires had just been cut between the frontier
+and the government of Irkutsk."
+
+"Ah! you are aware of that?"
+
+"I am!"
+
+"As regards myself, it would be difficult to avoid knowing it,
+since my last telegram reached Udinsk," observed Alcide Jolivet,
+with some satisfaction.
+
+"And mine only as far as Krasnoiarsk," answered Harry Blount,
+in a no less satisfied tone.
+
+"Then you know also that orders have been sent to the
+troops of Nikolaevsk?"
+
+"I do, sir; and at the same time a telegram was sent to the Cossacks
+of the government of Tobolsk to concentrate their forces."
+
+"Nothing can be more true, Mr. Blount; I was equally well acquainted
+with these measures, and you may be sure that my dear cousin shall
+know of them to-morrow."
+
+"Exactly as the readers of the Daily Telegraph shall know
+it also, M. Jolivet."
+
+"Well, when one sees all that is going on. . . ."
+
+"And when one hears all that is said. . . ."
+
+"An interesting campaign to follow, Mr. Blount."
+
+"I shall follow it, M. Jolivet!"
+
+"Then it is possible that we shall find ourselves on ground
+less safe, perhaps, than the floor of this ball-room."
+
+"Less safe, certainly, but--"
+
+"But much less slippery," added Alcide Jolivet, holding up his companion,
+just as the latter, drawing back, was about to lose his equilibrium.
+
+Thereupon the two correspondents separated, pleased that the one
+had not stolen a march on the other.
+
+At that moment the doors of the rooms adjoining the great reception
+saloon were thrown open, disclosing to view several immense tables
+beautifully laid out, and groaning under a profusion of valuable
+china and gold plate. On the central table, reserved for
+the princes, princesses, and members of the corps diplomatique,
+glittered an epergne of inestimable price, brought from London,
+and around this chef-d'oeuvre of chased gold reflected under
+the light of the lusters a thousand pieces of most beautiful
+service from the manufactories of Sevres.
+
+The guests of the New Palace immediately began to stream
+towards the supper-rooms.
+
+At that moment. General Kissoff, who had just re-entered, quickly
+approached the officer of chasseurs.
+
+"Well?" asked the latter abruptly, as he had done the former time.
+
+"Telegrams pass Tomsk no longer, sire."
+
+"A courier this moment!"
+
+The officer left the hall and entered a large antechamber adjoining.
+It was a cabinet with plain oak furniture, situated in an angle of
+the New Palace. Several pictures, amongst others some by Horace Vernet,
+hung on the wall.
+
+The officer hastily opened a window, as if he felt the want
+of air, and stepped out on a balcony to breathe the pure
+atmosphere of a lovely July night. Beneath his eyes,
+bathed in moonlight, lay a fortified inclosure, from which
+rose two cathedrals, three palaces, and an arsenal.
+Around this inclosure could be seen three distinct towns:
+Kitai-Gorod, Beloi-Gorod, Zemlianai-Gorod--European, Tartar,
+and Chinese quarters of great extent, commanded by towers,
+belfries, minarets, and the cupolas of three hundred churches,
+with green domes, surmounted by the silver cross.
+A little winding river, here and there reflected the rays
+of the moon.
+
+This river was the Moskowa; the town Moscow; the fortified inclosure
+the Kremlin; and the officer of chasseurs of the guard, who, with folded
+arms and thoughtful brow, was listening dreamily to the sounds floating
+from the New Palace over the old Muscovite city, was the Czar.
+
+
+CHAPTER II RUSSIANS AND TARTARS
+
+THE Czar had not so suddenly left the ball-room of the New Palace,
+when the fete he was giving to the civil and military authorities
+and principal people of Moscow was at the height of its brilliancy,
+without ample cause; for he had just received information that serious
+events were taking place beyond the frontiers of the Ural. It had become
+evident that a formidable rebellion threatened to wrest the Siberian
+provinces from the Russian crown.
+
+Asiatic Russia, or Siberia, covers a superficial area of 1,790,208
+square miles, and contains nearly two millions of inhabitants.
+Extending from the Ural Mountains, which separate it
+from Russia in Europe, to the shores of the Pacific Ocean,
+it is bounded on the south by Turkestan and the Chinese Empire;
+on the north by the Arctic Ocean, from the Sea of Kara
+to Behring's Straits. It is divided into several governments
+or provinces, those of Tobolsk, Yeniseisk, Irkutsk, Omsk,
+and Yakutsk; contains two districts, Okhotsk and Kamtschatka;
+and possesses two countries, now under the Muscovite dominion--
+that of the Kirghiz and that of the Tshouktshes. This immense
+extent of steppes, which includes more than one hundred and
+ten degrees from west to east, is a land to which criminals
+and political offenders are banished.
+
+Two governor-generals represent the supreme authority of the Czar
+over this vast country. The higher one resides at Irkutsk,
+the far capital of Eastern Siberia. The River Tchouna separates
+the two Siberias.
+
+No rail yet furrows these wide plains, some of which are in reality
+extremely fertile. No iron ways lead from those precious mines
+which make the Siberian soil far richer below than above its surface.
+The traveler journeys in summer in a kibick or telga; in winter,
+in a sledge.
+
+An electric telegraph, with a single wire more than eight thousand
+versts in length, alone affords communication between the western
+and eastern frontiers of Siberia. On issuing from the Ural, it passes
+through Ekaterenburg, Kasirnov, Tioumen, Ishim, Omsk, Elamsk, Kolyvan,
+Tomsk, Krasnoiarsk, Nijni-Udinsk, Irkutsk, Verkne-Nertschink, Strelink,
+Albazine, Blagowstenks, Radde, Orlomskaya, Alexandrowskoe, and Nikolaevsk;
+and six roubles and nineteen copecks are paid for every word sent
+from one end to the other. From Irkutsk there is a branch to Kiatka,
+on the Mongolian frontier; and from thence, for thirty copecks a word,
+the post conveys the dispatches to Pekin in a fortnight.
+
+It was this wire, extending from Ekaterenburg to Nikolaevsk,
+which had been cut, first beyond Tomsk, and then between
+Tomsk and Kolyvan.
+
+This was why the Czar, to the communication made to him for
+the second time by General Kissoff, had answered by the words,
+"A courier this moment!"
+
+The Czar remained motionless at the window for a few moments,
+when the door was again opened. The chief of police appeared
+on the threshold.
+
+"Enter, General," said the Czar briefly, "and tell me all you
+know of Ivan Ogareff."
+
+"He is an extremely dangerous man, sire," replied the chief of police.
+
+"He ranked as colonel, did he not?"
+
+"Yes, sire."
+
+"Was he an intelligent officer?"
+
+"Very intelligent, but a man whose spirit it was impossible to subdue;
+and possessing an ambition which stopped at nothing, he became involved
+in secret intrigues, and was degraded from his rank by his Highness
+the Grand Duke, and exiled to Siberia."
+
+"How long ago was that?"
+
+"Two years since. Pardoned after six months of exile by your
+majesty's favor, he returned to Russia."
+
+"And since that time, has he not revisited Siberia?"
+
+"Yes, sire; but he voluntarily returned there," replied the chief
+of police, adding, and slightly lowering his voice, "there was
+a time, sire, when NONE returned from Siberia."
+
+"Well, whilst I live, Siberia is and shall be a country whence
+men CAN return."
+
+The Czar had the right to utter these words with some pride,
+for often, by his clemency, he had shown that Russian justice
+knew how to pardon.
+
+The head of the police did not reply to this observation, but it
+was evident that he did not approve of such half-measures. According
+to his idea, a man who had once passed the Ural Mountains in charge
+of policemen, ought never again to cross them. Now, it was not thus
+under the new reign, and the chief of police sincerely deplored it.
+What! no banishment for life for other crimes than those against
+social order! What! political exiles returning from Tobolsk,
+from Yakutsk, from Irkutsk! In truth, the chief of police,
+accustomed to the despotic sentences of the ukase which formerly
+never pardoned, could not understand this mode of governing.
+But he was silent, waiting until the Czar should interrogate him further.
+The questions were not long in coming.
+
+"Did not Ivan Ogareff," asked the Czar, "return to Russia
+a second time, after that journey through the Siberian provinces,
+the object of which remains unknown?"
+
+"He did."
+
+"And have the police lost trace of him since?"
+
+"No, sire; for an offender only becomes really dangerous from the day
+he has received his pardon."
+
+The Czar frowned. Perhaps the chief of police feared that he had
+gone rather too far, though the stubbornness of his ideas was at
+least equal to the boundless devotion he felt for his master.
+But the Czar, disdaining to reply to these indirect
+reproaches cast on his policy, continued his questions.
+"Where was Ogareff last heard of?"
+
+"In the province of Perm."
+
+"In what town?"
+
+"At Perm itself."
+
+"What was he doing?"
+
+"He appeared unoccupied, and there was nothing suspicious
+in his conduct."
+
+"Then he was not under the surveillance of the secret police?"
+
+"No, sire."
+
+"When did he leave Perm?"
+
+"About the month of March?"
+
+"To go...?"
+
+"Where, is unknown."
+
+"And it is not known what has become of him?"
+
+"No, sire; it is not known."
+
+"Well, then, I myself know," answered the Czar. "I have received
+anonymous communications which did not pass through the police department;
+and, in the face of events now taking place beyond the frontier,
+I have every reason to believe that they are correct."
+
+"Do you mean, sire," cried the chief of police, "that Ivan Ogareff
+has a hand in this Tartar rebellion?"
+
+"Indeed I do; and I will now tell you something which you
+are ignorant of. After leaving Perm, Ivan Ogareff crossed
+the Ural mountains, entered Siberia, and penetrated the
+Kirghiz steppes, and there endeavored, not without success,
+to foment rebellion amongst their nomadic population.
+He then went so far south as free Turkestan; there, in the provinces
+of Bokhara, Khokhand, and Koondooz, he found chiefs willing
+to pour their Tartar hordes into Siberia, and excite a general
+rising in Asiatic Russia. The storm has been silently gathering,
+but it has at last burst like a thunderclap, and now all means
+of communication between Eastern and Western Siberia have
+been stopped. Moreover, Ivan Ogareff, thirsting for vengeance,
+aims at the life of my brother!"
+
+The Czar had become excited whilst speaking, and now paced up
+and down with hurried steps. The chief of police said nothing,
+but he thought to himself that, during the time when the
+emperors of Russia never pardoned an exile, schemes such
+as those of Ivan Ogareff could never have been realized.
+Approaching the Czar, who had thrown himself into an armchair,
+he asked, "Your majesty has of course given orders so that this
+rebellion may be suppressed as soon as possible?"
+
+"Yes," answered the Czar. "The last telegram which reached
+Nijni-Udinsk would set in motion the troops in the governments
+of Yenisei, Irkutsk, Yakutsk, as well as those in the provinces
+of the Amoor and Lake Baikal. At the same time, the regiments
+from Perm and Nijni-Novgorod, and the Cossacks from the frontier,
+are advancing by forced marches towards the Ural Mountains;
+but some weeks must pass before they can attack the Tartars."
+
+"And your majesty's brother, his Highness the Grand Duke,
+is now isolated in the government of Irkutsk, and is no longer
+in direct communication with Moscow?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"But by the last dispatches, he must know what measures have
+been taken by your majesty, and what help he may expect from
+the governments nearest Irkutsk?"
+
+"He knows that," answered the Czar; "but what he does not know is,
+that Ivan Ogareff, as well as being a rebel, is also playing the part
+of a traitor, and that in him he has a personal and bitter enemy.
+It is to the Grand Duke that Ogareff owes his first disgrace;
+and what is more serious is, that this man is not known to him.
+Ogareff's plan, therefore, is to go to Irkutsk, and, under an
+assumed name, offer his services to the Grand Duke. Then, after gaining
+his confidence, when the Tartars have invested Irkutsk, he will
+betray the town, and with it my brother, whose life he seeks.
+This is what I have learned from my secret intelligence; this is
+what the Grand Duke does not know; and this is what he must know!"
+
+"Well, sire, an intelligent, courageous courier . . ."
+
+"I momentarily expect one."
+
+"And it is to be hoped he will be expeditious," added the chief
+of police; "for, allow me to add, sire, that Siberia is a favorable
+land for rebellions."
+
+"Do you mean to say. General, that the exiles would make common
+cause with the rebels?" exclaimed the Czar.
+
+"Excuse me, your majesty," stammered the chief of police,
+for that was really the idea suggested to him by his uneasy
+and suspicious mind.
+
+"I believe in their patriotism," returned the Czar.
+
+"There are other offenders besides political exiles in Siberia,"
+said the chief of police.
+
+"The criminals? Oh, General, I give those up to you!
+They are the vilest, I grant, of the human race.
+They belong to no country. But the insurrection, or rather,
+the rebellion, is not to oppose the emperor; it is raised
+against Russia, against the country which the exiles have not
+lost all hope of again seeing--and which they will see again.
+No, a Russian would never unite with a Tartar, to weaken,
+were it only for an hour, the Muscovite power!"
+
+The Czar was right in trusting to the patriotism of those whom
+his policy kept, for a time, at a distance. Clemency, which was
+the foundation of his justice, when he could himself direct its effects,
+the modifications he had adopted with regard to applications for the
+formerly terrible ukases, warranted the belief that he was not mistaken.
+But even without this powerful element of success in regard to
+the Tartar rebellion, circumstances were not the less very serious;
+for it was to be feared that a large part of the Kirghiz population
+would join the rebels.
+
+The Kirghiz are divided into three hordes, the greater, the lesser,
+and the middle, and number nearly four hundred thousand "tents,"
+or two million souls. Of the different tribes some are independent
+and others recognize either the sovereignty of Russia or that of
+the Khans of Khiva, Khokhand, and Bokhara, the most formidable chiefs
+of Turkestan. The middle horde, the richest, is also the largest, and its
+encampments occupy all the space between the rivers Sara Sou, Irtish,
+and the Upper Ishim, Lake Saisang and Lake Aksakal. The greater horde,
+occupying the countries situated to the east of the middle one, extends as
+far as the governments of Omsk and Tobolsk. Therefore, if the Kirghiz
+population should rise, it would be the rebellion of Asiatic Russia,
+and the first thing would be the separation of Siberia, to the east
+of the Yenisei.
+
+It is true that these Kirghiz, mere novices in the art of war, are rather
+nocturnal thieves and plunderers of caravans than regular soldiers.
+As M. Levchine says, "a firm front or a square of good infantry could
+repel ten times the number of Kirghiz; and a single cannon might destroy
+a frightful number."
+
+That may be; but to do this it is necessary for the square of good
+infantry to reach the rebellious country, and the cannon to leave
+the arsenals of the Russian provinces, perhaps two or three thousand
+versts distant. Now, except by the direct route from Ekaterenburg
+to Irkutsk, the often marshy steppes are not easily practicable,
+and some weeks must certainly pass before the Russian troops could
+reach the Tartar hordes.
+
+Omsk is the center of that military organization of Western Siberia
+which is intended to overawe the Kirghiz population. Here are
+the bounds, more than once infringed by the half-subdued nomads,
+and there was every reason to believe that Omsk was already in danger.
+The line of military stations, that is to say, those Cossack
+posts which are ranged in echelon from Omsk to Semipolatinsk,
+must have been broken in several places. Now, it was to be
+feared that the "Grand Sultans," who govern the Kirghiz
+districts would either voluntarily accept, or involuntarily
+submit to, the dominion of Tartars, Mussulmen like themselves,
+and that to the hate caused by slavery was not united the hate
+due to the antagonism of the Greek and Mussulman religions.
+For some time, indeed, the Tartars of Turkestan had endeavored,
+both by force and persuasion, to subdue the Kirghiz hordes.
+
+A few words only with respect to these Tartars. The Tartars
+belong more especially to two distinct races, the Caucasian and
+the Mongolian. The Caucasian race, which, as Abel de Remusat says,
+"is regarded in Europe as the type of beauty in our species,
+because all the nations in this part of the world have sprung from it,"
+includes also the Turks and the Persians. The purely Mongolian
+race comprises the Mongols, Manchoux, and Thibetans.
+
+The Tartars who now threatened the Russian Empire, belonged to
+the Caucasian race, and occupied Turkestan. This immense
+country is divided into different states, governed by Khans,
+and hence termed Khanats. The principal khanats are
+those of Bokhara, Khokhand, Koondooz, etc. At this period,
+the most important and the most formidable khanat was that
+of Bokhara. Russia had already been several times at war
+with its chiefs, who, for their own interests, had supported
+the independence of the Kirghiz against the Muscovite dominion.
+The present chief, Feofar-Khan, followed in the steps
+of his predecessors.
+
+The khanat of Bokhara has a population of two million five
+hundred thousand inhabitants, an army of sixty thousand men,
+trebled in time of war, and thirty thousand horsemen.
+It is a rich country, with varied animal, vegetable,
+and mineral products, and has been increased by the accession
+of the territories of Balkh, Aukoi, and Meimaneh. It possesses
+nineteen large towns. Bokhara, surrounded by a wall measuring
+more than eight English miles, and flanked with towers,
+a glorious city, made illustrious by Avicenna and other
+learned men of the tenth century, is regarded as the center
+of Mussulman science, and ranks among the most celebrated
+cities of Central Asia. Samarcand, which contains the tomb
+of Tamerlane and the famous palace where the blue stone is kept
+on which each new khan must seat himself on his accession,
+is defended by a very strong citadel. Karschi, with its
+triple cordon, situated in an oasis, surrounded by a marsh
+peopled with tortoises and lizards, is almost impregnable,
+Is-chardjoui is defended by a population of twenty thousand souls.
+Protected by its mountains, and isolated by its steppes,
+the khanat of Bokhara is a most formidable state; and Russia
+would need a large force to subdue it.
+
+The fierce and ambitious Feofar now governed this corner
+of Tartary. Relying on the other khans--principally those of Khokhand
+and Koondooz, cruel and rapacious warriors, all ready to join
+an enterprise so dear to Tartar instincts--aided by the chiefs
+who ruled all the hordes of Central Asia, he had placed himself at
+the head of the rebellion of which Ivan Ogareff was the instigator.
+This traitor, impelled by insane ambition as much as by hate,
+had ordered the movement so as to attack Siberia. Mad indeed
+he was, if he hoped to rupture the Muscovite Empire. Acting under
+his suggestion, the Emir--which is the title taken by the khans
+of Bokhara--had poured his hordes over the Russian frontier.
+He invaded the government of Semipolatinsk, and the Cossacks,
+who were only in small force there, had been obliged to retire
+before him. He had advanced farther than Lake Balkhash,
+gaining over the Kirghiz population on his way. Pillaging, ravaging,
+enrolling those who submitted, taking prisoners those who resisted,
+he marched from one town to another, followed by those impedimenta
+of Oriental sovereignty which may be called his household,
+his wives and his slaves--all with the cool audacity of a modern
+Ghengis-Khan. It was impossible to ascertain where he now was;
+how far his soldiers had marched before the news of the rebellion
+reached Moscow; or to what part of Siberia the Russian troops
+had been forced to retire. All communication was interrupted.
+Had the wire between Kolyvan and Tomsk been cut by Tartar scouts,
+or had the Emir himself arrived at the Yeniseisk provinces?
+Was all the lower part of Western Siberia in a ferment?
+Had the rebellion already spread to the eastern regions?
+No one could say. The only agent which fears neither cold nor heat,
+which can neither be stopped by the rigors of winter nor the heat
+of summer, and which flies with the rapidity of lightning--
+the electric current--was prevented from traversing the steppes,
+and it was no longer possible to warn the Grand Duke, shut up
+in Irkutsk, of the danger threatening him from the treason
+of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+A courier only could supply the place of the interrupted current.
+It would take this man some time to traverse the five thousand two hundred
+versts between Moscow and Irkutsk. To pass the ranks of the rebels
+and invaders he must display almost superhuman courage and intelligence.
+But with a clear head and a firm heart much can be done.
+
+"Shall I be able to find this head and heart?" thought the Czar.
+
+
+CHAPTER III MICHAEL STROGOFF MEETS THE CZAR
+
+THE door of the imperial cabinet was again opened and
+General Kissoff was announced.
+
+"The courier?" inquired the Czar eagerly.
+
+"He is here, sire," replied General Kissoff.
+
+"Have you found a fitting man?"
+
+"I will answer for him to your majesty."
+
+"Has he been in the service of the Palace?"
+
+"Yes, sire."
+
+"You know him?"
+
+"Personally, and at various times he has fulfilled difficult
+missions with success."
+
+"Abroad?"
+
+"In Siberia itself."
+
+"Where does he come from?"
+
+"From Omsk. He is a Siberian."
+
+"Has he coolness, intelligence, courage?"
+
+"Yes, sire; he has all the qualities necessary to succeed,
+even where others might possibly fail."
+
+"What is his age?"
+
+"Thirty."
+
+"Is he strong and vigorous?"
+
+"Sire, he can bear cold, hunger, thirst, fatigue, to the
+very last extremities."
+
+"He must have a frame of iron."
+
+"Sire, he has."
+
+"And a heart?"
+
+"A heart of gold."
+
+"His name?"
+
+"Michael Strogoff."
+
+"Is he ready to set out?"
+
+"He awaits your majesty's orders in the guard-room."
+
+"Let him come in," said the Czar.
+
+In a few moments Michael Strogoff, the courier, entered the imperial
+library. He was a tall, vigorous, broad-shouldered, deep-chested man.
+His powerful head possessed the fine features of the Caucasian race.
+His well-knit frame seemed built for the performance of feats
+of strength. It would have been a difficult task to move such a man
+against his will, for when his feet were once planted on the ground,
+it was as if they had taken root. As he doffed his Muscovite cap,
+locks of thick curly hair fell over his broad, massive forehead.
+When his ordinarily pale face became at all flushed,
+it arose solely from a more rapid action of the heart.
+His eyes, of a deep blue, looked with clear, frank, firm gaze.
+The slightly-contracted eyebrows indicated lofty heroism--"the hero's
+cool courage," according to the definition of the physiologist.
+He possessed a fine nose, with large nostrils; and a well-shaped mouth,
+with the slightly-projecting lips which denote a generous
+and noble heart.
+
+Michael Strogoff had the temperament of the man of action, who does
+not bite his nails or scratch his head in doubt and indecision.
+Sparing of gestures as of words, he always stood motionless like a soldier
+before his superior; but when he moved, his step showed a firmness,
+a freedom of movement, which proved the confidence and vivacity
+of his mind.
+
+Michael Strogoff wore a handsome military uniform something
+resembling that of a light-cavalry officer in the field--
+boots, spurs, half tightly-fitting trousers, brown pelisse,
+trimmed with fur and ornamented with yellow braid.
+On his breast glittered a cross and several medals.
+
+Michael Strogoff belonged to the special corps of the Czar's
+couriers, ranking as an officer among those picked men.
+His most discernible characteristic--particularly in his walk,
+his face, in the whole man, and which the Czar perceived
+at a glance--was, that he was "a fulfiller of orders."
+He therefore possessed one of the most serviceable qualities
+in Russia--one which, as the celebrated novelist Tourgueneff says,
+"will lead to the highest positions in the Muscovite empire."
+
+In short, if anyone could accomplish this journey from Moscow
+to Irkutsk, across a rebellious country, surmount obstacles,
+and brave perils of all sorts, Michael Strogoff was the man.
+
+A circumstance especially favorable to the success of his plan was,
+that he was thoroughly acquainted with the country which he was
+about to traverse, and understood its different dialects--
+not only from having traveled there before, but because he was
+of Siberian origin.
+
+His father--old Peter Strogoff, dead ten years since--
+inhabited the town of Omsk, situated in the government of the
+same name; and his mother, Marfa Strogoff, lived there still.
+There, amid the wild steppes of the provinces of Omsk and Tobolsk,
+had the famous huntsman brought up his son Michael to endure hardship.
+Peter Strogoff was a huntsman by profession. Summer and winter--
+in the burning heat, as well as when the cold was sometimes fifty
+degrees below zero--he scoured the frozen plains, the thickets of
+birch and larch, the pine forests; setting traps; watching for small
+game with his gun, and for large game with the spear or knife.
+The large game was nothing less than the Siberian bear, a formidable
+and ferocious animal, in size equaling its fellow of the frozen seas.
+Peter Strogoff had killed more than thirty-nine bears--that is
+to say, the fortieth had fallen under his blows; and, according to
+Russian legends, most huntsmen who have been lucky enough up
+to the thirty-ninth bear, have succumbed to the fortieth.
+
+Peter Strogoff had, however, passed the fatal number without even
+a scratch. From that time, his son Michael, aged eleven years,
+never failed to accompany him to the hunt, carrying the ragatina
+or spear to aid his father, who was armed only with the knife.
+When he was fourteen, Michael Strogoff had killed his first bear,
+quite alone--that was nothing; but after stripping it he dragged
+the gigantic animal's skin to his father's house, many versts distant,
+exhibiting remarkable strength in a boy so young.
+
+This style of life was of great benefit to him, and when he arrived
+at manhood he could bear any amount of cold, heat, hunger, thirst,
+or fatigue. Like the Yakout of the northern countries, he was
+made of iron. He could go four-and-twenty hours without eating,
+ten nights without sleeping, and could make himself a shelter
+in the open steppe where others would have been frozen to death.
+Gifted with marvelous acuteness, guided by the instinct of the Delaware
+of North America, over the white plain, when every object is hidden
+in mist, or even in higher latitudes, where the polar night is
+prolonged for many days, he could find his way when others would
+have had no idea whither to turn. All his father's secrets were
+known to him. He had learnt to read almost imperceptible signs--
+the forms of icicles, the appearance of the small branches of trees,
+mists rising far away in the horizon, vague sounds in the air,
+distant reports, the flight of birds through the foggy atmosphere,
+a thousand circumstances which are so many words to those who can
+decipher them. Moreover, tempered by snow like a Damascus blade
+in the waters of Syria, he had a frame of iron, as General Kissoff
+had said, and, what was no less true, a heart of gold.
+
+The only sentiment of love felt by Michael Strogoff was that which
+he entertained for his mother, the aged Marfa, who could never be
+induced to leave the house of the Strogoffs, at Omsk, on the banks of
+the Irtish, where the old huntsman and she had lived so long together.
+When her son left her, he went away with a full heart, but promising
+to come and see her whenever he could possibly do so; and this promise
+he had always religiously kept.
+
+When Michael was twenty, it was decided that he should enter
+the personal service of the Emperor of Russia, in the corps
+of the couriers of the Czar. The hardy, intelligent, zealous,
+well-conducted young Siberian first distinguished himself especially,
+in a journey to the Caucasus, through the midst of a difficult country,
+ravaged by some restless successors of Schamyl; then later,
+in an important mission to Petropolowski, in Kamtschatka,
+the extreme limit of Asiatic Russia. During these long journeys
+he displayed such marvelous coolness, prudence, and courage,
+as to gain him the approbation and protection of his chiefs,
+who rapidly advanced him in his profession.
+
+The furloughs which were his due after these distant missions,
+he never failed to devote to his old mother. Having been much employed
+in the south of the empire, he had not seen old Marfa for three years--
+three ages!--the first time in his life he had been so long absent
+from her. Now, however, in a few days he would obtain his furlough,
+and he had accordingly already made preparations for departure
+for Omsk, when the events which have been related occurred.
+Michael Strogoff was therefore introduced into the Czar's presence
+in complete ignorance of what the emperor expected from him.
+
+The Czar fixed a penetrating look upon him without uttering a word,
+whilst Michael stood perfectly motionless.
+
+The Czar, apparently satisfied with his scrutiny, motioned to the chief
+of police to seat himself, and dictated in a low voice a letter of not
+more than a few lines.
+
+The letter penned, the Czar re-read it attentively, then signed it,
+preceding his name with the words "Byt po semou," which, signifying "So
+be it," constitutes the decisive formula of the Russian emperors.
+
+The letter was then placed in an envelope, which was sealed
+with the imperial arms.
+
+The Czar, rising, told Michael Strogoff to draw near.
+
+Michael advanced a few steps, and then stood motionless,
+ready to answer.
+
+The Czar again looked him full in the face and their eyes met.
+Then in an abrupt tone, "Thy name?" he asked.
+
+"Michael Strogoff, sire."
+
+"Thy rank?"
+
+"Captain in the corps of couriers of the Czar."
+
+"Thou dost know Siberia?"
+
+"I am a Siberian."
+
+"A native of?"
+
+"Omsk, sire."
+
+"Hast thou relations there?"
+
+"Yes sire."
+
+"What relations?"
+
+"My old mother."
+
+The Czar suspended his questions for a moment. Then, pointing to the
+letter which he held in his hand, "Here is a letter which I charge thee,
+Michael Strogoff, to deliver into the hands of the Grand Duke,
+and to no other but him."
+
+"I will deliver it, sire."
+
+"The Grand Duke is at Irkutsk."
+
+"I will go to Irkutsk."
+
+"Thou wilt have to traverse a rebellious country, invaded by Tartars,
+whose interest it will be to intercept this letter."
+
+"I will traverse it."
+
+"Above all, beware of the traitor, Ivan Ogareff, who will perhaps
+meet thee on the way."
+
+"I will beware of him."
+
+"Wilt thou pass through Omsk?"
+
+"Sire, that is my route."
+
+"If thou dost see thy mother, there will be the risk of being recognized.
+Thou must not see her!"
+
+Michael Strogoff hesitated a moment.
+
+"I will not see her," said he.
+
+"Swear to me that nothing will make thee acknowledge who thou art,
+nor whither thou art going."
+
+"I swear it."
+
+"Michael Strogoff," continued the Czar, giving the letter to the young
+courier, "take this letter; on it depends the safety of all Siberia,
+and perhaps the life of my brother the Grand Duke."
+
+"This letter shall be delivered to his Highness the Grand Duke."
+
+"Then thou wilt pass whatever happens?"
+
+"I shall pass, or they shall kill me."
+
+"I want thee to live."
+
+"I shall live, and I shall pass," answered Michael Strogoff.
+
+The Czar appeared satisfied with Strogoff's calm and simple answer.
+
+"Go then, Michael Strogoff," said he, "go for God, for Russia,
+for my brother, and for myself!"
+
+The courier, having saluted his sovereign, immediately left
+the imperial cabinet, and, in a few minutes, the New Palace.
+
+"You made a good choice there, General," said the Czar.
+
+"I think so, sire," replied General Kissoff; "and your majesty
+may be sure that Michael Strogoff will do all that a man can do."
+
+"He is indeed a man," said the Czar.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV FROM MOSCOW TO NIJNI-NOVGOROD
+
+THE distance between Moscow and Irkutsk, about to be traversed
+by Michael Strogoff, was three thousand four hundred miles.
+Before the telegraph wire extended from the Ural Mountains to
+the eastern frontier of Siberia, the dispatch service was performed
+by couriers, those who traveled the most rapidly taking eighteen
+days to get from Moscow to Irkutsk. But this was the exception,
+and the journey through Asiatic Russia usually occupied from four
+to five weeks, even though every available means of transport
+was placed at the disposal of the Czar's messengers.
+
+Michael Strogoff was a man who feared neither frost nor snow.
+He would have preferred traveling during the severe winter season,
+in order that he might perform the whole distance by sleighs.
+At that period of the year the difficulties which all other means
+of locomotion present are greatly diminished, the wide steppes
+being leveled by snow, while there are no rivers to cross,
+but simply sheets of glass, over which the sleigh glides
+rapidly and easily.
+
+Perhaps certain natural phenomena are most to be feared at that time,
+such as long-continuing and dense fogs, excessive cold, fearfully heavy
+snow-storms, which sometimes envelop whole caravans and cause
+their destruction. Hungry wolves also roam over the plain in thousands.
+But it would have been better for Michael Strogoff to face these risks;
+for during the winter the Tartar invaders would have been stationed
+in the towns, any movement of their troops would have been impracticable,
+and he could consequently have more easily performed his journey.
+But it was not in his power to choose either weather or time.
+Whatever the circumstances, he must accept them and set out.
+
+Such were the difficulties which Michael Strogoff boldly confronted
+and prepared to encounter.
+
+In the first place, he must not travel as a courier of the Czar
+usually would. No one must even suspect what he really was.
+Spies swarm in a rebellious country; let him be recognized,
+and his mission would be in danger. Also, while supplying him
+with a large sum of money, which was sufficient for his journey,
+and would facilitate it in some measure, General Kissoff
+had not given him any document notifying that he was on
+the Emperor's service, which is the Sesame par excellence.
+He contented himself with furnishing him with a "podorojna."
+
+This podorojna was made out in the name of Nicholas Korpanoff, merchant,
+living at Irkutsk. It authorized Nicholas Korpanoff to be accompanied
+by one or more persons, and, moreover, it was, by special notification,
+made available in the event of the Muscovite government forbidding
+natives of any other countries to leave Russia.
+
+The podorojna is simply a permission to take post-horses;
+but Michael Strogoff was not to use it unless he was sure that
+by so doing he would not excite suspicion as to his mission,
+that is to say, whilst he was on European territory.
+The consequence was that in Siberia, whilst traversing
+the insurgent provinces, he would have no power over the relays,
+either in the choice of horses in preference to others,
+or in demanding conveyances for his personal use; neither was
+Michael Strogoff to forget that he was no longer a courier,
+but a plain merchant, Nicholas Korpanoff, traveling from Moscow
+to Irkutsk, and, as such exposed to all the impediments
+of an ordinary journey.
+
+To pass unknown, more or less rapidly, but to pass somehow,
+such were the directions he had received.
+
+Thirty years previously, the escort of a traveler of rank consisted
+of not less than two hundred mounted Cossacks, two hundred foot-soldiers,
+twenty-five Baskir horsemen, three hundred camels, four hundred horses,
+twenty-five wagons, two portable boats, and two pieces of cannon.
+All this was requisite for a journey in Siberia.
+
+Michael Strogoff, however, had neither cannon, nor horsemen,
+nor foot-soldiers, nor beasts of burden. He would travel
+in a carriage or on horseback, when he could; on foot,
+when he could not.
+
+There would be no difficulty in getting over the first thousand miles,
+the distance between Moscow and the Russian frontier.
+Railroads, post-carriages, steamboats, relays of horses,
+were at everyone's disposal, and consequently at the disposal
+of the courier of the Czar.
+
+Accordingly, on the morning of the 16th of July, having doffed
+his uniform, with a knapsack on his back, dressed in the simple
+Russian costume--tightly-fitting tunic, the traditional belt of
+the Moujik, wide trousers, gartered at the knees, and high boots--
+Michael Strogoff arrived at the station in time for the first train.
+He carried no arms, openly at least, but under his belt was
+hidden a revolver and in his pocket, one of those large knives,
+resembling both a cutlass and a yataghan, with which a Siberian
+hunter can so neatly disembowel a bear, without injuring
+its precious fur.
+
+A crowd of travelers had collected at the Moscow station.
+The stations on the Russian railroads are much used as places
+for meeting, not only by those who are about to proceed
+by the train, but by friends who come to see them off.
+The station resembles, from the variety of characters assembled,
+a small news exchange.
+
+The train in which Michael took his place was to set him down at
+Nijni-Novgorod. There terminated at that time, the iron road which,
+uniting Moscow and St. Petersburg, has since been continued
+to the Russian frontier. It was a journey of under three
+hundred miles, and the train would accomplish it in ten hours.
+Once arrived at Nijni-Novgorod, Strogoff would either take
+the land route or the steamer on the Volga, so as to reach
+the Ural Mountains as soon as possible.
+
+Michael Strogoff ensconced himself in his corner, like a worthy
+citizen whose affairs go well with him, and who endeavors to kill
+time by sleep. Nevertheless, as he was not alone in his compartment,
+he slept with one eye open, and listened with both his ears.
+
+In fact, rumor of the rising of the Kirghiz hordes, and of the Tartar
+invasion had transpired in some degree. The occupants of the carriage,
+whom chance had made his traveling companions, discussed the subject,
+though with that caution which has become habitual among Russians,
+who know that spies are ever on the watch for any treasonable expressions
+which may be uttered.
+
+These travelers, as well as the large number of persons
+in the train, were merchants on their way to the celebrated
+fair of Nijni-Novgorod;--a very mixed assembly, composed of
+Jews, Turks, Cossacks, Russians, Georgians, Kalmucks, and others,
+but nearly all speaking the national tongue.
+
+They discussed the pros and cons of the serious events which
+were taking place beyond the Ural, and those merchants seemed
+to fear lest the government should be led to take certain
+restrictive measures, especially in the provinces bordering on
+the frontier--measures from which trade would certainly suffer.
+They apparently thought only of the struggle from the single
+point of view of their threatened interests. The presence
+of a private soldier, clad in his uniform--and the importance
+of a uniform in Russia is great--would have certainly been enough
+to restrain the merchants' tongues. But in the compartment occupied
+by Michael Strogoff, there was no one who seemed a military man,
+and the Czar's courier was not the person to betray himself.
+He listened, then.
+
+"They say that caravan teas are up," remarked a Persian,
+known by his cap of Astrakhan fur, and his ample brown robe,
+worn threadbare by use.
+
+"Oh, there's no fear of teas falling," answered an old Jew
+of sullen aspect. "Those in the market at Nijni-Novgorod will
+be easily cleared off by the West; but, unfortunately, it won't
+be the same with Bokhara carpets."
+
+"What! are you expecting goods from Bokhara?" asked the Persian.
+
+"No, but from Samarcand, and that is even more exposed.
+The idea of reckoning on the exports of a country in which the khans
+are in a state of revolt from Khiva to the Chinese frontier!"
+
+"Well," replied the Persian, "if the carpets do not arrive,
+the drafts will not arrive either, I suppose."
+
+"And the profits, Father Abraham!" exclaimed the little Jew,
+"do you reckon them as nothing?"
+
+"You are right," said another; "goods from Central Asia run a great
+risk in the market, and it will be the same with the tallow and shawls
+from the East."
+
+"Why, look out, little father," said a Russian traveler,
+in a bantering tone; "you'll grease your shawls terribly if you
+mix them up with your tallow."
+
+"That amuses you," sharply answered the merchant, who had little
+relish for that sort of joke.
+
+"Well, if you tear your hair, or if you throw ashes on your head,"
+replied the traveler, "will that change the course of events?
+No; no more than the course of the Exchange."
+
+"One can easily see that you are not a merchant," observed the little Jew.
+
+"Faith, no, worthy son of Abraham! I sell neither hops,
+nor eider-down, nor honey, nor wax, nor hemp-seed, nor salt meat,
+nor caviare, nor wood, nor wool, nor ribbons, nor, hemp, nor flax,
+nor morocco, nor furs."
+
+"But do you buy them?" asked the Persian, interrupting
+the traveler's list.
+
+"As little as I can, and only for my own private use,"
+answered the other, with a wink.
+
+"He's a wag," said the Jew to the Persian.
+
+"Or a spy," replied the other, lowering his voice.
+"We had better take care, and not speak more than necessary.
+The police are not over-particular in these times, and you
+never can know with whom you are traveling."
+
+In another corner of the compartment they were speaking
+less of mercantile affairs, and more of the Tartar invasion
+and its annoying consequences.
+
+"All the horses in Siberia will be requisitioned," said a traveler,
+"and communication between the different provinces of Central Asia
+will become very difficult."
+
+"Is it true," asked his neighbor, "that the Kirghiz of the middle
+horde have joined the Tartars?"
+
+"So it is said," answered the traveler, lowering his voice;
+"but who can flatter themselves that they know anything really
+of what is going on in this country?"
+
+"I have heard speak of a concentration of troops on the frontier.
+The Don Cossacks have already gathered along the course of the Volga,
+and they are to be opposed to the rebel Kirghiz."
+
+"If the Kirghiz descend the Irtish, the route to Irkutsk will not
+be safe," observed his neighbor. "Besides, yesterday I wanted
+to send a telegram to Krasnoiarsk, and it could not be forwarded.
+It's to be feared that before long the Tartar columns will have
+isolated Eastern Siberia."
+
+"In short, little father," continued the first speaker, "these merchants
+have good reason for being uneasy about their trade and transactions.
+After requisitioning the horses, they will take the boats, carriages,
+every means of transport, until presently no one will be allowed to take
+even one step in all the empire."
+
+"I'm much afraid that the Nijni-Novgorod fair won't end as brilliantly
+as it has begun," responded the other, shaking his head.
+"But the safety and integrity of the Russian territory before everything.
+Business is business."
+
+If in this compartment the subject of conversation varied but little--
+nor did it, indeed, in the other carriages of the train--in all it
+might have been observed that the talkers used much circumspection.
+When they did happen to venture out of the region of facts,
+they never went so far as to attempt to divine the intentions
+of the Muscovite government, or even to criticize them.
+
+This was especially remarked by a traveler in a carriage at
+the front part of the train. This person--evidently a stranger--
+made good use of his eyes, and asked numberless questions,
+to which he received only evasive answers. Every minute leaning
+out of the window, which he would keep down, to the great disgust
+of his fellow-travelers, he lost nothing of the views to the right.
+He inquired the names of the most insignificant places,
+their position, what were their commerce, their manufactures,
+the number of their inhabitants, the average mortality,
+etc., and all this he wrote down in a note-book, already full.
+
+This was the correspondent Alcide Jolivet, and the reason of his putting
+so many insignificant questions was, that amongst the many answers
+he received, he hoped to find some interesting fact "for his cousin."
+But, naturally enough, he was taken for a spy, and not a word treating
+of the events of the day was uttered in his hearing.
+
+Finding, therefore, that he could learn nothing of the Tartar
+invasion, he wrote in his book, "Travelers of great discretion.
+Very close as to political matters."
+
+Whilst Alcide Jolivet noted down his impressions thus minutely,
+his confrere, in the same train, traveling for the same object,
+was devoting himself to the same work of observation in
+another compartment. Neither of them had seen each other
+that day at the Moscow station, and they were each ignorant
+that the other had set out to visit the scene of the war.
+Harry Blount, speaking little, but listening much, had not inspired
+his companions with the suspicions which Alcide Jolivet had aroused.
+He was not taken for a spy, and therefore his neighbors,
+without constraint, gossiped in his presence, allowing themselves
+even to go farther than their natural caution would in most cases
+have allowed them. The correspondent of the Daily Telegraph
+had thus an opportunity of observing how much recent events
+preoccupied the merchants of Nijni-Novgorod, and to what a degree
+the commerce with Central Asia was threatened in its transit.
+
+He therefore noted in his book this perfectly correct observation,
+"My fellow-travelers extremely anxious. Nothing is talked of but war,
+and they speak of it, with a freedom which is astonishing, as having
+broken out between the Volga and the Vistula."
+
+The readers of the Daily Telegraph would not fail to be as well informed
+as Alcide Jolivet's "cousin." But as Harry Blount, seated at the left
+of the train, only saw one part of the country, which was hilly,
+without giving himself the trouble of looking at the right side,
+which was composed of wide plains, he added, with British assurance,
+"Country mountainous between Moscow and Wladimir."
+
+It was evident that the Russian government purposed taking severe
+measures to guard against any serious eventualities even in the interior
+of the empire. The rebel lion had not crossed the Siberian frontier,
+but evil influences might be feared in the Volga provinces, so near
+to the country of the Kirghiz.
+
+The police had as yet found no traces of Ivan Ogareff. It was not
+known whether the traitor, calling in the foreigner to avenge his
+personal rancor, had rejoined Feofar-Khan, or whether he was endeavoring
+to foment a revolt in the government of Nijni-Novgorod, which at this time
+of year contained a population of such diverse elements. Perhaps among
+the Persians, Armenians, or Kalmucks, who flocked to the great market,
+he had agents, instructed to provoke a rising in the interior.
+All this was possible, especially in such a country as Russia. In fact,
+this vast empire, 4,000,000 square miles in extent, does not possess
+the homogeneousness of the states of Western Europe. The Russian
+territory in Europe and Asia contains more than seventy millions
+of inhabitants. In it thirty different languages are spoken.
+The Sclavonian race predominates, no doubt, but there are
+besides Russians, Poles, Lithuanians, Courlanders. Add to these,
+Finns, Laplanders, Esthonians, several other northern tribes with
+unpronounceable names, the Permiaks, the Germans, the Greeks, the Tartars,
+the Caucasian tribes, the Mongol, Kalmuck, Samoid, Kamtschatkan,
+and Aleutian hordes, and one may understand that the unity of so vast
+a state must be difficult to maintain, and that it could only be
+the work of time, aided by the wisdom of many successive rulers.
+
+Be that as it may, Ivan Ogareff had hitherto managed to escape
+all search, and very probably he might have rejoined the Tartar army.
+But at every station where the train stopped, inspectors came
+forward who scrutinized the travelers and subjected them all to a
+minute examination, as by order of the superintendent of police,
+these officials were seeking Ivan Ogareff. The government, in fact,
+believed it to be certain that the traitor had not yet been able to quit
+European Russia. If there appeared cause to suspect any traveler,
+he was carried off to explain himself at the police station,
+and in the meantime the train went on its way, no person troubling
+himself about the unfortunate one left behind.
+
+With the Russian police, which is very arbitrary, it is absolutely
+useless to argue. Military rank is conferred on its employees,
+and they act in military fashion. How can anyone, moreover,
+help obeying, unhesitatingly, orders which emanate from a monarch
+who has the right to employ this formula at the head of his ukase:
+"We, by the grace of God, Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russias
+of Moscow, Kiev, Wladimir, and Novgorod, Czar of Kasan and Astrakhan, Czar
+of Poland, Czar of Siberia, Czar of the Tauric Chersonese, Seignior
+of Pskov, Prince of Smolensk, Lithuania, Volkynia, Podolia,
+and Finland, Prince of Esthonia, Livonia, Courland, and of Semigallia,
+of Bialystok, Karelia, Sougria, Perm, Viatka, Bulgaria, and many
+other countries; Lord and Sovereign Prince of the territory
+of Nijni-Novgorod, Tchemigoff, Riazan, Polotsk, Rostov,
+Jaroslavl, Bielozersk, Oudoria, Obdoria, Kondinia, Vitepsk,
+and of Mstislaf, Governor of the Hyperborean Regions, Lord of
+the countries of Iveria, Kartalinia, Grou-zinia, Kabardinia,
+and Armenia, Hereditary Lord and Suzerain of the Scherkess princes,
+of those of the mountains, and of others; heir of Norway, Duke of
+Schleswig-Holstein, Stormarn, Dittmarsen, and Oldenburg." A powerful
+lord, in truth, is he whose arms are an eagle with two heads,
+holding a scepter and a globe, surrounded by the escutcheons
+of Novgorod, Wladimir, Kiev, Kasan, Astrakhan, and of Siberia,
+and environed by the collar of the order of St. Andrew, surmounted by
+a royal crown!
+
+As to Michael Strogoff, his papers were in order, and he was,
+consequently, free from all police supervision.
+
+At the station of Wladimir the train stopped for several minutes,
+which appeared sufficient to enable the correspondent of
+the Daily Telegraph to take a twofold view, physical and moral,
+and to form a complete estimate of this ancient capital of Russia.
+
+At the Wladimir station fresh travelers joined the train.
+Among others, a young girl entered the compartment occupied by
+Michael Strogoff. A vacant place was found opposite the courier.
+The young girl took it, after placing by her side a modest traveling-bag
+of red leather, which seemed to constitute all her luggage.
+Then seating herself with downcast eyes, not even glancing
+at the fellow-travelers whom chance had given her, she prepared
+for a journey which was still to last several hours.
+
+Michael Strogoff could not help looking attentively at his
+newly-arrived fellow-traveler. As she was so placed as to travel
+with her back to the engine, he even offered her his seat,
+which he might prefer to her own, but she thanked him with a
+slight bend of her graceful neck.
+
+The young girl appeared to be about sixteen or seventeen years of age.
+Her head, truly charming, was of the purest Sclavonic type--
+slightly severe, and likely in a few summers to unfold into beauty
+rather than mere prettiness. From beneath a sort of kerchief
+which she wore on her head escaped in profusion light golden hair.
+Her eyes were brown, soft, and expressive of much sweetness of temper.
+The nose was straight, and attached to her pale and somewhat thin
+cheeks by delicately mobile nostrils. The lips were finely cut,
+but it seemed as if they had long since forgotten how to smile.
+
+The young traveler was tall and upright, as far as could be judged
+of her figure from the very simple and ample pelisse that covered her.
+Although she was still a very young girl in the literal sense of the term,
+the development of her high forehead and clearly-cut features
+gave the idea that she was the possessor of great moral energy--
+a point which did not escape Michael Strogoff. Evidently this
+young girl had already suffered in the past, and the future
+doubtless did not present itself to her in glowing colors; but she
+had surely known how to struggle still with the trials of life.
+Her energy was evidently both prompt and persistent, and her
+calmness unalterable, even under circumstances in which a man would
+be likely to give way or lose his self-command.
+
+Such was the impression which she produced at first sight.
+Michael Strogoff, being himself of an energetic temperament,
+was naturally struck by the character of her physiognomy, and,
+while taking care not to cause her annoyance by a too persistent gaze,
+he observed his neighbor with no small interest. The costume
+of the young traveler was both extremely simple and appropriate.
+She was not rich--that could be easily seen; but not the slightest
+mark of negligence was to be discerned in her dress.
+All her luggage was contained in the leather bag which,
+for want of room, she held on her lap.
+
+She wore a long, dark pelisse, gracefully adjusted at the neck
+by a blue tie. Under this pelisse, a short skirt, also dark,
+fell over a robe which reached the ankles. Half-boots of leather,
+thickly soled, as if chosen in anticipation of a long journey,
+covered her small feet.
+
+Michael Strogoff fancied that he recognized, by certain details,
+the fashion of the costume of Livonia, and thought his neighbor
+a native of the Baltic provinces.
+
+But whither was this young girl going, alone, at an age when the fostering
+care of a father, or the protection of a brother, is considered a matter
+of necessity? Had she now come, after an already long journey, from the
+provinces of Western Russia? Was she merely going to Nijni-Novgorod,
+or was the end of her travels beyond the eastern frontiers of the empire?
+Would some relation, some friend, await her arrival by the train?
+Or was it not more probable, on the contrary, that she would find
+herself as much isolated in the town as she was in this compartment?
+It was probable.
+
+In fact, the effect of habits contracted in solitude was clearly
+manifested in the bearing of the young girl. The manner in which
+she entered the carriage and prepared herself for the journey,
+the slight disturbance she caused among those around her,
+the care she took not to incommode or give trouble to anyone,
+all showed that she was accustomed to be alone, and to depend
+on herself only.
+
+Michael Strogoff observed her with interest, but, himself reserved,
+he sought no opportunity of accosting her. Once only, when her neighbor--
+the merchant who had jumbled together so imprudently in his remarks
+tallow and shawls--being asleep, and threatening her with his great head,
+which was swaying from one shoulder to the other, Michael Strogoff
+awoke him somewhat roughly, and made him understand that he must
+hold himself upright.
+
+The merchant, rude enough by nature, grumbled some words against "people
+who interfere with what does not concern them," but Michael Strogoff cast
+on him a glance so stern that the sleeper leant on the opposite side,
+and relieved the young traveler from his unpleasant vicinity.
+
+The latter looked at the young man for an instant, and mute and modest
+thanks were in that look.
+
+But a circumstance occurred which gave Strogoff a just idea
+of the character of the maiden. Twelve versts before
+arriving at Nijni-Novgorod, at a sharp curve of the iron way,
+the train experienced a very violent shock. Then, for a minute,
+it ran onto the slope of an embankment.
+
+Travelers more or less shaken about, cries, confusion, general disorder
+in the carriages--such was the effect at first produced.
+It was to be feared that some serious accident had happened.
+Consequently, even before the train had stopped, the doors were opened,
+and the panic-stricken passengers thought only of getting out
+of the carriages.
+
+Michael Strogoff thought instantly of the young girl; but, while the
+passengers in her compartment were precipitating themselves outside,
+screaming and struggling, she had remained quietly in her place,
+her face scarcely changed by a slight pallor.
+
+She waited--Michael Strogoff waited also.
+
+Both remained quiet.
+
+"A determined nature!" thought Michael Strogoff.
+
+However, all danger had quickly disappeared. A breakage of
+the coupling of the luggage-van had first caused the shock to,
+and then the stoppage of, the train, which in another instant
+would have been thrown from the top of the embankment into a bog.
+There was an hour's delay. At last, the road being cleared,
+the train proceeded, and at half-past eight in the evening
+arrived at the station of Nijni-Novgorod.
+
+
+Before anyone could get out of the carriages, the inspectors of police
+presented themselves at the doors and examined the passengers.
+
+Michael Strogoff showed his podorojna, made out in the name
+of Nicholas Korpanoff. He had consequently no difficulty.
+As to the other travelers in the compartment, all bound
+for Nijni-Novgorod, their appearance, happily for them,
+was in nowise suspicious.
+
+The young girl in her turn, exhibited, not a passport, since passports
+are no longer required in Russia, but a permit indorsed with a
+private seal, and which seemed to be of a special character.
+The inspector read the permit with attention. Then, having attentively
+examined the person whose description it contained:
+
+"You are from Riga?" he said.
+
+"Yes," replied the young girl.
+
+"You are going to Irkutsk?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"By what route?"
+
+"By Perm."
+
+"Good!" replied the inspector. "Take care to have your permit vised,
+at the police station of Nijni-Novgorod."
+
+The young girl bent her head in token of assent.
+
+Hearing these questions and replies, Michael Strogoff
+experienced a mingled sentiment both of surprise and pity.
+What! this young girl, alone, journeying to that far-off Siberia,
+and at a time when, to its ordinary dangers, were added all the
+perils of an invaded country and one in a state of insurrection!
+How would she reach it? What would become of her?
+
+The inspection ended, the doors of the carriages were then opened, but,
+before Michael Strogoff could move towards her, the young Livonian,
+who had been the first to descend, had disappeared in the crowd
+which thronged the platforms of the railway station.
+
+CHAPTER V THE TWO ANNOUNCEMENTS
+
+NIJNI-NOVGOROD, Lower Novgorod, situate at the junction of the Volga
+and the Oka, is the chief town in the district of the same name.
+It was here that Michael Strogoff was obliged to leave the railway,
+which at the time did not go beyond that town. Thus, as he advanced,
+his traveling would become first less speedy and then less safe.
+
+Nijni-Novgorod, the fixed population of which is only from thirty
+to thirty-five thousand inhabitants, contained at that time
+more than three hundred thousand; that is to say, the population
+was increased tenfold. This addition was in consequence of the
+celebrated fair, which was held within the walls for three weeks.
+Formerly Makariew had the benefit of this concourse of traders,
+but since 1817 the fair had been removed to Nijni-Novgorod.
+
+Even at the late hour at which Michael Strogoff left the platform,
+there was still a large number of people in the two towns,
+separated by the stream of the Volga, which compose
+Nijni-Novgorod. The highest of these is built on a steep rock.
+and defended by a fort called in Russia "kreml."
+
+Michael Strogoff expected some trouble in finding a hotel,
+or even an inn, to suit him. As he had not to start immediately,
+for he was going to take a steamer, he was compelled to look
+out for some lodging; but, before doing so, he wished to know
+exactly the hour at which the steamboat would start.
+He went to the office of the company whose boats plied between
+Nijni-Novgorod and Perm. There, to his great annoyance,
+he found that no boat started for Perm till the following
+day at twelve o'clock. Seventeen hours to wait!
+It was very vexatious to a man so pressed for time.
+However, he never senselessly murmured. Besides, the fact was
+that no other conveyance could take him so quickly either to Perm
+or Kasan. It would be better, then, to wait for the steamer,
+which would enable him to regain lost time.
+
+Here, then, was Michael Strogoff, strolling through the town
+and quietly looking out for some inn in which to pass the night.
+However, he troubled himself little on this score, and, but that
+hunger pressed him, he would probably have wandered on till
+morning in the streets of Nijni-Novgorod. He was looking
+for supper rather than a bed. But he found both at the sign
+of the City of Constantinople. There, the landlord offered him
+a fairly comfortable room, with little furniture, it is true,
+but not without an image of the Virgin, and a few saints framed
+in yellow gauze.
+
+A goose filled with sour stuffing swimming in thick cream,
+barley bread, some curds, powdered sugar mixed with cinnamon,
+and a jug of kwass, the ordinary Russian beer, were placed
+before him, and sufficed to satisfy his hunger. He did justice
+to the meal, which was more than could be said of his neighbor
+at table, who, having, in his character of "old believer"
+of the sect of Raskalniks, made the vow of abstinence,
+rejected the potatoes in front of him, and carefully refrained
+from putting sugar in his tea.
+
+His supper finished, Michael Strogoff, instead of going up to his bedroom,
+again strolled out into the town. But, although the long twilight
+yet lingered, the crowd was already dispersing, the streets were gradually
+becoming empty, and at length everyone retired to his dwelling.
+
+Why did not Michael Strogoff go quietly to bed, as would have seemed
+more reasonable after a long railway journey? Was he thinking
+of the young Livonian girl who had been his traveling companion?
+Having nothing better to do, he WAS thinking of her. Did he fear that,
+lost in this busy city, she might be exposed to insult? He feared so,
+and with good reason. Did he hope to meet her, and, if need were,
+to afford her protection? No. To meet would be difficult.
+As to protection--what right had he--
+
+"Alone," he said to himself, "alone, in the midst of these
+wandering tribes! And yet the present dangers are nothing
+compared to those she must undergo. Siberia! Irkutsk! I am
+about to dare all risks for Russia, for the Czar, while she
+is about to do so--For whom? For what? She is authorized
+to cross the frontier! The country beyond is in revolt!
+The steppes are full of Tartar bands!"
+
+Michael Strogoff stopped for an instant, and reflected.
+
+"Without doubt," thought he, "she must have determined on
+undertaking her journey before the invasion. Perhaps she is
+even now ignorant of what is happening. But no, that cannot be;
+the merchants discussed before her the disturbances in Siberia--
+and she did not seem surprised. She did not even ask an explanation.
+She must have known it then, and knowing it, is still resolute.
+Poor girl! Her motive for the journey must be urgent indeed!
+But though she may be brave--and she certainly is so--her strength
+must fail her, and, to say nothing of dangers and obstacles,
+she will be unable to endure the fatigue of such a journey.
+Never can she reach Irkutsk!"
+
+Indulging in such reflections, Michael Strogoff wandered
+on as chance led him; being well acquainted with the town,
+he knew that he could easily retrace his steps.
+
+Having strolled on for about an hour, he seated himself
+on a bench against the wall of a large wooden cottage,
+which stood, with many others, on a vast open space.
+He had scarcely been there five minutes when a hand was laid
+heavily on his shoulder.
+
+"What are you doing here?" roughly demanded a tall and powerful man,
+who had approached unperceived.
+
+"I am resting," replied Michael Strogoff.
+
+"Do you mean to stay all night on the bench?"
+
+"Yes, if I feel inclined to do so," answered Michael Strogoff, in a tone
+somewhat too sharp for the simple merchant he wished to personate.
+
+"Come forward, then, so I can see you," said the man.
+
+Michael Strogoff, remembering that, above all, prudence was requisite,
+instinctively drew back. "It is not necessary," he replied,
+and calmly stepped back ten paces.
+
+The man seemed, as Michael observed him well, to have the look
+of a Bohemian, such as are met at fairs, and with whom contact,
+either physical or moral, is unpleasant. Then, as he looked
+more attentively through the dusk, he perceived, near the cottage,
+a large caravan, the usual traveling dwelling of the Zingaris or gypsies,
+who swarm in Russia wherever a few copecks can be obtained.
+
+As the gypsy took two or three steps forward, and was about to interrogate
+Michael Strogoff more closely, the door of the cottage opened.
+He could just see a woman, who spoke quickly in a language which
+Michael Strogoff knew to be a mixture of Mongol and Siberian.
+
+"Another spy! Let him alone, and come to supper.
+The papluka is waiting for you."
+
+Michael Strogoff could not help smiling at the epithet bestowed on him,
+dreading spies as he did above all else.
+
+In the same dialect, although his accent was very different,
+the Bohemian replied in words which signify, "You are
+right, Sangarre! Besides, we start to-morrow."
+
+"To-morrow?" repeated the woman in surprise.
+
+"Yes, Sangarre," replied the Bohemian; "to-morrow, and the Father
+himself sends us--where we are going!"
+
+Thereupon the man and woman entered the cottage, and carefully
+closed the door.
+
+"Good!" said Michael Strogoff, to himself; "if these gipsies
+do not wish to be understood when they speak before me,
+they had better use some other language."
+
+From his Siberian origin, and because he had passed his childhood in
+the Steppes, Michael Strogoff, it has been said, understood almost all
+the languages in usage from Tartary to the Sea of Ice. As to the exact
+signification of the words he had heard, he did not trouble his head.
+For why should it interest him?
+
+It was already late when he thought of returning to his inn to take
+some repose. He followed, as he did so, the course of the Volga,
+whose waters were almost hidden under the countless number of boats
+floating on its bosom.
+
+An hour after, Michael Strogoff was sleeping soundly on one
+of those Russian beds which always seem so hard to strangers,
+and on the morrow, the 17th of July, he awoke at break of day.
+
+He had still five hours to pass in Nijni-Novgorod; it seemed to him
+an age. How was he to spend the morning unless in wandering,
+as he had done the evening before, through the streets?
+By the time he had finished his breakfast, strapped up his bag,
+had his podorojna inspected at the police office, he would have
+nothing to do but start. But he was not a man to lie in bed after
+the sun had risen; so he rose, dressed himself, placed the letter
+with the imperial arms on it carefully at the bottom of its usual
+pocket within the lining of his coat, over which he fastened
+his belt; he then closed his bag and threw it over his shoulder.
+This done, he had no wish to return to the City of Constantinople,
+and intending to breakfast on the bank of the Volga near the wharf,
+he settled his bill and left the inn. By way of precaution,
+Michael Strogoff went first to the office of the steam-packet company,
+and there made sure that the Caucasus would start at the appointed hour.
+As he did so, the thought for the first time struck him that,
+since the young Livonian girl was going to Perm, it was very
+possible that her intention was also to embark in the Caucasus,
+in which case he should accompany her.
+
+The town above with its kremlin, whose circumference measures two versts,
+and which resembles that of Moscow, was altogether abandoned.
+Even the governor did not reside there. But if the town above was
+like a city of the dead, the town below, at all events, was alive.
+
+Michael Strogoff, having crossed the Volga on a bridge of boats,
+guarded by mounted Cossacks, reached the square where the evening
+before he had fallen in with the gipsy camp. This was somewhat
+outside the town, where the fair of Nijni-Novgorod was held.
+In a vast plain rose the temporary palace of the governor-general,
+where by imperial orders that great functionary resided during
+the whole of the fair, which, thanks to the people who composed it,
+required an ever-watchful surveillance.
+
+This plain was now covered with booths symmetrically arranged
+in such a manner as to leave avenues broad enough to allow
+the crowd to pass without a crush.
+
+Each group of these booths, of all sizes and shapes, formed a separate
+quarter particularly dedicated to some special branch of commerce.
+There was the iron quarter, the furriers' quarter, the woolen quarter,
+the quarter of the wood merchants, the weavers' quarter, the dried
+fish quarter, etc. Some booths were even built of fancy materials,
+some of bricks of tea, others of masses of salt meat--that is to say,
+of samples of the goods which the owners thus announced were there to
+the purchasers--a singular, and somewhat American, mode of advertisement.
+
+In the avenues and long alleys there was already a large assemblage
+of people--the sun, which had risen at four o'clock, being
+well above the horizon--an extraordinary mixture of Europeans
+and Asiatics, talking, wrangling, haranguing, and bargaining.
+Everything which can be bought or sold seemed to be heaped up
+in this square. Furs, precious stones, silks, Cashmere shawls,
+Turkey carpets, weapons from the Caucasus, gauzes from Smyrna
+and Ispahan. Tiflis armor, caravan teas. European bronzes,
+Swiss clocks, velvets and silks from Lyons, English cottons,
+harness, fruits, vegetables, minerals from the Ural,
+malachite, lapis-lazuli, spices, perfumes, medicinal herbs,
+wood, tar, rope, horn, pumpkins, water-melons, etc--
+all the products of India, China, Persia, from the shores
+of the Caspian and the Black Sea, from America and Europe,
+were united at this corner of the globe.
+
+It is scarcely possible truly to portray the moving mass of human
+beings surging here and there, the excitement, the confusion,
+the hubbub; demonstrative as were the natives and the inferior classes,
+they were completely outdone by their visitors. There were
+merchants from Central Asia, who had occupied a year in escorting
+their merchandise across its vast plains, and who would not again
+see their shops and counting-houses for another year to come.
+In short, of such importance is this fair of Nijni-Novgorod,
+that the sum total of its transactions amounts yearly to nearly
+a hundred million dollars.
+
+On one of the open spaces between the quarters of this temporary
+city were numbers of mountebanks of every description;
+gypsies from the mountains, telling fortunes to the credulous fools
+who are ever to be found in such assemblies; Zingaris or Tsiganes--
+a name which the Russians give to the gypsies who are the descendants
+of the ancient Copts--singing their wildest melodies and dancing
+their most original dances; comedians of foreign theaters,
+acting Shakespeare, adapted to the taste of spectators who crowded
+to witness them. In the long avenues the bear showmen accompanied
+their four-footed dancers, menageries resounded with the hoarse
+cries of animals under the influence of the stinging whip or red-hot
+irons of the tamer; and, besides all these numberless performers,
+in the middle of the central square, surrounded by a circle four deep
+of enthusiastic amateurs, was a band of "mariners of the Volga,"
+sitting on the ground, as on the deck of their vessel,
+imitating the action of rowing, guided by the stick of the master
+of the orchestra, the veritable helmsman of this imaginary vessel!
+A whimsical and pleasing custom!
+
+Suddenly, according to a time-honored observance in the fair
+of Nijni-Novgorod, above the heads of the vast concourse a flock
+of birds was allowed to escape from the cages in which they
+had been brought to the spot. In return for a few copecks
+charitably offered by some good people, the bird-fanciers opened
+the prison doors of their captives, who flew out in hundreds,
+uttering their joyous notes.
+
+It should be mentioned that England and France, at all events, were this
+year represented at the great fair of Nijni-Novgorod by two of the most
+distinguished products of modern civilization, Messrs. Harry Blount
+and Alcide Jolivet. Jolivet, an optimist by nature, found everything
+agreeable, and as by chance both lodging and food were to his taste,
+he jotted down in his book some memoranda particularly favorable to
+the town of Nijni-Novgorod. Blount, on the contrary, having in vain hunted
+for a supper, had been obliged to find a resting-place in the open air.
+He therefore looked at it all from another point of view, and was
+preparing an article of the most withering character against a town
+in which the landlords of the inns refused to receive travelers who only
+begged leave to be flayed, "morally and physically."
+
+Michael Strogoff, one hand in his pocket, the other holding
+his cherry-stemmed pipe, appeared the most indifferent and least
+impatient of men; yet, from a certain contraction of his eyebrows
+every now and then, a careful observer would have seen that he was
+burning to be off.
+
+For two hours he kept walking about the streets, only to find
+himself invariably at the fair again. As he passed among the groups
+of buyers and sellers he discovered that those who came from
+countries on the confines of Asia manifested great uneasiness.
+Their trade was visibly suffering. Another symptom also was marked.
+In Russia military uniforms appear on every occasion. Soldiers are
+wont to mix freely with the crowd, the police agents being almost
+invariably aided by a number of Cossacks, who, lance on shoulder,
+keep order in the crowd of three hundred thousand strangers.
+But on this occasion the soldiers, Cossacks and the rest, did not put
+in an appearance at the great market. Doubtless, a sudden order
+to move having been foreseen, they were restricted to their barracks.
+
+Moreover, while no soldiers were to be seen, it was not so with
+their officers. Since the evening before, aides-decamp, leaving the
+governor's palace, galloped in every direction. An unusual movement was
+going forward which a serious state of affairs could alone account for.
+There were innumerable couriers on the roads both to Wladimir
+and to the Ural Mountains. The exchange of telegraphic dispatches
+with Moscow was incessant.
+
+Michael Strogoff found himself in the central square when the report
+spread that the head of police had been summoned by a courier to
+the palace of the governor-general. An important dispatch from Moscow,
+it was said, was the cause of it.
+
+"The fair is to be closed," said one.
+
+"The regiment of Nijni-Novgorod has received the route," declared another.
+
+"They say that the Tartars menace Tomsk!"
+
+"Here is the head of police!" was shouted on every side.
+A loud clapping of hands was suddenly raised, which subsided
+by degrees, and finally was succeeded by absolute silence.
+The head of police arrived in the middle of the central square,
+and it was seen by all that he held in his hand a dispatch.
+
+Then, in a loud voice, he read the following announcements:
+"By order of the Governor of Nijni-Novgorod.
+
+"1st. All Russian subjects are forbidden to quit the province
+upon any pretext whatsoever.
+
+"2nd. All strangers of Asiatic origin are commanded to leave
+the province within twenty-four hours."
+
+
+CHAPTER VI BROTHER AND SISTER
+
+HOWEVER disastrous these measures might be to private interests,
+they were, under the circumstances, perfectly justifiable.
+
+"All Russian subjects are forbidden to leave the province;"
+if Ivan Ogareff was still in the province, this would at
+any rate prevent him, unless with the greatest difficulty,
+from rejoining Feofar-Khan, and becoming a very formidable
+lieutenant to the Tartar chief.
+
+"All foreigners of Asiatic origin are ordered to leave the province in
+four-and-twenty hours;" this would send off in a body all the traders from
+Central Asia, as well as the bands of Bohemians, gipsies, etc., having
+more or less sympathy with the Tartars. So many heads, so many spies--
+undoubtedly affairs required their expulsion.
+
+It is easy to understand the effect produced by these two thunder-claps
+bursting over a town like Nijni-Novgorod, so densely crowded
+with visitors, and with a commerce so greatly surpassing that of all
+other places in Russia. The natives whom business called beyond
+the Siberian frontier could not leave the province for a time at least.
+The tenor of the first article of the order was express; it admitted
+of no exception. All private interests must yield to the public weal.
+As to the second article of the proclamation, the order of
+expulsion which it contained admitted of no evasion either.
+It only concerned foreigners of Asiatic origin, but these could do
+nothing but pack up their merchandise and go back the way they came.
+As to the mountebanks, of which there were a considerable number,
+they had nearly a thousand versts to go before they could reach
+the nearest frontier. For them it was simply misery.
+
+At first there rose against this unusual measure a murmur
+of protestation, a cry of despair, but this was quickly
+suppressed by the presence of the Cossacks and agents of police.
+Immediately, what might be called the exodus from the immense
+plain began. The awnings in front of the stalls were folded up;
+the theaters were taken to pieces; the fires were put out;
+the acrobats' ropes were lowered; the old broken-winded
+horses of the traveling vans came back from their sheds.
+Agents and soldiers with whip or stick stimulated the tardy ones,
+and made nothing of pulling down the tents even before the poor
+Bohemians had left them.
+
+Under these energetic measures the square of Nijni-Novgorod would,
+it was evident, be entirely evacuated before the evening,
+and to the tumult of the great fair would succeed the silence
+of the desert.
+
+It must again be repeated--for it was a necessary aggravation
+of these severe measures--that to all those nomads chiefly concerned
+in the order of expulsion even the steppes of Siberia were forbidden,
+and they would be obliged to hasten to the south of the Caspian Sea,
+either to Persia, Turkey, or the plains of Turkestan. The post
+of the Ural, and the mountains which form, as it were, a prolongation
+of the river along the Russian frontier, they were not allowed to pass.
+They were therefore under the necessity of traveling six hundred
+miles before they could tread a free soil.
+
+Just as the reading of the proclamation by the head of the police
+came to an end, an idea darted instinctively into the mind
+of Michael Strogoff. "What a singular coincidence," thought he,
+"between this proclamation expelling all foreigners of Asiatic origin,
+and the words exchanged last evening between those two gipsies
+of the Zingari race. 'The Father himself sends us where we wish
+to go,' that old man said. But 'the Father' is the emperor!
+He is never called anything else among the people. How could
+those gipsies have foreseen the measure taken against them? how could
+they have known it beforehand, and where do they wish to go?
+Those are suspicious people, and it seems to me that to them
+the government proclamation must be more useful than injurious."
+
+But these reflections were completely dispelled by another
+which drove every other thought out of Michael's mind.
+He forgot the Zingaris, their suspicious words, the strange
+coincidence which resulted from the proclamation.
+The remembrance of the young Livonian girl suddenly rushed
+into his mind. "Poor child!" he thought to himself.
+"She cannot now cross the frontier."
+
+In truth the young girl was from Riga; she was Livonian,
+consequently Russian, and now could not leave Russian territory!
+The permit which had been given her before the new
+measures had been promulgated was no longer available.
+All the routes to Siberia had just been pitilessly closed
+to her, and, whatever the motive taking her to Irkutsk,
+she was now forbidden to go there.
+
+This thought greatly occupied Michael Strogoff. He said to himself,
+vaguely at first, that, without neglecting anything of what was due
+to his important mission, it would perhaps be possible for him to be
+of some use to this brave girl; and this idea pleased him. Knowing how
+serious were the dangers which he, an energetic and vigorous man,
+would have personally to encounter, he could not conceal from himself
+how infinitely greater they would prove to a young unprotected girl.
+As she was going to Irkutsk, she would be obliged to follow the same
+road as himself, she would have to pass through the bands of invaders,
+as he was about to attempt doing himself. If, moreover, she had
+at her disposal only the money necessary for a journey taken under
+ordinary circumstances, how could she manage to accomplish it under
+conditions which made it not only perilous but expensive?
+
+"Well," said he, "if she takes the route to Perm,
+it is nearly impossible but that I shall fall in with her.
+Then, I will watch over her without her suspecting it;
+and as she appears to me as anxious as myself to reach Irkutsk,
+she will cause me no delay."
+
+But one thought leads to another. Michael Strogoff had till now thought
+only of doing a kind action; but now another idea flashed into his brain;
+the question presented itself under quite a new aspect.
+
+"The fact is," said he to himself, "that I have much more need of her
+than she can have of me. Her presence will be useful in drawing
+off suspicion from me. A man traveling alone across the steppe,
+may be easily guessed to be a courier of the Czar. If, on the contrary,
+this young girl accompanies me, I shall appear, in the eyes of all,
+the Nicholas Korpanoff of my podorojna. Therefore, she must
+accompany me. Therefore, I must find her again at any cost.
+It is not probable that since yesterday evening she has been able
+to get a carriage and leave Nijni-Novgorod. I must look for her.
+And may God guide me!"
+
+Michael left the great square of Nijni-Novgorod, where the tumult
+produced by the carrying out of the prescribed measures had now
+reached its height. Recriminations from the banished strangers,
+shouts from the agents and Cossacks who were using them so brutally,
+together made an indescribable uproar. The girl for whom he searched
+could not be there. It was now nine o'clock in the morning.
+The steamboat did not start till twelve. Michael Strogoff had
+therefore nearly two hours to employ in searching for her whom
+he wished to make his traveling companion.
+
+He crossed the Volga again and hunted through the quarters
+on the other side, where the crowd was much less considerable.
+He entered the churches, the natural refuge for all who weep,
+for all who suffer. Nowhere did he meet with the young Livonian.
+
+"And yet," he repeated, "she could not have left Nijni-Novgorod yet.
+We'll have another look." He wandered about thus for two hours.
+He went on without stopping, feeling no fatigue, obeying a potent
+instinct which allowed no room for thought. All was in vain.
+
+It then occurred to him that perhaps the girl had not heard
+of the order--though this was improbable enough, for such a
+thunder-clap could not have burst without being heard by all.
+Evidently interested in knowing the smallest news from Siberia,
+how could she be ignorant of the measures taken by the governor,
+measures which concerned her so directly?
+
+But, if she was ignorant of it, she would come in an hour to the quay,
+and there some merciless agent would refuse her a passage!
+At any cost, he must see her beforehand, and enable her to avoid
+such a repulse.
+
+But all his endeavors were in vain, and he at length almost despaired
+of finding her again. It was eleven o'clock, and Michael thought
+of presenting his podorojna at the office of the head of police.
+The proclamation evidently did not concern him, since the emergency
+had been foreseen for him, but he wished to make sure that nothing
+would hinder his departure from the town.
+
+Michael then returned to the other side of the Volga,
+to the quarter in which was the office of the head of police.
+An immense crowd was collected there; for though all foreigners
+were ordered to quit the province, they had notwithstanding
+to go through certain forms before they could depart.
+
+Without this precaution, some Russian more or less implicated
+in the Tartar movement would have been able, in a disguise, to pass
+the frontier--just those whom the order wished to prevent going.
+The strangers were sent away, but still had to gain permission to go.
+
+Mountebanks, gypsies, Tsiganes, Zingaris, mingled with merchants
+from Persia, Turkey, India, Turkestan, China, filled the court
+and offices of the police station.
+
+Everyone was in a hurry, for the means of transport would be much
+sought after among this crowd of banished people, and those who did
+not set about it soon ran a great risk of not being able to leave
+the town in the prescribed time, which would expose them to some
+brutal treatment from the governor's agents.
+
+Owing to the strength of his elbows Michael was able to cross the court.
+But to get into the office and up to the clerk's little window was a much
+more difficult business. However, a word into an inspector's ear and a
+few judiciously given roubles were powerful enough to gain him a passage.
+The man, after taking him into the waiting-room, went to call an
+upper clerk. Michael Strogoff would not be long in making everything
+right with the police and being free in his movements.
+
+Whilst waiting, he looked about him, and what did he see?
+There, fallen, rather than seated, on a bench, was a girl,
+prey to a silent despair, although her face could scarcely
+be seen, the profile alone being visible against the wall.
+Michael Strogoff could not be mistaken. He instantly recognized
+the young Livonian.
+
+Not knowing the governor's orders, she had come to the police office
+to get her pass signed. They had refused to sign it. No doubt
+she was authorized to go to Irkutsk, but the order was peremptory--
+it annulled all previous au-thorizations, and the routes to Siberia
+were closed to her. Michael, delighted at having found her again,
+approached the girl.
+
+She looked up for a moment and her face brightened on recognizing
+her traveling companion. She instinctively rose and, like a drowning
+man who clutches at a spar, she was about to ask his help.
+
+At that moment the agent touched Michael on the shoulder,
+"The head of police will see you," he said.
+
+"Good," returned Michael. And without saying a word to her for whom
+he had been searching all day, without reassuring her by even a gesture,
+which might compromise either her or himself, he followed the man.
+
+The young Livonian, seeing the only being to whom she could look
+for help disappear, fell back again on her bench.
+
+Three minutes had not passed before Michael Strogoff reappeared,
+accompanied by the agent. In his hand he held his podorojna,
+which threw open the roads to Siberia for him. He again
+approached the young Livonian, and holding out his hand:
+"Sister," said he.
+
+She understood. She rose as if some sudden inspiration prevented
+her from hesitating a moment.
+
+"Sister," repeated Michael Strogoff, "we are authorized to continue
+our journey to Irkutsk. Will you come with me?"
+
+"I will follow you, brother," replied the girl, putting her hand into
+that of Michael Strogoff. And together they left the police station.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII GOING DOWN THE VOLGA
+
+A LITTLE before midday, the steamboat's bell drew to the wharf
+on the Volga an unusually large concourse of people,
+for not only were those about to embark who had intended to go,
+but the many who were compelled to go contrary to their wishes.
+The boilers of the Caucasus were under full pressure; a slight
+smoke issued from its funnel, whilst the end of the escape-pipe
+and the lids of the valves were crowned with white vapor.
+It is needless to say that the police kept a close watch over
+the departure of the Caucasus, and showed themselves pitiless to
+those travelers who did not satisfactorily answer their questions.
+
+Numerous Cossacks came and went on the quay, ready to assist
+the agents, but they had not to interfere, as no one
+ventured to offer the slightest resistance to their orders.
+Exactly at the hour the last clang of the bell sounded,
+the powerful wheels of the steamboat began to beat the water,
+and the Caucasus passed rapidly between the two towns of which
+Nijni-Novgorod is composed.
+
+Michael Strogoff and the young Livonian had taken a passage on board
+the Caucasus. Their embarkation was made without any difficulty.
+As is known, the podorojna, drawn up in the name of Nicholas Korpanoff,
+authorized this merchant to be accompanied on his journey
+to Siberia. They appeared, therefore, to be a brother and
+sister traveling under the protection of the imperial police.
+Both, seated together at the stern, gazed at the receding town,
+so disturbed by the governor's order. Michael had as yet
+said nothing to the girl, he had not even questioned her.
+He waited until she should speak to him, when that was necessary.
+She had been anxious to leave that town, in which, but for
+the providential intervention of this unexpected protector,
+she would have remained imprisoned. She said nothing,
+but her looks spoke her thanks.
+
+The Volga, the Rha of the ancients, the largest river
+in all Europe, is almost three thousand miles in length.
+Its waters, rather unwholesome in its upper part, are improved
+at Nijni-Novgorod by those of the Oka, a rapid affluent,
+issuing from the central provinces of Russia. The system of
+Russian canals and rivers has been justly compared to a gigantic
+tree whose branches spread over every part of the empire.
+The Volga forms the trunk of this tree, and it has for roots
+seventy mouths opening into the Caspian Sea. It is navigable
+as far as Rjef, a town in the government of Tver, that is,
+along the greater part of its course.
+
+The steamboats plying between Perm and Nijni-Novgorod rapidly perform
+the two hundred and fifty miles which separate this town from the town
+of Kasan. It is true that these boats have only to descend the Volga,
+which adds nearly two miles of current per hour to their own speed;
+but on arriving at the confluence of the Kama, a little below Kasan,
+they are obliged to quit the Volga for the smaller river, up which
+they ascend to Perm. Powerful as were her machines, the Caucasus
+could not thus, after entering the Kama, make against the current
+more than ten miles an hour. Including an hour's stoppage at Kasan,
+the voyage from Nijni-Novgorod to Perm would take from between sixty
+to sixty-two hours.
+
+The steamer was very well arranged, and the passengers, according to
+their condition or resources, occupied three distinct classes on board.
+Michael Strogoff had taken care to engage two first-class cabins,
+so that his young companion might retire into hers whenever she liked.
+
+The Caucasus was loaded with passengers of every description.
+A number of Asiatic traders had thought it best to leave
+Nijni-Novgorod immediately. In that part of the steamer reserved
+for the first-class might be seen Armenians in long robes and a sort
+of miter on their heads; Jews, known by their conical caps; rich Chinese
+in their traditional costume, a very wide blue, violet, or black robe;
+Turks, wearing the national turban; Hindoos, with square caps,
+and a simple string for a girdle, some of whom, hold in their hands
+all the traffic of Central Asia; and, lastly, Tartars, wearing boots,
+ornamented with many-colored braid, and the breast a mass of embroidery.
+All these merchants had been obliged to pile up their numerous bales
+and chests in the hold and on the deck; and the transport of their
+baggage would cost them dear, for, according to the regulations,
+each person had only a right to twenty pounds' weight.
+
+In the bows of the Caucasus were more numerous groups of passengers,
+not only foreigners, but also Russians, who were not forbidden
+by the order to go back to their towns in the province.
+There were mujiks with caps on their heads, and wearing
+checked shirts under their wide pelisses; peasants of
+the Volga, with blue trousers stuffed into their boots,
+rose-colored cotton shirts, drawn in by a cord, felt caps;
+a few women, habited in flowery-patterned cotton dresses,
+gay-colored aprons, and bright handkerchiefs on their heads.
+These were principally third-class passengers, who were,
+happily, not troubled by the prospect of a long return voyage.
+The Caucasus passed numerous boats being towed up the stream,
+carrying all sorts of merchandise to Nijni-Novgorod. Then passed
+rafts of wood interminably long, and barges loaded to the gunwale,
+and nearly sinking under water. A bootless voyage they were making,
+since the fair had been abruptly broken up at its outset.
+
+The waves caused by the steamer splashed on the banks, covered with
+flocks of wild duck, who flew away uttering deafening cries.
+A little farther, on the dry fields, bordered with willows,
+and aspens, were scattered a few cows, sheep, and herds of pigs.
+Fields, sown with thin buckwheat and rye, stretched away to a
+background of half-cultivated hills, offering no remarkable prospect.
+The pencil of an artist in quest of the picturesque would have found
+nothing to reproduce in this monotonous landscape.
+
+The Caucasus had been steaming on for almost two hours,
+when the young Livonian, addressing herself to Michael, said,
+"Are you going to Irkutsk, brother?"
+
+"Yes, sister," answered the young man. "We are going the same way.
+Consequently, where I go, you shall go."
+
+"To-morrow, brother, you shall know why I left the shores of the Baltic
+to go beyond the Ural Mountains."
+
+"I ask you nothing, sister."
+
+"You shall know all," replied the girl, with a faint smile.
+"A sister should hide nothing from her brother. But I cannot
+to-day. Fatigue and sorrow have broken me."
+
+"Will you go and rest in your cabin?" asked Michael Strogoff.
+
+"Yes--yes; and to-morrow--"
+
+"Come then--"
+
+He hesitated to finish his sentence, as if he had wished to end it
+by the name of his companion, of which he was still ignorant.
+
+"Nadia," said she, holding out her hand.
+
+"Come, Nadia," answered Michael, "and make what use you like of your
+brother Nicholas Korpanoff." And he led the girl to the cabin engaged
+for her off the saloon.
+
+Michael Strogoff returned on deck, and eager for any news
+which might bear on his journey, he mingled in the groups
+of passengers, though without taking any part in the conversation.
+Should he by any chance be questioned, and obliged to reply,
+he would announce himself as the merchant Nicholas Korpanoff,
+going back to the frontier, for he did not wish it to be suspected
+that a special permission authorized him to travel to Siberia.
+
+The foreigners in the steamer could evidently speak of nothing
+but the occurrences of the day, of the order and its consequences.
+These poor people, scarcely recovered from the fatigue of a journey
+across Central Asia, found themselves obliged to return, and if they
+did not give loud vent to their anger and despair, it was because
+they dared not. Fear, mingled with respect, restrained them.
+It was possible that inspectors of police, charged with watching
+the passengers, had secretly embarked on board the Caucasus,
+and it was just as well to keep silence; expulsion, after all,
+was a good deal preferable to imprisonment in a fortress.
+Therefore the men were either silent, or spoke with so much caution
+that it was scarcely possible to get any useful information.
+
+Michael Strogoff thus could learn nothing here; but if mouths
+were often shut at his approach--for they did not know him--
+his ears were soon struck by the sound of one voice, which cared
+little whether it was heard or not.
+
+The man with the hearty voice spoke Russian, but with a French accent;
+and another speaker answered him more reservedly. "What," said
+the first, "are you on board this boat, too, my dear fellow;
+you whom I met at the imperial fete in Moscow, and just caught
+a glimpse of at Nijni-Novgorod?"
+
+"Yes, it's I," answered the second drily.
+
+"Really, I didn't expect to be so closely followed."
+
+"I am not following you sir; I am preceding you."
+
+"Precede! precede! Let us march abreast, keeping step,
+like two soldiers on parade, and for the time, at least,
+let us agree, if you will, that one shall not pass the other."
+
+"On the contrary, I shall pass you."
+
+"We shall see that, when we are at the seat of war;
+but till then, why, let us be traveling companions.
+Later, we shall have both time and occasion to be rivals."
+
+"Enemies."
+
+"Enemies, if you like. There is a precision in your words,
+my dear fellow, particularly agreeable to me. One may always
+know what one has to look for, with you."
+
+"What is the harm?"
+
+"No harm at all. So, in my turn, I will ask your permission to state
+our respective situations."
+
+"State away."
+
+"You are going to Perm--like me?"
+
+"Like you."
+
+"And probably you will go from Perm to Ekaterenburg, since that is
+the best and safest route by which to cross the Ural Mountains?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"Once past the frontier, we shall be in Siberia, that is to say
+in the midst of the invasion."
+
+"We shall be there."
+
+"Well! then, and only then, will be the time to say, Each for himself,
+and God for--"
+
+"For me."
+
+"For you, all by yourself! Very well! But since we have a week
+of neutral days before us, and since it is very certain that news
+will not shower down upon us on the way, let us be friends until
+we become rivals again."
+
+"Enemies."
+
+"Yes; that's right, enemies. But till then, let us act together,
+and not try and ruin each other. All the same, I promise you
+to keep to myself all that I can see--"
+
+"And I, all that I can hear."
+
+"Is that agreed?"
+
+"It is agreed."
+
+"Your hand?"
+
+"Here it is." And the hand of the first speaker, that is to say,
+five wide-open fingers, vigorously shook the two fingers coolly
+extended by the other.
+
+"By the bye," said the first, "I was able this morning to telegraph
+the very words of the order to my cousin at seventeen minutes past ten."
+
+"And I sent it to the Daily Telegraph at thirteen minutes past ten."
+
+"Bravo, Mr. Blount!"
+
+"Very good, M. Jolivet."
+
+"I will try and match that!"
+
+"It will be difficult."
+
+"I can try, however."
+
+So saying, the French correspondent familiarly saluted
+the Englishman, who bowed stiffly. The governor's proclamation
+did not concern these two news-hunters, as they were neither
+Russians nor foreigners of Asiatic origin. However, being urged
+by the same instinct, they had left Nijni-Novgorod together.
+It was natural that they should take the same means of transport,
+and that they should follow the same route to the Siberian steppes.
+Traveling companions, whether enemies or friends, they had
+a week to pass together before "the hunt would be open."
+And then success to the most expert! Alcide Jolivet had made
+the first advances, and Harry Blount had accepted them though
+he had done so coldly.
+
+That very day at dinner the Frenchman open as ever and even
+too loquacious, the Englishman still silent and grave, were seen
+hobnobbing at the same table, drinking genuine Cliquot, at six roubles
+the bottle, made from the fresh sap of the birch-trees of the country.
+On hearing them chatting away together, Michael Strogoff said to himself:
+"Those are inquisitive and indiscreet fellows whom I shall probably
+meet again on the way. It will be prudent for me to keep them
+at a distance."
+
+The young Livonian did not come to dinner. She was asleep in her cabin,
+and Michael did not like to awaken her. It was evening before she
+reappeared on the deck of the Caucasus. The long twilight imparted
+a coolness to the atmosphere eagerly enjoyed by the passengers
+after the stifling heat of the day. As the evening advanced,
+the greater number never even thought of going into the saloon.
+Stretched on the benches, they inhaled with delight the slight
+breeze caused by the speed of the steamer. At this time of year,
+and under this latitude, the sky scarcely darkened between sunset
+and dawn, and left the steersman light enough to guide his steamer
+among the numerous vessels going up or down the Volga.
+
+Between eleven and two, however, the moon being new, it was almost dark.
+Nearly all the passengers were then asleep on the deck, and the silence
+was disturbed only by the noise of the paddles striking the water
+at regular intervals. Anxiety kept Michael Strogoff awake.
+He walked up and down, but always in the stern of the steamer.
+Once, however, he happened to pass the engine-room. He then found
+himself in the part reserved for second and third-class passengers.
+
+There, everyone was lying asleep, not only on the benches,
+but also on the bales, packages, and even the deck itself.
+Some care was necessary not to tread on the sleepers, who were
+lying about everywhere. They were chiefly mujiks, accustomed to
+hard couches, and quite satisfied with the planks of the deck.
+But no doubt they would, all the same, have soundly abused
+the clumsy fellow who roused them with an accidental kick.
+
+Michael Strogoff took care, therefore, not to disturb anyone.
+By going thus to the end of the boat, he had no other idea
+but that of striving against sleep by a rather longer walk.
+He reached the forward deck, and was already climbing
+the forecastle ladder, when he heard someone speaking near him.
+He stopped. The voices appeared to come from a group of
+passengers enveloped in cloaks and wraps. It was impossible
+to recognize them in the dark, though it sometimes happened that,
+when the steamer's chimney sent forth a plume of ruddy flames,
+the sparks seemed to fall amongst the group as though thousands
+of spangles had been suddenly illuminated.
+
+Michael was about to step up the ladder, when a few words reached his ear,
+uttered in that strange tongue which he had heard during the night
+at the fair. Instinctively he stopped to listen. Protected by
+the shadow of the forecastle, he could not be perceived himself.
+As to seeing the passengers who were talking, that was impossible.
+He must confine himself to listening.
+
+The first words exchanged were of no importance--to him at least--but they
+allowed him to recognize the voices of the man and woman whom he had heard
+at Nijni-Novgorod. This, of course, made him redouble his attention.
+It was, indeed, not at all impossible that these same Tsiganes,
+now banished, should be on board the Caucasus.
+
+And it was well for him that he listened, for he distinctly
+heard this question and answer made in the Tartar idiom:
+"It is said that a courier has set out from Moscow for Irkutsk."
+
+"It is so said, Sangarre; but either this courier will arrive too late,
+or he will not arrive at all."
+
+Michael Strogoff started involuntarily at this reply,
+which concerned him so directly. He tried to see if the man
+and woman who had just spoken were really those whom he suspected,
+but he could not succeed.
+
+In a few moments Michael Strogoff had regained the stern of the vessel
+without having been perceived, and, taking a seat by himself,
+he buried his face in his hands. It might have been supposed
+that he was asleep.
+
+He was not asleep, however, and did not even think of sleeping.
+He was reflecting, not without a lively apprehension:
+"Who is it knows of my departure, and who can have any interest
+in knowing it?"
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII GOING UP THE KAMA
+
+THE next day, the 18th of July, at twenty minutes to seven in the morning,
+the Caucasus reached the Kasan quay, seven versts from the town.
+
+Kasan is situated at the confluence of the Volga
+and Kasanka. It is an important chief town of the government,
+and a Greek archbishopric, as well as the seat of a university.
+The varied population preserves an Asiatic character.
+Although the town was so far from the landing-place, a large
+crowd was collected on the quay. They had come for news.
+The governor of the province had published an order identical
+with that of Nijni-Novgorod. Police officers and a few Cossacks kept
+order among the crowd, and cleared the way both for the passengers
+who were disembarking and also for those who were embarking on
+board the Caucasus, minutely examining both classes of travelers.
+The one were the Asiatics who were being expelled; the other,
+mujiks stopping at Kasan.
+
+Michael Strogoff unconcernedly watched the bustle which occurs at
+all quays on the arrival of a steam vessel. The Caucasus would stay
+for an hour to renew her fuel. Michael did not even think of landing.
+He was unwilling to leave the young Livonian girl alone on board,
+as she had not yet reappeared on deck.
+
+The two journalists had risen at dawn, as all good huntsmen should do.
+They went on shore and mingled with the crowd, each keeping to his own
+peculiar mode of proceeding; Harry Blount, sketching different types,
+or noting some observation; Alcide Jolivet contenting himself with
+asking questions, confiding in his memory, which never failed him.
+
+There was a report along all the frontier that the insurrection and
+invasion had reached considerable proportions. Communication between
+Siberia and the empire was already extremely difficult.
+All this Michael Strogoff heard from the new arrivals.
+This information could not but cause him great uneasiness,
+and increase his wish of being beyond the Ural Mountains,
+so as to judge for himself of the truth of these rumors,
+and enable him to guard against any possible contingency.
+He was thinking of seeking more direct intelligence from some
+native of Kasan, when his attention was suddenly diverted.
+
+Among the passengers who were leaving the Caucasus, Michael
+recognized the troop of Tsiganes who, the day before,
+had appeared in the Nijni-Novgorod fair. There, on the deck
+of the steamboat were the old Bohemian and the woman.
+With them, and no doubt under their direction, landed about
+twenty dancers and singers, from fifteen to twenty years of age,
+wrapped in old cloaks, which covered their spangled dresses.
+These dresses, just then glancing in the first rays of the sun,
+reminded Michael of the curious appearance which he had observed
+during the night. It must have been the glitter of those spangles
+in the bright flames issuing from the steamboat's funnel
+which had attracted his attention.
+
+"Evidently," said Michael to himself, "this troop of Tsiganes, after
+remaining below all day, crouched under the forecastle during the night.
+Were these gipsies trying to show themselves as little as possible?
+Such is not according to the usual custom of their race."
+
+Michael Strogoff no longer doubted that the expressions he had heard,
+had proceeded from this tawny group, and had been exchanged between
+the old gypsy and the woman to whom he gave the Mongolian name
+of Sangarre. Michael involuntarily moved towards the gangway,
+as the Bohemian troop was leaving the steamboat.
+
+The old Bohemian was there, in a humble attitude,
+little conformable with the effrontery natural to his race.
+One would have said that he was endeavoring rather to avoid
+attention than to attract it. His battered hat, browned by the suns
+of every clime, was pulled forward over his wrinkled face.
+His arched back was bent under an old cloak, wrapped closely
+round him, notwithstanding the heat. It would have been difficult,
+in this miserable dress, to judge of either his size or face.
+Near him was the Tsigane, Sangarre, a woman about thirty years old.
+She was tall and well made, with olive complexion, magnificent eyes,
+and golden hair.
+
+Many of the young dancers were remarkably pretty, all possessing
+the clear-cut features of their race. These Tsiganes are generally
+very attractive, and more than one of the great Russian nobles,
+who try to vie with the English in eccentricity, has not
+hesitated to choose his wife from among these gypsy girls.
+One of them was humming a song of strange rhythm, which might
+be thus rendered:
+
+ "Glitters brightly the gold
+ In my raven locks streaming
+ Rich coral around
+ My graceful neck gleaming;
+ Like a bird of the air,
+ Through the wide world I roam."
+
+The laughing girl continued her song, but Michael Strogoff ceased
+to listen. It struck him just then that the Tsigane, Sangarre,
+was regarding him with a peculiar gaze, as if to fix his features
+indelibly in her memory.
+
+It was but for a few moments, when Sangarre herself followed
+the old man and his troop, who had already left the vessel.
+"That's a bold gypsy," said Michael to himself.
+"Could she have recognized me as the man whom she saw at
+Nijni-Novgorod? These confounded Tsiganes have the eyes of a cat!
+They can see in the dark; and that woman there might well know--"
+
+Michael Strogoff was on the point of following Sangarre
+and the gypsy band, but he stopped. "No," thought he,
+"no unguarded proceedings. If I were to stop that old
+fortune teller and his companions my incognito would run
+a risk of being discovered. Besides, now they have landed,
+before they can pass the frontier I shall be far beyond it.
+They may take the route from Kasan to Ishim, but that affords
+no resources to travelers. Besides a tarantass, drawn by good
+Siberian horses, will always go faster than a gypsy cart!
+Come, friend Korpanoff, be easy."
+
+By this time the man and Sangarre had disappeared.
+
+Kasan is justly called the "Gate of Asia" and considered as the center
+of Siberian and Bokharian commerce; for two roads begin here and lead
+across the Ural Mountains. Michael Strogoff had very judiciously
+chosen the one by Perm and Ekaterenburg. It is the great stage road,
+well supplied with relays kept at the expense of the government,
+and is prolonged from Ishim to Irkutsk.
+
+It is true that a second route--the one of which Michael had just spoken--
+avoiding the slight detour by Perm, also connects Kasan with Ishim. It is
+perhaps shorter than the other, but this advantage is much diminished
+by the absence of post-houses, the bad roads, and lack of villages.
+Michael Strogoff was right in the choice he had made, and if,
+as appeared probable, the gipsies should follow the second route from
+Kasan to Ishim, he had every chance of arriving before them.
+
+An hour afterwards the bell rang on board the Caucasus,
+calling the new passengers, and recalling the former ones.
+It was now seven o'clock in the morning. The requisite fuel
+had been received on board. The whole vessel began to vibrate
+from the effects of the steam. She was ready to start.
+Passengers going from Kasan to Perm were crowding on the deck.
+
+Michael noticed that of the two reporters Blount alone had rejoined
+the steamer. Was Alcide Jolivet about to miss his passage?
+
+But just as the ropes were being cast off, Jolivet appeared,
+tearing along. The steamer was already sheering off, the gangway
+had been drawn onto the quay, but Alcide Jolivet would not stick
+at such a little thing as that, so, with a bound like a harlequin,
+he alighted on the deck of the Caucasus almost in his rival's arms.
+
+"I thought the Caucasus was going without you," said the latter.
+
+"Bah!" answered Jolivet, "I should soon have caught you up again,
+by chartering a boat at my cousin's expense, or by traveling post
+at twenty copecks a verst, and on horseback. What could I do?
+It was so long a way from the quay to the telegraph office."
+
+"Have you been to the telegraph office?" asked Harry Blount,
+biting his lips.
+
+"That's exactly where I have been!" answered Jolivet, with his
+most amiable smile.
+
+"And is it still working to Kolyvan?"
+
+"That I don't know, but I can assure you, for instance,
+that it is working from Kasan to Paris."
+
+"You sent a dispatch to your cousin?"
+
+"With enthusiasm."
+
+"You had learnt then--?"
+
+"Look here, little father, as the Russians say," replied Alcide Jolivet,
+"I'm a good fellow, and I don't wish to keep anything from you.
+The Tartars, and Feofar-Khan at their head, have passed Semipolatinsk,
+and are descending the Irtish. Do what you like with that!"
+
+What! such important news, and Harry Blount had not known it;
+and his rival, who had probably learned it from some inhabitant of Kasan,
+had already transmitted it to Paris. The English paper was distanced!
+Harry Blount, crossing his hands behind him, walked off and seated
+himself in the stern without uttering a word.
+
+About ten o'clock in the morning, the young Livonian, leaving her cabin,
+appeared on deck. Michael Strogoff went forward and took her hand.
+"Look, sister!" said he, leading her to the bows of the Caucasus.
+
+The view was indeed well worth seeing. The Caucasus had reached
+the confluence of the Volga and the Kama. There she would leave
+the former river, after having descended it for nearly three
+hundred miles, to ascend the latter for a full three hundred.
+
+The Kama was here very wide, and its wooded banks lovely.
+A few white sails enlivened the sparkling water.
+The horizon was closed by a line of hills covered with aspens,
+alders, and sometimes large oaks.
+
+But these beauties of nature could not distract the thoughts
+of the young Livonian even for an instant. She had left her hand
+in that of her companion, and turning to him, "At what distance
+are we from Moscow?" she asked.
+
+"Nine hundred versts," answered Michael.
+
+"Nine hundred, out of seven thousand!" murmured the girl.
+
+The bell now announced the breakfast hour. Nadia followed
+Michael Strogoff to the restaurant. She ate little, and as a poor
+girl whose means are small would do. Michael thought it best
+to content himself with the fare which satisfied his companion;
+and in less than twenty minutes he and Nadia returned on deck.
+There they seated themselves in the stern, and without preamble,
+Nadia, lowering her voice to be heard by him alone, began:
+
+"Brother, I am the daughter of an exile. My name is
+Nadia Fedor. My mother died at Riga scarcely a month ago, and I
+am going to Irkutsk to rejoin my father and share his exile."
+
+"I, too, am going to Irkutsk," answered Michael, "and I shall
+thank Heaven if it enables me to give Nadia Fedor safe and sound
+into her father's hands."
+
+"Thank you, brother," replied Nadia.
+
+Michael Strogoff then added that he had obtained a special
+podorojna for Siberia, and that the Russian authorities could
+in no way hinder his progress.
+
+Nadia asked nothing more. She saw in this fortunate meeting with Michael
+a means only of accelerating her journey to her father.
+
+"I had," said she, "a permit which authorized me to go to Irkutsk,
+but the new order annulled that; and but for you, brother, I should
+have been unable to leave the town, in which, without doubt,
+I should have perished."
+
+"And dared you, alone, Nadia," said Michael, "attempt to cross
+the steppes of Siberia?"
+
+"The Tartar invasion was not known when I left Riga. It was only
+at Moscow that I learnt the news."
+
+"And despite it, you continued your journey?"
+
+"It was my duty."
+
+The words showed the character of the brave girl.
+
+She then spoke of her father, Wassili Fedor. He was a much-esteemed
+physician at Riga. But his connection with some secret society having
+been asserted, he received orders to start for Irkutsk. The police
+who brought the order conducted him without delay beyond the frontier.
+
+Wassili Fedor had but time to embrace his sick wife and his daughter,
+so soon to be left alone, when, shedding bitter tears, he was led away.
+A year and a half after her husband's departure, Madame Fedor died in
+the arms of her daughter, who was thus left alone and almost penniless.
+Nadia Fedor then asked, and easily obtained from the Russian government,
+an authorization to join her father at Irkutsk. She wrote and told him
+she was starting. She had barely enough money for this long journey, and
+yet she did not hesitate to undertake it. She would do what she could.
+God would do the rest.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX DAY AND NIGHT IN A TARANTASS
+
+THE next day, the 19th of July, the Caucasus reached Perm,
+the last place at which she touched on the Kama.
+
+The government of which Perm is the capital is one of the largest
+in the Russian Empire, and, extending over the Ural Mountains,
+encroaches on Siberian territory. Marble quarries, mines of salt,
+platina, gold, and coal are worked here on a large scale.
+Although Perm, by its situation, has become an important town, it is
+by no means attractive, being extremely dirty, and without resources.
+This want of comfort is of no consequence to those going to Siberia,
+for they come from the more civilized districts, and are supplied
+with all necessaries.
+
+At Perm travelers from Siberia resell their vehicles,
+more or less damaged by the long journey across the plains.
+There, too, those passing from Europe to Asia purchase carriages,
+or sleighs in the winter season.
+
+Michael Strogoff had already sketched out his programme.
+A vehicle carrying the mail usually runs across the Ural Mountains,
+but this, of course, was discontinued. Even if it had not been so,
+he would not have taken it, as he wished to travel as fast as possible,
+without depending on anyone. He wisely preferred to buy a carriage,
+and journey by stages, stimulating the zeal of the postillions
+by well-applied "na vodkou," or tips.
+
+Unfortunately, in consequence of the measures taken against foreigners
+of Asiatic origin, a large number of travelers had already left Perm,
+and therefore conveyances were extremely rare. Michael was
+obliged to content himself with what had been rejected by others.
+As to horses, as long as the Czar's courier was not in Siberia,
+he could exhibit his podorojna, and the postmasters would give him
+the preference. But, once out of Europe, he had to depend alone
+on the power of his roubles.
+
+But to what sort of a vehicle should he harness his horses?
+To a telga or to a tarantass? The telga is nothing
+but an open four-wheeled cart, made entirely of wood,
+the pieces fastened together by means of strong rope.
+Nothing could be more primitive, nothing could be less comfortable;
+but, on the other hand, should any accident happen on the way,
+nothing could be more easily repaired. There is no want of firs
+on the Russian frontier, and axle-trees grow naturally in forests.
+The post extraordinary, known by the name of "perck-ladnoi,"
+is carried by the telga, as any road is good enough for it.
+It must be confessed that sometimes the ropes which fasten
+the concern together break, and whilst the hinder part remains stuck
+in some bog, the fore-part arrives at the post-house on two wheels;
+but this result is considered quite satisfactory.
+
+Michael Strogoff would have been obliged to employ a telga,
+if he had not been lucky enough to discover a tarantass.
+It is to be hoped that the invention of Russian coach-builders
+will devise some improvement in this last-named vehicle.
+Springs are wanting in it as well as in the telga;
+in the absence of iron, wood is not spared; but its four wheels,
+with eight or nine feet between them, assure a certain
+equilibrium over the jolting rough roads. A splash-board
+protects the travelers from the mud, and a strong leathern hood,
+which may be pulled quite over the occupiers, shelters them
+from the great heat and violent storms of the summer.
+The tarantass is as solid and as easy to repair as the telga,
+and is, moreover, less addicted to leaving its hinder part
+in the middle of the road.
+
+It was not without careful search that Michael managed to
+discover this tarantass, and there was probably not a second
+to be found in all Perm. He haggled long about the price,
+for form's sake, to act up to his part as Nicholas Korpanoff,
+a plain merchant of Irkutsk.
+
+Nadia had followed her companion in his search after a suitable vehicle.
+Although the object of each was different, both were equally
+anxious to arrive at their goal. One would have said the same will
+animated them both.
+
+"Sister," said Michael, "I wish I could have found a more comfortable
+conveyance for you."
+
+"Do you say that to me, brother, when I would have gone on foot,
+if need were, to rejoin my father?"
+
+"I do not doubt your courage, Nadia, but there are physical fatigues
+a woman may be unable to endure."
+
+"I shall endure them, whatever they be," replied the girl.
+"If you ever hear a complaint from me you may leave me in the road,
+and continue your journey alone."
+
+Half an hour later, the podorojna being presented by Michael,
+three post-horses were harnessed to the tarantass. These animals,
+covered with long hair, were very like long-legged bears.
+They were small but spirited, being of Siberian breed.
+The way in which the iemschik harnessed them was thus:
+one, the largest, was secured between two long shafts, on whose
+farther end was a hoop carrying tassels and bells; the two others
+were simply fastened by ropes to the steps of the tarantass.
+This was the complete harness, with mere strings for reins.
+
+Neither Michael Strogoff nor the young Livonian girl had any baggage.
+The rapidity with which one wished to make the journey, and the more than
+modest resources of the other, prevented them from embarrassing themselves
+with packages. It was a fortunate thing, under the circumstances,
+for the tarantass could not have carried both baggage and travelers.
+It was only made for two persons, without counting the iemschik,
+who kept his equilibrium on his narrow seat in a marvelous manner.
+
+The iemschik is changed at every relay. The man who drove
+the tarantass during the first stage was, like his horses,
+a Siberian, and no less shaggy than they; long hair, cut square
+on the forehead, hat with a turned-up brim, red belt, coat with
+crossed facings and buttons stamped with the imperial cipher.
+The iemschik, on coming up with his team, threw an inquisitive
+glance at the passengers of the tarantass. No luggage!--
+and had there been, where in the world could he have stowed it?
+Rather shabby in appearance too. He looked contemptuous.
+
+"Crows," said he, without caring whether he was overheard or not;
+"crows, at six copecks a verst!"
+
+"No, eagles!" said Michael, who understood the iemschik's slang perfectly;
+"eagles, do you hear, at nine copecks a verst, and a tip besides."
+
+He was answered by a merry crack of the whip.
+
+In the language of the Russian postillions the "crow" is the stingy
+or poor traveler, who at the post-houses only pays two or three
+copecks a verst for the horses. The "eagle" is the traveler
+who does not mind expense, to say nothing of liberal tips.
+Therefore the crow could not claim to fly as rapidly as
+the imperial bird.
+
+Nadia and Michael immediately took their places in the tarantass.
+A small store of provisions was put in the box, in case at any time they
+were delayed in reaching the post-houses, which are very comfortably
+provided under direction of the State. The hood was pulled up,
+as it was insupport-ably hot, and at twelve o'clock the tarantass
+left Perm in a cloud of dust.
+
+The way in which the iemschik kept up the pace of his team would
+have certainly astonished travelers who, being neither Russians
+nor Siberians, were not accustomed to this sort of thing.
+The leader, rather larger than the others, kept to a steady
+long trot, perfectly regular, whether up or down hill.
+The two other horses seemed to know no other pace than the gallop,
+though they performed many an eccentric curvette as they went along.
+The iemschik, however, never touched them, only urging them on
+by startling cracks of his whip. But what epithets he lavished
+on them, including the names of all the saints in the calendar,
+when they behaved like docile and conscientious animals!
+The string which served as reins would have had no influence
+on the spirited beasts, but the words "na pravo," to the right,
+"na levo," to the left, pronounced in a guttural tone,
+were more effectual than either bridle or snaffle.
+
+And what amiable expressions! "Go on, my doves!" the iemschik
+would say. "Go on, pretty swallows! Fly, my little pigeons!
+Hold up, my cousin on the left! Gee up, my little father
+on the right!"
+
+But when the pace slackened, what insulting expressions,
+instantly understood by the sensitive animals!
+"Go on, you wretched snail! Confound you, you slug!
+I'll roast you alive, you tortoise, you!"
+
+Whether or not it was from this way of driving, which requires
+the iemschiks to possess strong throats more than muscular arms,
+the tarantass flew along at a rate of from twelve to fourteen
+miles an hour. Michael Strogoff was accustomed both to the sort
+of vehicle and the mode of traveling. Neither jerks nor jolts
+incommoded him. He knew that a Russian driver never even tries
+to avoid either stones, ruts, bogs, fallen trees, or trenches,
+which may happen to be in the road. He was used to all that.
+His companion ran a risk of being hurt by the violent jolts
+of the tarantass, but she would not complain.
+
+For a little while Nadia did not speak. Then possessed
+with the one thought, that of reaching her journey's end,
+"I have calculated that there are three hundred versts
+between Perm and Ekaterenburg, brother," said she.
+"Am I right?"
+
+"You are quite right, Nadia," answered Michael; "and when we have
+reached Ekaterenburg, we shall be at the foot of the Ural Mountains
+on the opposite side."
+
+"How long will it take to get across the mountains?"
+
+"Forty-eight hours, for we shall travel day and night.
+I say day and night, Nadia," added he, "for I cannot stop
+even for a moment; I go on without rest to Irkutsk."
+
+"I shall not delay you, brother; no, not even for an hour,
+and we will travel day and night."
+
+"Well then, Nadia, if the Tartar invasion has only left the road open,
+we shall arrive in twenty days."
+
+"You have made this journey before?" asked Nadia.
+
+"Many times."
+
+"During winter we should have gone more rapidly and surely,
+should we not?"
+
+"Yes, especially with more rapidity, but you would have suffered much
+from the frost and snow."
+
+"What matter! Winter is the friend of Russia."
+
+"Yes, Nadia, but what a constitution anyone must have to endure
+such friendship! I have often seen the temperature in the Siberian
+steppes fall to more than forty degrees below freezing point!
+I have felt, notwithstanding my reindeer coat, my heart
+growing chill, my limbs stiffening, my feet freezing in triple
+woolen socks; I have seen my sleigh horses covered with a
+coating of ice, their breath congealed at their nostrils.
+I have seen the brandy in my flask change into hard stone,
+on which not even my knife could make an impression.
+But my sleigh flew like the wind. Not an obstacle on the plain,
+white and level farther than the eye could reach! No rivers
+to stop one! Hard ice everywhere, the route open, the road sure!
+But at the price of what suffering, Nadia, those alone could say,
+who have never returned, but whose bodies have been covered up
+by the snow storm."
+
+"However, you have returned, brother," said Nadia.
+
+"Yes, but I am a Siberian, and, when quite a child, I used to follow
+my father to the chase, and so became inured to these hardships.
+But when you said to me, Nadia, that winter would not have stopped you,
+that you would have gone alone, ready to struggle against the frightful
+Siberian climate, I seemed to see you lost in the snow and falling,
+never to rise again."
+
+"How many times have you crossed the steppe in winter?"
+asked the young Livonian.
+
+"Three times, Nadia, when I was going to Omsk."
+
+"And what were you going to do at Omsk?"
+
+"See my mother, who was expecting me."
+
+"And I am going to Irkutsk, where my father expects me.
+I am taking him my mother's last words. That is as much
+as to tell you, brother, that nothing would have prevented me
+from setting out."
+
+"You are a brave girl, Nadia," replied Michael. "God Himself
+would have led you."
+
+All day the tarantass was driven rapidly by the iemschiks,
+who succeeded each other at every stage. The eagles of the mountain
+would not have found their name dishonored by these "eagles"
+of the highway. The high price paid for each horse, and the tips
+dealt out so freely, recommended the travelers in a special way.
+Perhaps the postmasters thought it singular that, after the publication
+of the order, a young man and his sister, evidently both Russians,
+could travel freely across Siberia, which was closed to everyone else,
+but their papers were all en regle and they had the right to pass.
+
+However, Michael Strogoff and Nadia were not the only travelers on
+their way from Perm to Ekaterenburg. At the first stages, the courier
+of the Czar had learnt that a carriage preceded them, but, as there
+was no want of horses, he did not trouble himself about that.
+
+During the day, halts were made for food alone.
+At the post-houses could be found lodging and provision.
+Besides, if there was not an inn, the house of the Russian peasant
+would have been no less hospitable. In the villages, which are
+almost all alike, with their white-walled, green-roofed chapels,
+the traveler might knock at any door, and it would be opened to him.
+The moujik would come out, smiling and extending his hand to his guest.
+He would offer him bread and salt, the burning charcoal would
+be put into the "samovar," and he would be made quite at home.
+The family would turn out themselves rather than that he should
+not have room. The stranger is the relation of all.
+He is "one sent by God."
+
+On arriving that evening Michael instinctively asked the postmaster how
+many hours ago the carriage which preceded them had passed that stage.
+
+"Two hours ago, little father," replied the postmaster.
+
+"Is it a berlin?"
+
+"No, a telga."
+
+"How many travelers?"
+
+"Two."
+
+"And they are going fast?"
+
+"Eagles!"
+
+"Let them put the horses to as soon as possible."
+
+Michael and Nadia, resolved not to stop even for an hour,
+traveled all night. The weather continued fine, though the
+atmosphere was heavy and becoming charged with electricity.
+It was to be hoped that a storm would not burst whilst they
+were among the mountains, for there it would be terrible.
+Being accustomed to read atmospheric signs, Michael Strogoff
+knew that a struggle of the elements was approaching.
+
+The night passed without incident. Notwithstanding the jolting
+of the tarantass, Nadia was able to sleep for some hours.
+The hood was partly raised so as to give as much air as there
+was in the stifling atmosphere.
+
+Michael kept awake all night, mistrusting the iemschiks, who are
+apt to sleep at their posts. Not an hour was lost at the relays,
+not an hour on the road.
+
+The next day, the 20th of July, at about eight o'clock in the morning,
+they caught the first glimpse of the Ural Mountains in the east.
+This important chain which separates Russia from Siberia was still
+at a great distance, and they could not hope to reach it until
+the end of the day. The passage of the mountains must necessarily
+be performed during the next night. The sky was cloudy all day,
+and the temperature was therefore more bearable, but the weather
+was very threatening.
+
+It would perhaps have been more prudent not to have ascended
+the mountains during the night, and Michael would not have done so,
+had he been permitted to wait; but when, at the last stage,
+the iemschik drew his attention to a peal of thunder reverberating
+among the rocks, he merely said:
+
+"Is a telga still before us?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How long is it in advance?"
+
+"Nearly an hour."
+
+"Forward, and a triple tip if we are at Ekaterenburg to-morrow morning."
+
+
+CHAPTER X A STORM IN THE URAL MOUNTAINS
+
+THE Ural Mountains extend in a length of over two thousand miles
+between Europe and Asia. Whether they are called the Urals,
+which is the Tartar, or the Poyas, which is the Russian name,
+they are correctly so termed; for these names signify "belt"
+in both languages. Rising on the shores of the Arctic Sea,
+they reach the borders of the Caspian. This was the barrier
+to be crossed by Michael Strogoff before he could enter
+Siberian Russia. The mountains could be crossed in one night,
+if no accident happened. Unfortunately, thunder muttering
+in the distance announced that a storm was at hand.
+The electric tension was such that it could not be dispersed
+without a tremendous explosion, which in the peculiar state
+of the atmosphere would be very terrible.
+
+Michael took care that his young companion should be as well protected
+as possible. The hood, which might have been easily blown away,
+was fastened more securely with ropes, crossed above and at the back.
+The traces were doubled, and, as an additional precaution,
+the nave-boxes were stuffed with straw, as much to increase the strength
+of the wheels as to lessen the jolting, unavoidable on a dark night.
+Lastly, the fore and hinder parts, connected simply by the axles to
+the body of the tarantass, were joined one to the other by a crossbar,
+fixed by means of pins and screws.
+
+Nadia resumed her place in the cart, and Michael took his seat
+beside her. Before the lowered hood hung two leathern curtains,
+which would in some degree protect the travelers against the wind
+and rain. Two great lanterns, suspended from the iemschik's seat,
+threw a pale glimmer scarcely sufficient to light the way,
+but serving as warning lights to prevent any other carriage
+from running into them.
+
+It was well that all these precautions were taken, in expectation
+of a rough night. The road led them up towards dense masses of clouds,
+and should the clouds not soon resolve into rain, the fog would
+be such that the tarantass would be unable to advance without danger
+of falling over some precipice.
+
+The Ural chain does not attain any very great height,
+the highest summit not being more than five thousand feet.
+Eternal snow is there unknown, and what is piled up
+by the Siberian winter is soon melted by the summer sun.
+Shrubs and trees grow to a considerable height.
+The iron and copper mines, as well as those of precious stones,
+draw a considerable number of workmen to that region.
+Also, those villages termed "gavody" are there met with
+pretty frequently, and the road through the great passes is
+easily practicable for post-carriages.
+
+But what is easy enough in fine weather and broad daylight,
+offers difficulties and perils when the elements are engaged
+in fierce warfare, and the traveler is in the midst of it.
+Michael Strogoff knew from former experience what a storm
+in the mountains was, and perhaps this would be as terrible
+as the snowstorms which burst forth with such vehemence
+in the winter.
+
+Rain was not yet falling, so Michael raised the leathern curtains
+which protected the interior of the tarantass and looked out,
+watching the sides of the road, peopled with fantastic shadows,
+caused by the wavering light of the lanterns. Nadia, motionless,
+her arms folded, gazed forth also, though without leaning forward,
+whilst her companion, his body half out of the carriage,
+examined both sky and earth.
+
+The calmness of the atmosphere was very threatening, the air being
+perfectly still. It was just as if Nature were half stifled,
+and could no longer breathe; her lungs, that is to say those gloomy,
+dense clouds, not being able to perform their functions.
+The silence would have been complete but for the grindings of the
+wheels of the tarantass over the road, the creaking of the axles,
+the snorting of the horses, and the clattering of their iron
+hoofs among the pebbles, sparks flying out on every side.
+
+The road was perfectly deserted. The tarantass encountered neither
+pedestrians nor horsemen, nor a vehicle of any description,
+in the narrow defiles of the Ural, on this threatening night.
+Not even the fire of a charcoal-burner was visible in the woods,
+not an encampment of miners near the mines, not a hut
+among the brushwood.
+
+Under these peculiar circumstances it might have been
+allowable to postpone the journey till the morning.
+Michael Strogoff, however, had not hesitated, he had no right
+to stop, but then--and it began to cause him some anxiety--
+what possible reason could those travelers in the telga ahead
+have for being so imprudent?
+
+Michael remained thus on the look-out for some time.
+About eleven o'clock lightning began to blaze continuously in the sky.
+The shadows of huge pines appeared and disappeared in the rapid light.
+Sometimes when the tarantass neared the side of the road, deep gulfs,
+lit up by the flashes, could be seen yawning beneath them.
+From time to time, on their vehicle giving a worse lurch than usual,
+they knew that they were crossing a bridge of roughly-hewn planks
+thrown over some chasm, thunder appearing actually to be rumbling
+below them. Besides this, a booming sound filled the air,
+which increased as they mounted higher. With these different
+noises rose the shouts of the iemschik, sometimes scolding,
+sometimes coaxing his poor beasts, who were suffering more from
+the oppression of the air than the roughness of the roads.
+Even the bells on the shafts could no longer rouse them,
+and they stumbled every instant.
+
+"At what time shall we reach the top of the ridge?" asked Michael
+of the iemschik.
+
+"At one o'clock in the morning if we ever get there at all,"
+replied he, with a shake of his head.
+
+"Why, my friend, this will not be your first storm in
+the mountains, will it?"
+
+"No, and pray God it may not be my last!"
+
+"Are you afraid?"
+
+"No, I'm not afraid, but I repeat that I think you were
+wrong in starting."
+
+"I should have been still more wrong had I stayed."
+
+"Hold up, my pigeons!" cried the iemschik; it was his business to obey,
+not to question.
+
+Just then a distant noise was heard, shrill whistling
+through the atmosphere, so calm a minute before.
+By the light of a dazzling flash, almost immediately followed
+by a tremendous clap of thunder, Michael could see huge pines
+on a high peak, bending before the blast. The wind was unchained,
+but as yet it was the upper air alone which was disturbed.
+Successive crashes showed that many of the trees had been unable
+to resist the burst of the hurricane. An avalanche of shattered
+trunks swept across the road and dashed over the precipice
+on the left, two hundred feet in front of the tarantass.
+
+The horses stopped short.
+
+"Get up, my pretty doves!" cried the iemschik, adding the cracking
+of his whip to the rumbling of the thunder.
+
+Michael took Nadia's hand. "Are you asleep, sister?"
+
+"No, brother."
+
+"Be ready for anything; here comes the storm!"
+
+"I am ready."
+
+Michael Strogoff had only just time to draw the leathern curtains,
+when the storm was upon them.
+
+The iemschik leapt from his seat and seized the horses'
+heads, for terrible danger threatened the whole party.
+
+The tarantass was at a standstill at a turning of the road,
+down which swept the hurricane; it was absolutely necessary
+to hold the animals' heads to the wind, for if the carriage
+was taken broadside it must infallibly capsize and be
+dashed over the precipice. The frightened horses reared,
+and their driver could not manage to quiet them. His friendly
+expressions had been succeeded by the most insulting epithets.
+Nothing was of any use. The unfortunate animals, blinded by
+the lightning, terrified by the incessant peals of thunder,
+threatened every instant to break their traces and flee.
+The iemschik had no longer any control over his team.
+
+At that moment Michael Strogoff threw himself from the tarantass
+and rushed to his assistance. Endowed with more than common strength,
+he managed, though not without difficulty, to master the horses.
+
+The storm now raged with redoubled fury. A perfect avalanche of stones
+and trunks of trees began to roll down the slope above them.
+
+"We cannot stop here," said Michael.
+
+"We cannot stop anywhere," returned the iemschik, all his energies
+apparently overcome by terror. "The storm will soon send us
+to the bottom of the mountain, and that by the shortest way."
+
+"Take you that horse, coward," returned Michael, "I'll look
+after this one."
+
+A fresh burst of the storm interrupted him. The driver and he were
+obliged to crouch upon the ground to avoid being blown down.
+The carriage, notwithstanding their efforts and those of the horses,
+was gradually blown back, and had it not been stopped by the trunk
+of a tree, it would have gone over the edge of the precipice.
+
+"Do not be afraid, Nadia!" cried Michael Strogoff.
+
+"I'm not afraid," replied the young Livonian, her voice not betraying
+the slightest emotion.
+
+The rumbling of the thunder ceased for an instant, the terrible
+blast had swept past into the gorge below.
+
+"Will you go back?" said the iemschik.
+
+"No, we must go on! Once past this turning, we shall have the shelter
+of the slope."
+
+"But the horses won't move!"
+
+"Do as I do, and drag them on."
+
+"The storm will come back!"
+
+"Do you mean to obey?"
+
+"Do you order it?"
+
+"The Father orders it!" answered Michael, for the first time invoking
+the all-powerful name of the Emperor.
+
+"Forward, my swallows!" cried the iemschik, seizing one horse,
+while Michael did the same to the other.
+
+Thus urged, the horses began to struggle onward.
+They could no longer rear, and the middle horse not being
+hampered by the others, could keep in the center of the road.
+It was with the greatest difficulty that either man or beasts
+could stand against the wind, and for every three steps they took
+in advance, they lost one, and even two, by being forced backwards.
+They slipped, they fell, they got up again. The vehicle ran
+a great risk of being smashed. If the hood had not been
+securely fastened, it would have been blown away long before.
+Michael Strogoff and the iemschik took more than two hours
+in getting up this bit of road, only half a verst in length,
+so directly exposed was it to the lashing of the storm.
+The danger was not only from the wind which battered against
+the travelers, but from the avalanche of stones and broken
+trunks which were hurtling through the air.
+
+Suddenly, during a flash of lightning, one of these masses was seen
+crashing and rolling down the mountain towards the tarantass.
+The iemschik uttered a cry.
+
+Michael Strogoff in vain brought his whip down on the team,
+they refused to move.
+
+A few feet farther on, and the mass would pass behind them!
+Michael saw the tarantass struck, his companion crushed;
+he saw there was no time to drag her from the vehicle.
+
+Then, possessed in this hour of peril with superhuman strength,
+he threw himself behind it, and planting his feet on the ground,
+by main force placed it out of danger.
+
+The enormous mass as it passed grazed his chest, taking away his breath
+as though it had been a cannon-ball, then crushing to powder the flints
+on the road, it bounded into the abyss below.
+
+"Oh, brother!" cried Nadia, who had seen it all by the light
+of the flashes.
+
+"Nadia!" replied Michael, "fear nothing!"
+
+"It is not on my own account that I fear!"
+
+"God is with us, sister!"
+
+"With me truly, brother, since He has sent thee in my way!"
+murmured the young girl.
+
+The impetus the tarantass had received was not to be lost, and the tired
+horses once more moved forward. Dragged, so to speak, by Michael and
+the iemschik, they toiled on towards a narrow pass, lying north and south,
+where they would be protected from the direct sweep of the tempest.
+At one end a huge rock jutted out, round the summit of which whirled
+an eddy. Behind the shelter of the rock there was a comparative calm;
+yet once within the circumference of the cyclone, neither man nor beast
+could resist its power.
+
+Indeed, some firs which towered above this protection were in a trice
+shorn of their tops, as though a gigantic scythe had swept across them.
+The storm was now at its height. The lightning filled the defile,
+and the thunderclaps had become one continued peal. The ground,
+struck by the concussion, trembled as though the whole Ural chain
+was shaken to its foundations.
+
+Happily, the tarantass could be so placed that the storm might strike
+it obliquely. But the counter-currents, directed towards it by the slope,
+could not be so well avoided, and so violent were they that every
+instant it seemed as though it would be dashed to pieces.
+
+Nadia was obliged to leave her seat, and Michael, by the light
+of one of the lanterns, discovered an excavation bearing the marks
+of a miner's pick, where the young girl could rest in safety until
+they could once more start.
+
+Just then--it was one o'clock in the morning--the rain began to fall
+in torrents, and this in addition to the wind and lightning,
+made the storm truly frightful. To continue the journey at present
+was utterly impossible. Besides, having reached this pass,
+they had only to descend the slopes of the Ural Mountains, and to
+descend now, with the road torn up by a thousand mountain torrents,
+in these eddies of wind and rain, was utter madness.
+
+"To wait is indeed serious," said Michael, "but it must certainly
+be done, to avoid still longer detentions. The very violence
+of the storm makes me hope that it will not last long.
+About three o'clock the day will begin to break, and the descent,
+which we cannot risk in the dark, we shall be able, if not with ease,
+at least without such danger, to attempt after sunrise."
+
+"Let us wait, brother," replied Nadia; "but if you delay,
+let it not be to spare me fatigue or danger."
+
+"Nadia, I know that you are ready to brave everything, but,
+in exposing both of us, I risk more than my life, more than yours,
+I am not fulfilling my task, that duty which before everything
+else I must accomplish."
+
+"A duty!" murmured Nadia.
+
+Just then a bright flash lit up the sky; a loud clap followed.
+The air was filled with sulphurous suffocating vapor, and a clump
+of huge pines, struck by the electric fluid, scarcely twenty feet
+from the tarantass, flared up like a gigantic torch.
+
+The iemschik was struck to the ground by a counter-shock, but,
+regaining his feet, found himself happily unhurt.
+
+Just as the last growlings of the thunder were lost
+in the recesses of the mountain, Michael felt Nadia's hand
+pressing his, and he heard her whisper these words in his ear:
+"Cries, brother! Listen!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XI TRAVELERS IN DISTRESS
+
+DURING the momentary lull which followed, shouts could be distinctly
+heard from farther on, at no great distance from the tarantass.
+It was an earnest appeal, evidently from some traveler in distress.
+
+Michael listened attentively. The iemschik also listened,
+but shook his head, as though it was impossible to help.
+
+"They are travelers calling for aid," cried Nadia.
+
+"They can expect nothing," replied the iemschik.
+
+"Why not?" cried Michael. "Ought not we do for them what they
+would for us under similar circumstances?"
+
+"Surely you will not risk the carriage and horses!"
+
+"I will go on foot," replied Michael, interrupting the iemschik.
+
+"I will go, too, brother," said the young girl.
+
+"No, remain here, Nadia. The iemschik will stay with you.
+I do not wish to leave him alone."
+
+"I will stay," replied Nadia.
+
+"Whatever happens, do not leave this spot."
+
+"You will find me where I now am."
+
+Michael pressed her hand, and, turning the corner of the slope,
+disappeared in the darkness.
+
+"Your brother is wrong," said the iemschik.
+
+"He is right," replied Nadia simply.
+
+Meanwhile Strogoff strode rapidly on. If he was in a great hurry
+to aid the travelers, he was also very anxious to know who it
+was that had not been hindered from starting by the storm;
+for he had no doubt that the cries came from the telga,
+which had so long preceded him.
+
+The rain had stopped, but the storm was raging with redoubled fury.
+The shouts, borne on the air, became more distinct.
+Nothing was to be seen of the pass in which Nadia remained.
+The road wound along, and the squalls, checked by the corners,
+formed eddies highly dangerous, to pass which, without being
+taken off his legs, Michael had to use his utmost strength.
+
+He soon perceived that the travelers whose shouts he had heard
+were at no great distance. Even then, on account of the darkness,
+Michael could not see them, yet he heard distinctly their words.
+
+This is what he heard, and what caused him some surprise:
+"Are you coming back, blockhead?"
+
+"You shall have a taste of the knout at the next stage."
+
+"Do you hear, you devil's postillion! Hullo! Below!"
+
+"This is how a carriage takes you in this country!"
+
+"Yes, this is what you call a telga!"
+
+"Oh, that abominable driver! He goes on and does not appear
+to have discovered that he has left us behind!"
+
+"To deceive me, too! Me, an honorable Englishman! I will make
+a complaint at the chancellor's office and have the fellow hanged."
+
+This was said in a very angry tone, but was suddenly interrupted
+by a burst of laughter from his companion, who exclaimed,
+"Well! this is a good joke, I must say."
+
+"You venture to laugh!" said the Briton angrily.
+
+"Certainly, my dear confrere, and that most heartily.
+'Pon my word I never saw anything to come up to it."
+
+Just then a crashing clap of thunder re-echoed through the defile,
+and then died away among the distant peaks. When the sound
+of the last growl had ceased, the merry voice went on:
+"Yes, it undoubtedly is a good joke. This machine certainly
+never came from France."
+
+"Nor from England," replied the other.
+
+On the road, by the light of the flashes, Michael saw, twenty yards
+from him, two travelers, seated side by side in a most peculiar vehicle,
+the wheels of which were deeply imbedded in the ruts formed in the road.
+
+He approached them, the one grinning from ear to ear, and the other
+gloomily contemplating his situation, and recognized them as the two
+reporters who had been his companions on board the Caucasus.
+
+"Good-morning to you, sir," cried the Frenchman. "Delighted to see
+you here. Let me introduce you to my intimate enemy, Mr. Blount."
+
+The English reporter bowed, and was about to introduce in his turn
+his companion, Alcide Jolivet, in accordance with the rules of society,
+when Michael interrupted him.
+
+"Perfectly unnecessary, sir; we already know each other,
+for we traveled together on the Volga."
+
+"Ah, yes! exactly so! Mr.--"
+
+"Nicholas Korpanoff, merchant, of Irkutsk. But may I know
+what has happened which, though a misfortune to your companion,
+amuses you so much?"
+
+"Certainly, Mr. Korpanoff," replied Alcide. "Fancy! our driver
+has gone off with the front part of this confounded carriage,
+and left us quietly seated in the back part! So here we
+are in the worse half of a telga; no driver, no horses.
+Is it not a joke?"
+
+"No joke at all," said the Englishman.
+
+"Indeed it is, my dear fellow. You do not know how to look
+at the bright side of things."
+
+"How, pray, are we to go on?" asked Blount.
+
+"That is the easiest thing in the world," replied Alcide. "Go and
+harness yourself to what remains of our cart; I will take the reins,
+and call you my little pigeon, like a true iemschik, and you will trot
+off like a real post-horse."
+
+"Mr. Jolivet," replied the Englishman, "this joking is going too far,
+it passes all limits and--"
+
+"Now do be quiet, my dear sir. When you are done up, I will take
+your place; and call me a broken-winded snail and faint-hearted
+tortoise if I don't take you over the ground at a rattling pace."
+
+Alcide said all this with such perfect good-humor that Michael could
+not help smiling. "Gentlemen," said he, "here is a better plan.
+We have now reached the highest ridge of the Ural chain,
+and thus have merely to descend the slopes of the mountain.
+My carriage is close by, only two hundred yards behind.
+I will lend you one of my horses, harness it to the remains
+of the telga, and to-mor-how, if no accident befalls us,
+we will arrive together at Ekaterenburg."
+
+"That, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide, "is indeed a generous proposal."
+
+"Indeed, sir," replied Michael, "I would willingly offer you places
+in my tarantass, but it will only hold two, and my sister and I
+already fill it."
+
+"Really, sir," answered Alcide, "with your horse and our demi-telga
+we will go to the world's end."
+
+"Sir," said Harry Blount, "we most willingly accept your kind offer.
+And, as to that iemschik--"
+
+"Oh! I assure you that you are not the first travelers who have met
+with a similar misfortune," replied Michael.
+
+"But why should not our driver come back? He knows perfectly
+well that he has left us behind, wretch that he is!"
+
+"He! He never suspected such a thing."
+
+"What! the fellow not know that he was leaving the better half
+of his telga behind?"
+
+"Not a bit, and in all good faith is driving the fore
+part into Ekaterenburg."
+
+"Did I not tell you that it was a good joke, confrere?" cried Alcide.
+
+"Then, gentlemen, if you will follow me," said Michael,
+"we will return to my carriage, and--"
+
+"But the telga," observed the Englishman.
+
+"There is not the slightest fear that it will fly away, my dear Blount!"
+exclaimed Alcide; "it has taken such good root in the ground,
+that if it were left here until next spring it would begin to bud."
+
+"Come then, gentlemen," said Michael Strogoff, "and we will bring
+up the tarantass."
+
+The Frenchman and the Englishman, descending from their seats, no longer
+the hinder one, since the front had taken its departure, followed Michael.
+
+Walking along, Alcide Jolivet chattered away as usual,
+with his invariable good-humor. "Faith, Mr. Korpanoff,"
+said he, "you have indeed got us out of a bad scrape."
+
+"I have only done, sir," replied Michael, "what anyone would
+have done in my place."
+
+"Well, sir, you have done us a good turn, and if you are going
+farther we may possibly meet again, and--"
+
+Alcide Jolivet did not put any direct question to Michael
+as to where he was going, but the latter, not wishing it to be
+suspected that he had anything to conceal, at once replied,
+"I am bound for Omsk, gentlemen."
+
+"Mr. Blount and I," replied Alcide, "go where danger is certainly
+to be found, and without doubt news also."
+
+"To the invaded provinces?" asked Michael with some earnestness.
+
+"Exactly so, Mr. Korpanoff; and we may possibly meet there."
+
+"Indeed, sir," replied Michael, "I have little love for cannon-balls
+or lance points, and am by nature too great a lover of peace to venture
+where fighting is going on."
+
+"I am sorry, sir, extremely sorry; we must only regret that we shall
+separate so soon! But on leaving Ekaterenburg it may be our fortunate
+fate to travel together, if only for a few days?"
+
+"Do you go on to Omsk?" asked Michael, after a moment's reflection.
+
+"We know nothing as yet," replied Alcide; "but we shall
+certainly go as far as Ishim, and once there, our movements
+must depend on circumstances."
+
+"Well then, gentlemen," said Michael, "we will be fellow-travelers
+as far as Ishim."
+
+Michael would certainly have preferred to travel alone, but he could not,
+without appearing at least singular, seek to separate himself
+from the two reporters, who were taking the same road that he was.
+Besides, since Alcide and his companion intended to make some stay
+at Ishim, he thought it rather convenient than otherwise to make
+that part of the journey in their company.
+
+Then in an indifferent tone he asked, "Do you know, with any certainty,
+where this Tartar invasion is?"
+
+"Indeed, sir," replied Alcide, "we only know what they said
+at Perm. Feofar-Khan's Tartars have invaded the whole province
+of Semipolatinsk, and for some days, by forced marches,
+have been descending the Irtish. You must hurry if you wish
+to get to Omsk before them."
+
+"Indeed I must," replied Michael.
+
+"It is reported also that Colonel Ogareff has succeeded in passing
+the frontier in disguise, and that he will not be slow in joining
+the Tartar chief in the revolted country."
+
+"But how do they know it?" asked Michael, whom this news,
+more or less true, so directly concerned.
+
+"Oh! as these things are always known," replied Alcide;
+"it is in the air."
+
+"Then have you really reason to think that Colonel Ogareff
+is in Siberia?"
+
+"I myself have heard it said that he was to take the road
+from Kasan to Ekaterenburg."
+
+"Ah! you know that, Mr. Jolivet?" said Harry Blount,
+roused from his silence.
+
+"I knew it," replied Alcide.
+
+"And do you know that he went disguised as a gypsy!" asked Blount.
+
+"As a gypsy!" exclaimed Michael, almost involuntarily, and he suddenly
+remembered the look of the old Bohemian at Nijni-Novgorod, his voyage
+on board the Caucasus, and his disembarking at Kasan.
+
+"Just well enough to make a few remarks on the subject in a letter
+to my cousin," replied Alcide, smiling.
+
+"You lost no time at Kasan," dryly observed the Englishman.
+
+"No, my dear fellow! and while the Caucasus was laying in her supply
+of fuel, I was employed in obtaining a store of information."
+
+Michael no longer listened to the repartee which Harry Blount
+and Alcide exchanged. He was thinking of the gypsy troupe,
+of the old Tsigane, whose face he had not been able to see,
+and of the strange woman who accompanied him, and then of the
+peculiar glance which she had cast at him. Suddenly, close by
+he heard a pistol-shot.
+
+"Ah! forward, sirs!" cried he.
+
+"Hullo!" said Alcide to himself, "this quiet merchant who always
+avoids bullets is in a great hurry to go where they are flying
+about just now!"
+
+Quickly followed by Harry Blount, who was not a man to be behind
+in danger, he dashed after Michael. In another instant the three
+were opposite the projecting rock which protected the tarantass
+at the turning of the road.
+
+The clump of pines struck by the lightning was still burning.
+There was no one to be seen. However, Michael was not mistaken.
+Suddenly a dreadful growling was heard, and then another report.
+
+"A bear;" cried Michael, who could not mistake the growling.
+"Nadia; Nadia!" And drawing his cutlass from his belt,
+Michael bounded round the buttress behind which the young girl
+had promised to wait.
+
+The pines, completely enveloped in flames, threw a wild glare
+on the scene. As Michael reached the tarantass, a huge animal
+retreated towards him.
+
+It was a monstrous bear. The tempest had driven it from the woods, and it
+had come to seek refuge in this cave, doubtless its habitual retreat,
+which Nadia then occupied.
+
+Two of the horses, terrified at the presence of the enormous creature,
+breaking their traces, had escaped, and the iemschik, thinking only
+of his beasts, leaving Nadia face to face with the bear, had gone
+in pursuit of them.
+
+But the brave girl had not lost her presence of mind.
+The animal, which had not at first seen her, was attacking
+the remaining horse. Nadia, leaving the shelter in which she
+had been crouching, had run to the carriage, taken one of
+Michael's revolvers, and, advancing resolutely towards the bear,
+had fired close to it.
+
+The animal, slightly wounded in the shoulder, turned on the girl,
+who rushed for protection behind the tarantass, but then,
+seeing that the horse was attempting to break its traces,
+and knowing that if it did so, and the others were not recovered,
+their journey could not be continued, with the most perfect
+coolness she again approached the bear, and, as it raised its paws
+to strike her down, gave it the contents of the second barrel.
+
+This was the report which Michael had just heard. In an instant he was
+on the spot. Another bound and he was between the bear and the girl.
+His arm made one movement upwards, and the enormous beast,
+ripped up by that terrible knife, fell to the ground a lifeless mass.
+He had executed in splendid style the famous blow of the Siberian hunters,
+who endeavor not to damage the precious fur of the bear, which fetches
+a high price.
+
+"You are not wounded, sister?" said Michael, springing to the side
+of the young girl.
+
+"No, brother," replied Nadia.
+
+At that moment the two journalists came up. Alcide seized
+the horse's head, and, in an instant, his strong wrist mastered it.
+His companion and he had seen Michael's rapid stroke.
+"Bravo!" cried Alcide; "for a simple merchant, Mr. Korpanoff,
+you handle the hunter's knife in a most masterly fashion."
+
+"Most masterly, indeed," added Blount.
+
+"In Siberia," replied Michael, "we are obliged to do a
+little of everything."
+
+Alcide regarded him attentively. Seen in the bright glare,
+his knife dripping with blood, his tall figure, his foot firm
+on the huge carcass, he was indeed worth looking at.
+
+"A formidable fellow," said Alcide to himself.
+Then advancing respectfully, he saluted the young girl.
+
+Nadia bowed slightly.
+
+Alcide turned towards his companion. "The sister worthy of the brother!"
+said he. "Now, were I a bear, I should not meddle with two so brave
+and so charming."
+
+Harry Blount, perfectly upright, stood, hat in hand, at some distance.
+His companion's easy manners only increased his usual stiffness.
+
+At that moment the iemschik, who had succeeded in recapturing his
+two horses, reappeared. He cast a regretful glance at the magnificent
+animal lying on the ground, loth to leave it to the birds of prey,
+and then proceeded once more to harness his team.
+
+Michael acquainted him with the travelers' situation, and his intention
+of loaning one of the horses.
+
+"As you please," replied the iemschik. "Only, you know,
+two carriages instead of one."
+
+"All right, my friend," said Alcide, who understood the insinuation,
+"we will pay double."
+
+"Then gee up, my turtle-doves!" cried the iemschik.
+
+Nadia again took her place in the tarantass. Michael and his
+companions followed on foot. It was three o'clock. The storm still
+swept with terrific violence across the defile. When the first
+streaks of daybreak appeared the tarantass had reached the telga,
+which was still conscientiously imbedded as far as the center
+of the wheel. Such being the case, it can be easily understood
+how a sudden jerk would separate the front from the hinder part.
+One of the horses was now harnessed by means of cords
+to the remains of the telga, the reporters took their place
+on the singular equipage, and the two carriages started off.
+They had now only to descend the Ural slopes, in doing which there
+was not the slightest difficulty.
+
+Six hours afterwards the two vehicles, the tarantass preceding
+the telga, arrived at Ekaterenburg, nothing worthy of note having
+happened in the descent.
+
+The first person the reporters perceived at the door of the post-house
+was their iemschik, who appeared to be waiting for them.
+This worthy Russian had a fine open countenance, and he smilingly
+approached the travelers, and, holding out his hand, in a quiet
+tone he demanded the usual "pour-boire."
+
+This very cool request roused Blount's ire to its highest pitch,
+and had not the iemschik prudently retreated, a straight-out
+blow of the fist, in true British boxing style, would have paid
+his claim of "na vodkou."
+
+Alcide Jolivet, at this burst of anger, laughed as he had
+never laughed before.
+
+"But the poor devil is quite right!" he cried.
+"He is perfectly right, my dear fellow. It is not his fault
+if we did not know how to follow him!"
+
+Then drawing several copecks from his pocket, "Here my friend,"
+said he, handing them to the iemschik; "take them.
+If you have not earned them, that is not your fault."
+
+This redoubled Mr. Blount's irritation. He even began to speak
+of a lawsuit against the owner of the telga.
+
+"A lawsuit in Russia, my dear fellow!" cried Alcide. "Things must
+indeed change should it ever be brought to a conclusion!
+Did you never hear the story of the wet-nurse who claimed payment
+of twelve months' nursing of some poor little infant?"
+
+"I never heard it," replied Harry Blount.
+
+"Then you do not know what that suckling had become by the time
+judgment was given in favor of the nurse?"
+
+"What was he, pray?"
+
+"Colonel of the Imperial Guard!"
+
+At this reply all burst into a laugh.
+
+Alcide, enchanted with his own joke, drew out his notebook,
+and in it wrote the following memorandum, destined to
+figure in a forthcoming French and Russian dictionary:
+"Telga, a Russian carriage with four wheels, that is when it starts;
+with two wheels, when it arrives at its destination."
+
+
+CHAPTER XII PROVOCATION
+
+EKATERENBURG, geographically, is an Asiatic city; for it is situated
+beyond the Ural Mountains, on the farthest eastern slopes of the chain.
+Nevertheless, it belongs to the government of Perm; and, consequently,
+is included in one of the great divisions of European Russia. It is
+as though a morsel of Siberia lay in Russian jaws.
+
+Neither Michael nor his companions were likely to experience
+the slightest difficulty in obtaining means of continuing their
+journey in so large a town as Ekaterenburg. It was founded in 1723,
+and has since become a place of considerable size, for in it
+is the chief mint of the empire. There also are the headquarters
+of the officials employed in the management of the mines.
+Thus the town is the center of an important district,
+abounding in manufactories principally for the working and refining
+of gold and platina.
+
+Just now the population of Ekaterenburg had greatly increased;
+many Russians and Siberians, menaced by the Tartar invasion,
+having collected there. Thus, though it had been so troublesome
+a matter to find horses and vehicles when going to Ekaterenburg,
+there was no difficulty in leaving it; for under present circumstances
+few travelers cared to venture on the Siberian roads.
+
+So it happened that Blount and Alcide had not the slightest trouble
+in replacing, by a sound telga, the famous demi-carriage which had managed
+to take them to Ekaterenburg. As to Michael, he retained his tarantass,
+which was not much the worse for its journey across the Urals;
+and he had only to harness three good horses to it to take him swiftly
+over the road to Irkutsk.
+
+As far as Tioumen, and even up to Novo-Zaimskoe, this road has
+slight inclines, which gentle undulations are the first signs
+of the slopes of the Ural Mountains. But after Novo-Zaimskoe
+begins the immense steppe.
+
+At Ichim, as we have said, the reporters intended to stop, that is at
+about four hundred and twenty miles from Ekaterenburg. There they
+intended to be guided by circumstances as to their route across
+the invaded country, either together or separately, according as their
+news-hunting instinct set them on one track or another.
+
+This road from Ekaterenburg to Ichim--which passes through Irkutsk--
+was the only one which Michael could take. But, as he did not run
+after news, and wished, on the contrary, to avoid the country
+devastated by the invaders, he determined to stop nowhere.
+
+"I am very happy to make part of my journey in your company,"
+said he to his new companions, "but I must tell you that I am most anxious
+to reach Omsk; for my sister and I are going to rejoin our mother.
+Who can say whether we shall arrive before the Tartars reach the town!
+I must therefore stop at the post-houses only long enough to
+change horses, and must travel day and night."
+
+"That is exactly what we intend doing," replied Blount.
+
+"Good," replied Michael; "but do not lose an instant.
+Buy or hire a carriage whose--"
+
+"Whose hind wheels," added Alcide, "are warranted to arrive
+at the same time as its front wheels."
+
+Half an hour afterwards the energetic Frenchman had found a
+tarantass in which he and his companion at once seated themselves.
+Michael and Nadia once more entered their own carriage, and at twelve
+o'clock the two vehicles left the town of Ekaterenburg together.
+
+Nadia was at last in Siberia, on that long road which led
+to Irkutsk. What must then have been the thoughts of the young girl?
+Three strong swift horses were taking her across that land
+of exile where her parent was condemned to live, for how long
+she knew not, and so far from his native land. But she scarcely
+noticed those long steppes over which the tarantass was rolling,
+and which at one time she had despaired of ever seeing,
+for her eyes were gazing at the horizon, beyond which she knew
+her banished father was. She saw nothing of the country across
+which she was traveling at the rate of fifteen versts an hour;
+nothing of these regions of Western Siberia, so different from
+those of the east. Here, indeed, were few cultivated fields;
+the soil was poor, at least at the surface, but in its bowels
+lay hid quantities of iron, copper, platina, and gold.
+How can hands be found to cultivate the land, when it pays better
+to burrow beneath the earth? The pickaxe is everywhere at work;
+the spade nowhere.
+
+However, Nadia's thoughts sometimes left the provinces
+of Lake Baikal, and returned to her present situation.
+Her father's image faded away, and was replaced by that of her
+generous companion as he first appeared on the Vladimir railroad.
+She recalled his attentions during that journey, his arrival at
+the police-station, the hearty simplicity with which he had called
+her sister, his kindness to her in the descent of the Volga,
+and then all that he did for her on that terrible night
+of the storm in the Urals, when he saved her life at the peril
+of his own.
+
+Thus Nadia thought of Michael. She thanked God for having given
+her such a gallant protector, a friend so generous and wise.
+She knew that she was safe with him, under his protection.
+No brother could have done more than he. All obstacles
+seemed cleared away; the performance of her journey was but a
+matter of time.
+
+Michael remained buried in thought. He also thanked God
+for having brought about this meeting with Nadia, which at
+the same time enabled him to do a good action, and afforded
+him additional means for concealing his true character.
+He delighted in the young girl's calm intrepidity.
+Was she not indeed his sister? His feeling towards his beautiful
+and brave companion was rather respect than affection.
+He felt that hers was one of those pure and rare hearts which
+are held by all in high esteem.
+
+However, Michael's dangers were now beginning, since he had
+reached Siberian ground. If the reporters were not mistaken,
+if Ivan Ogareff had really passed the frontier, all his actions
+must be made with extreme caution. Things were now altered;
+Tartar spies swarmed in the Siberian provinces. His incognito
+once discovered, his character as courier of the Czar known,
+there was an end of his journey, and probably of his life.
+Michael felt now more than ever the weight of his responsibility.
+
+While such were the thoughts of those occupying the first carriage,
+what was happening in the second? Nothing out of the way.
+Alcide spoke in sentences; Blount replied by monosyllables.
+Each looked at everything in his own light, and made notes of such
+incidents as occurred on the journey--few and but slightly varied--
+while they crossed the provinces of Western Siberia.
+
+At each relay the reporters descended from their carriage
+and found themselves with Michael. Except when meals were to be
+taken at the post-houses, Nadia did not leave the tarantass.
+When obliged to breakfast or dine, she sat at table, but was
+always very reserved, and seldom joined in conversation.
+
+Alcide, without going beyond the limits of strict propriety,
+showed that he was greatly struck by the young girl.
+He admired the silent energy which she showed in bearing all
+the fatigues of so difficult a journey.
+
+The forced stoppages were anything but agreeable to Michael;
+so he hastened the departure at each relay, roused the innkeepers,
+urged on the iemschiks, and expedited the harnessing of the tarantass.
+Then the hurried meal over--always much too hurried to agree with Blount,
+who was a methodical eater--they started, and were driven as eagles,
+for they paid like princes.
+
+It need scarcely be said that Blount did not trouble himself
+about the girl at table. That gentleman was not in the habit
+of doing two things at once. She was also one of the few
+subjects of conversation which he did not care to discuss
+with his companion.
+
+Alcide having asked him, on one occasion, how old he thought the girl,
+"What girl?" he replied, quite seriously.
+
+"Why, Nicholas Korpanoff's sister."
+
+"Is she his sister?"
+
+"No; his grandmother!" replied Alcide, angry at his indifference.
+"What age should you consider her?"
+
+"Had I been present at her birth I might have known."
+
+Very few of the Siberian peasants were to be seen in the fields.
+These peasants are remarkable for their pale, grave faces,
+which a celebrated traveler has compared to those of the Castilians,
+without the haughtiness of the latter. Here and there some villages
+already deserted indicated the approach of the Tartar hordes.
+The inhabitants, having driven off their flocks of sheep, their camels,
+and their horses, were taking refuge in the plains of the north.
+Some tribes of the wandering Kirghiz, who remained faithful,
+had transported their tents beyond the Irtych, to escape the depredations
+of the invaders.
+
+Happily, post traveling was as yet uninterrupted; and telegraphic
+communication could still be effected between places connected with
+the wire. At each relay horses were to be had on the usual conditions.
+At each telegraphic station the clerks transmitted messages delivered
+to them, delaying for State dispatches alone.
+
+Thus far, then, Michael's journey had been accomplished satisfactorily.
+The courier of the Czar had in no way been impeded; and, if he could
+only get on to Krasnoiarsk, which seemed the farthest point attained
+by Feofar-Khan's Tartars, he knew that he could arrive at Irkutsk,
+before them. The day after the two carriages had left Ekaterenburg they
+reached the small town of Toulouguisk at seven o'clock in the morning,
+having covered two hundred and twenty versts, no event worthy
+of mention having occurred. The same evening, the 22d of July,
+they arrived at Tioumen.
+
+Tioumen, whose population is usually ten thousand inhabitants,
+then contained double that number. This, the first industrial
+town established by the Russians in Siberia, in which may
+be seen a fine metal-refining factory and a bell foundry,
+had never before presented such an animated appearance.
+The correspondents immediately went off after news.
+That brought by Siberian fugitives from the seat of war
+was far from reassuring. They said, amongst other things,
+that Feofar-Khan's army was rapidly approaching the valley
+of the Ichim, and they confirmed the report that the Tartar
+chief was soon to be joined by Colonel Ogareff, if he had not
+been so already. Hence the conclusion was that operations
+would be pushed in Eastern Siberia with the greatest activity.
+However, the loyal Cossacks of the government of Tobolsk
+were advancing by forced marches towards Tomsk, in the hope
+of cutting off the Tartar columns.
+
+At midnight the town of Novo-Saimsk was reached; and the travelers
+now left behind them the country broken by tree-covered hills,
+the last remains of the Urals.
+
+Here began the regular Siberian steppe which extends to the neighborhood
+of Krasnoiarsk. It is a boundless plain, a vast grassy desert;
+earth and sky here form a circle as distinct as that traced
+by a sweep of the compasses. The steppe presents nothing
+to attract notice but the long line of the telegraph posts,
+their wires vibrating in the breeze like the strings of a harp.
+The road could be distinguished from the rest of the plain only by
+the clouds of fine dust which rose under the wheels of the tarantass.
+Had it not been for this white riband, which stretched away as far
+as the eye could reach, the travelers might have thought themselves
+in a desert.
+
+Michael and his companions again pressed rapidly forward.
+The horses, urged on by the iemschik, seemed to fly over the ground,
+for there was not the slightest obstacle to impede them.
+The tarantass was going straight for Ichim, where the two
+correspondents intended to stop, if nothing happened to make
+them alter their plans.
+
+A hundred and twenty miles separated Novo-Saimsk from the town
+of Ichim, and before eight o'clock the next evening the distance
+could and should be accomplished if no time was lost.
+In the opinion of the iemschiks, should the travelers not be
+great lords or high functionaries, they were worthy of being so,
+if it was only for their generosity in the matter of "na vodkou."
+
+On the afternoon of the next day, the 23rd of July, the two carriages
+were not more than thirty versts from Ichim. Suddenly Michael caught
+sight of a carriage--scarcely visible among the clouds of dust--
+preceding them along the road. As his horses were evidently less
+fatigued than those of the other traveler, he would not be long
+in overtaking it. This was neither a tarantass nor a telga,
+but a post-berlin, which looked as if it had made a long journey.
+The postillion was thrashing his horses with all his might,
+and only kept them at a gallop by dint of abuse and blows.
+The berlin had certainly not passed through Novo-Saimsk, and could
+only have struck the Irkutsk road by some less frequented route
+across the steppe.
+
+Our travelers' first thought, on seeing this berlin, was to get in front
+of it, and arrive first at the relay, so as to make sure of fresh horses.
+They said a word to their iemschiks, who soon brought them up
+with the berlin.
+
+Michael Strogoff came up first. As he passed, a head was thrust
+out of the window of the berlin.
+
+He had not time to see what it was like, but as he dashed by he distinctly
+heard this word, uttered in an imperious tone: "Stop!"
+
+But they did not stop; on the contrary, the berlin was soon distanced
+by the two tarantasses.
+
+It now became a regular race; for the horses of the berlin--
+no doubt excited by the sight and pace of the others--
+recovered their strength and kept up for some minutes.
+The three carriages were hidden in a cloud of dust.
+From this cloud issued the cracking of whips mingled with excited
+shouts and exclamations of anger.
+
+Nevertheless, the advantage remained with Michael and his companions,
+which might be very important to them if the relay was poorly provided
+with horses. Two carriages were perhaps more than the postmaster could
+provide for, at least in a short space of time.
+
+Half an hour after the berlin was left far behind, looking only a speck
+on the horizon of the steppe.
+
+It was eight o'clock in the evening when the two carriages
+reached Ichim. The news was worse and worse with regard to
+the invasion. The town itself was menaced by the Tartar vanguard;
+and two days before the authorities had been obliged to retreat
+to Tobolsk. There was not an officer nor a soldier left in Ichim.
+
+On arriving at the relay, Michael Strogoff immediately asked
+for horses. He had been fortunate in distancing the berlin.
+Only three horses were fit to be harnessed. The others had
+just come in worn out from a long stage.
+
+As the two correspondents intended to stop at Ichim, they had not to
+trouble themselves to find transport, and had their carriage put away.
+In ten minutes Michael was told that his tarantass was ready to start.
+
+"Good," said he.
+
+Then turning to the two reporters: "Well, gentlemen, the time
+is come for us to separate."
+
+"What, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide Jolivet, "shall you not stop
+even for an hour at Ichim?"
+
+"No, sir; and I also wish to leave the post-house before the arrival
+of the berlin which we distanced."
+
+"Are you afraid that the traveler will dispute the horses with you?"
+
+"I particularly wish to avoid any difficulty."
+
+"Then, Mr. Korpanoff," said Jolivet, "it only remains for us
+to thank you once more for the service you rendered us,
+and the pleasure we have had in traveling with you."
+
+"It is possible that we shall meet you again in a few days
+at Omsk," added Blount.
+
+"It is possible," answered Michael, "since I am going straight there."
+
+"Well, I wish you a safe journey, Mr. Korpanoff," said Alcide,
+"and Heaven preserve you from telgas."
+
+The two reporters held out their hands to Michael with the intention
+of cordially shaking his, when the sound of a carriage was heard outside.
+Almost immediately the door was flung open and a man appeared.
+
+It was the traveler of the berlin, a military-looking man,
+apparently about forty years of age, tall, robust in figure,
+broad-shouldered, with a strongly-set head, and thick
+mus-taches meeting red whiskers. He wore a plain uniform.
+A cavalry saber hung at his side, and in his hand he held
+a short-handled whip.
+
+"Horses," he demanded, with the air of a man accustomed to command.
+
+"I have no more disposable horses," answered the postmaster, bowing.
+
+"I must have some this moment."
+
+"It is impossible."
+
+"What are those horses which have just been harnessed to the tarantass
+I saw at the door?"
+
+"They belong to this traveler," answered the postmaster,
+pointing to Michael Strogoff.
+
+"Take them out!" said the traveler in a tone which admitted
+of no reply.
+
+Michael then advanced.
+
+"These horses are engaged by me," he said.
+
+"What does that matter? I must have them. Come, be quick;
+I have no time to lose."
+
+"I have no time to lose either," replied Michael, restraining
+himself with difficulty.
+
+Nadia was near him, calm also, but secretly uneasy at a scene
+which it would have been better to avoid.
+
+"Enough!" said the traveler. Then, going up to the postmaster,
+"Let the horses be put into my berlin," he exclaimed with
+a threatening gesture.
+
+The postmaster, much embarrassed, did not know whom to obey,
+and looked at Michael, who evidently had the right to resist
+the unjust demands of the traveler.
+
+Michael hesitated an instant. He did not wish to make use
+of his podorojna, which would have drawn attention to him,
+and he was most unwilling also, by giving up his horses,
+to delay his journey, and yet he must not engage in a struggle
+which might compromise his mission.
+
+The two reporters looked at him ready to support him should
+he appeal to them.
+
+"My horses will remain in my carriage," said Michael, but without raising
+his tone more than would be suitable for a plain Irkutsk merchant.
+
+The traveler advanced towards Michael and laid his hand
+heavily on his shoulder. "Is it so?" he said roughly.
+"You will not give up your horses to me?"
+
+"No," answered Michael.
+
+"Very well, they shall belong to whichever of us is able to start.
+Defend yourself; I shall not spare you!"
+
+So saying, the traveler drew his saber from its sheath,
+and Nadia threw herself before Michael.
+
+Blount and Alcide Jolivet advanced towards him.
+
+"I shall not fight," said Michael quietly, folding his arms
+across his chest.
+
+"You will not fight?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Not even after this?" exclaimed the traveler. And before anyone
+could prevent him, he struck Michael's shoulder with the handle
+of the whip. At this insult Michael turned deadly pale.
+His hands moved convulsively as if he would have knocked the brute down.
+But by a tremendous effort he mastered himself. A duel! it was
+more than a delay; it was perhaps the failure of his mission.
+It would be better to lose some hours. Yes; but to swallow this affront!
+
+"Will you fight now, coward?" repeated the traveler,
+adding coarseness to brutality.
+
+"No," answered Michael, without moving, but looking the other straight
+in the face.
+
+"The horses this moment," said the man, and left the room.
+
+The postmaster followed him, after shrugging his shoulders and bestowing
+on Michael a glance of anything but approbation.
+
+The effect produced on the reporters by this incident was not
+to Michael's advantage. Their discomfiture was visible.
+How could this strong young man allow himself to be struck
+like that and not demand satisfaction for such an insult?
+They contented themselves with bowing to him and retired,
+Jolivet remarking to Harry Blount
+
+"I could not have believed that of a man who is so skillful
+in finishing up Ural Mountain bears. Is it the case that a
+man can be courageous at one time and a coward at another?
+It is quite incomprehensible."
+
+A moment afterwards the noise of wheels and whip showed that
+the berlin, drawn by the tarantass' horses, was driving rapidly
+away from the post-house.
+
+Nadia, unmoved, and Michael, still quivering, remained alone in the room.
+The courier of the Czar, his arms crossed over his chest was seated
+motionless as a statue. A color, which could not have been the blush
+of shame, had replaced the paleness on his countenance.
+
+Nadia did not doubt that powerful reasons alone could have allowed him
+to suffer so great a humiliation from such a man. Going up to him
+as he had come to her in the police-station at Nijni-Novgorod:
+
+"Your hand, brother," said she.
+
+And at the same time her hand, with an almost maternal gesture,
+wiped away a tear which sprang to her companion's eye.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII DUTY BEFORE EVERYTHING
+
+NADIA, with the clear perception of a right-minded woman,
+guessed that some secret motive directed all Michael Strogoff's actions;
+that he, for a reason unknown to her, did not belong to himself;
+and that in this instance especially he had heroically sacrificed
+to duty even his resentment at the gross injury he had received.
+
+Nadia, therefore, asked no explanation from Michael. Had not the hand
+which she had extended to him already replied to all that he might have
+been able to tell her?
+
+Michael remained silent all the evening. The postmaster
+not being able to supply them with fresh horses until
+the next morning, a whole night must be passed at the house.
+Nadia could profit by it to take some rest, and a room was
+therefore prepared for her.
+
+The young girl would no doubt have preferred not to leave her companion,
+but she felt that he would rather be alone, and she made ready to go
+to her room.
+
+Just as she was about to retire she could not refrain from going up
+to Michael to say good-night.
+
+"Brother," she whispered. But he checked her with a gesture.
+The girl sighed and left the room.
+
+Michael Strogoff did not lie down. He could not have slept even
+for an hour. The place on which he had been struck by the brutal
+traveler felt like a burn.
+
+"For my country and the Father," he muttered as he ended
+his evening prayer.
+
+He especially felt a great wish to know who was the man
+who had struck him, whence he came, and where he was going.
+As to his face, the features of it were so deeply engraven
+on his memory that he had no fear of ever forgetting them.
+
+Michael Strogoff at last asked for the postmaster. The latter,
+a Siberian of the old type, came directly, and looking rather
+contemptuously at the young man, waited to be questioned.
+
+"You belong to the country?" asked Michael.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you know that man who took my horses?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Had you never seen him before?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Who do you think he was?"
+
+"A man who knows how to make himself obeyed."
+
+Michael fixed his piercing gaze upon the Siberian, but the other did
+not quail before it.
+
+"Do you dare to judge me?" exclaimed Michael.
+
+"Yes," answered the Siberian, "there are some things even a plain
+merchant cannot receive without returning."
+
+"Blows?"
+
+"Blows, young man. I am of an age and strength to tell you so."
+
+Michael went up to the postmaster and laid his two powerful hands
+on his shoulders.
+
+Then in a peculiarly calm tone, "Be off, my friend," said he:
+"be off! I could kill you."
+
+The postmaster understood. "I like him better for that,"
+he muttered and retired without another word.
+
+At eight o'clock the next morning, the 24th of July,
+three strong horses were harnessed to the tarantass.
+Michael Strogoff and Nadia took their places, and Ichim,
+with its disagreeable remembrances, was soon left far behind.
+
+At the different relays at which they stopped during the day Strogoff
+ascertained that the berlin still preceded them on the road to Irkutsk,
+and that the traveler, as hurried as they were, never lost a minute
+in pursuing his way across the steppe.
+
+At four o'clock in the evening they reached Abatskaia,
+fifty miles farther on, where the Ichim, one of the principal
+affluents of the Irtych, had to be crossed. This passage
+was rather more difficult than that of the Tobol. Indeed the
+current of the Ichim was very rapid just at that place.
+During the Siberian winter, the rivers being all frozen
+to a thickness of several feet, they are easily practicable,
+and the traveler even crosses them without being aware of the fact,
+for their beds have disappeared under the snowy sheet spread
+uniformly over the steppe; but in summer the difficulties
+of crossing are sometimes great.
+
+In fact, two hours were taken up in making the passage
+of the Ichim, which much exasperated Michael, especially as
+the boatmen gave them alarming news of the Tartar invasion.
+Some of Feofar-Khan's scouts had already appeared on both banks
+of the lower Ichim, in the southern parts of the government
+of Tobolsk. Omsk was threatened. They spoke of an engagement
+which had taken place between the Siberian and Tartar troops
+on the frontier of the great Kirghese horde--an engagement not
+to the advantage of the Russians, who were weak in numbers.
+The troops had retreated thence, and in consequence there had
+been a general emigration of all the peasants of the province.
+The boatmen spoke of horrible atrocities committed by the invaders--
+pillage, theft, incendiarism, murder. Such was the system
+of Tartar warfare.
+
+The people all fled before Feofar-Khan. Michael Strogoff's
+great fear was lest, in the depopulation of the towns,
+he should be unable to obtain the means of transport.
+He was therefore extremely anxious to reach Omsk. Perhaps there
+they would get the start of the Tartar scouts, who were coming
+down the valley of the Irtych, and would find the road
+open to Irkutsk.
+
+Just at the place where the tarantass crossed the river ended
+what is called, in military language, the "Ichim chain"--a chain
+of towers, or little wooden forts, extending from the southern
+frontier of Siberia for a distance of nearly four hundred versts.
+Formerly these forts were occupied by detachments of Cossacks,
+and they protected the country against the Kirghese, as well as
+against the Tartars. But since the Muscovite Government had believed
+these hordes reduced to absolute submission, they had been abandoned,
+and now could not be used; just at the time when they were needed.
+Many of these forts had been reduced to ashes; and the boatmen even
+pointed out the smoke to Michael, rising in the southern horizon,
+and showing the approach of the Tartar advance-guard.
+
+As soon as the ferryboat landed the tarantass on the right bank of
+the Ichim, the journey across the steppe was resumed with all speed.
+Michael Strogoff remained very silent. He was, however, always
+attentive to Nadia, helping her to bear the fatigue of this long
+journey without break or rest; but the girl never complained.
+She longed to give wings to the horses. Something told her that
+her companion was even more anxious than herself to reach Irkutsk;
+and how many versts were still between!
+
+It also occurred to her that if Omsk was entered by
+the Tartars, Michael's mother, who lived there, would be in danger,
+and that this was sufficient to explain her son's impatience
+to get to her.
+
+Nadia at last spoke to him of old Marfa, and of how unprotected
+she would be in the midst of all these events.
+
+"Have you received any news of your mother since the beginning
+of the invasion?" she asked.
+
+"None, Nadia. The last letter my mother wrote to me contained
+good news. Marfa is a brave and energetic Siberian woman.
+Notwithstanding her age, she has preserved all her moral strength.
+She knows how to suffer."
+
+"I shall see her, brother," said Nadia quickly. "Since you give me
+the name of sister, I am Marfa's daughter."
+
+And as Michael did not answer she added:
+
+"Perhaps your mother has been able to leave Omsk?"
+
+"It is possible, Nadia," replied Michael; "and I hope she may have
+reached Tobolsk. Marfa hates the Tartars. She knows the steppe,
+and would have no fear in just taking her staff and going down the banks
+of the Irtych. There is not a spot in all the province unknown to her.
+Many times has she traveled all over the country with my father;
+and many times I myself, when a mere child, have accompanied them
+across the Siberian desert. Yes, Nadia, I trust that my mother
+has left Omsk."
+
+"And when shall you see her?"
+
+"I shall see her--on my return."
+
+"If, however, your mother is still at Omsk, you will be able to spare
+an hour to go to her?"
+
+"I shall not go and see her."
+
+"You will not see her?"
+
+"No, Nadia," said Michael, his chest heaving as he felt he could
+not go on replying to the girl's questions.
+
+"You say no! Why, brother, if your mother is still at Omsk,
+for what reason could you refuse to see her?"
+
+"For what reason, Nadia? You ask me for what reason," exclaimed Michael,
+in so changed a voice that the young girl started. "For the same reason
+as that which made me patient even to cowardice with the villain who--"
+He could not finish his sentence.
+
+"Calm yourself, brother," said Nadia in a gentle voice.
+"I only know one thing, or rather I do not know it, I feel it.
+It is that all your conduct is now directed by the sentiment
+of a duty more sacred--if there can be one--than that which unites
+the son to the mother."
+
+Nadia was silent, and from that moment avoided every subject
+which in any way touched on Michael's peculiar situation.
+He had a secret motive which she must respect. She respected it.
+
+The next day, July 25th, at three o'clock in the morning, the tarantass
+arrived at Tioukalmsk, having accomplished a distance of eighty
+miles since it had crossed the Ichim. They rapidly changed horses.
+Here, however, for the first time, the iemschik made difficulties
+about starting, declaring that detachments of Tartars were roving
+across the steppe, and that travelers, horses, and carriages would
+be a fine prize for them.
+
+Only by dint of a large bribe could Michael get over
+the unwillingness of the iemschik, for in this instance,
+as in many others, he did not wish to show his podorojna.
+The last ukase, having been transmitted by telegraph, was known
+in the Siberian provinces; and a Russian specially exempted from
+obeying these words would certainly have drawn public attention
+to himself--a thing above all to be avoided by the Czar's courier.
+As to the iemschik's hesitation, either the rascal traded on
+the traveler's impatience or he really had good reason to fear.
+
+However, at last the tarantass started, and made such good way
+that by three in the afternoon it had reached Koulatsinskoe,
+fifty miles farther on. An hour after this it was on the banks
+of the Irtych. Omsk was now only fourteen miles distant.
+
+The Irtych is a large river, and one of the principal of those which flow
+towards the north of Asia. Rising in the Altai Mountains, it flows
+from the southeast to the northwest and empties itself into the Obi,
+after a course of four thousand miles.
+
+At this time of year, when all the rivers of the Siberian basin
+are much swollen, the waters of the Irtych were very high.
+In consequence the current was changed to a regular torrent,
+rendering the passage difficult enough. A swimmer could not
+have crossed, however powerful; and even in a ferryboat there
+would be some danger.
+
+But Michael and Nadia, determined to brave all perils whatever
+they might be, did not dream of shrinking from this one.
+Michael proposed to his young companion that he should cross first,
+embarking in the ferryboat with the tarantass and horses,
+as he feared that the weight of this load would render it less safe.
+After landing the carriage he would return and fetch Nadia.
+
+The girl refused. It would be the delay of an hour, and she would not,
+for her safety alone, be the cause of it.
+
+The embarkation was made not without difficulty, for the banks
+were partly flooded and the boat could not get in near enough.
+However, after half an hour's exertion, the boatmen got the tarantass
+and the three horses on board. The passengers embarked also,
+and they shoved off.
+
+For a few minutes all went well. A little way up the river
+the current was broken by a long point projecting from the bank,
+and forming an eddy easily crossed by the boat. The two boatmen
+propelled their barge with long poles, which they handled cleverly;
+but as they gained the middle of the stream it grew deeper
+and deeper, until at last they could only just reach the bottom.
+The ends of the poles were only a foot above the water,
+which rendered their use difficult. Michael and Nadia,
+seated in the stern of the boat, and always in dread of a delay,
+watched the boatmen with some uneasiness.
+
+"Look out!" cried one of them to his comrade.
+
+The shout was occasioned by the new direction the boat was
+rapidly taking. It had got into the direct current and was
+being swept down the river. By diligent use of the poles,
+putting the ends in a series of notches cut below the gunwale,
+the boatmen managed to keep the craft against the stream,
+and slowly urged it in a slanting direction towards the right bank.
+
+They calculated on reaching it some five or six versts below
+the landing place; but, after all, that would not matter
+so long as men and beasts could disembark without accident.
+The two stout boatmen, stimulated moreover by the promise
+of double fare, did not doubt of succeeding in this difficult
+passage of the Irtych.
+
+But they reckoned without an accident which they were powerless
+to prevent, and neither their zeal nor their skill-fulness could,
+under the circumstances, have done more.
+
+The boat was in the middle of the current, at nearly equal
+distances from either shore, and being carried down at the rate
+of two versts an hour, when Michael, springing to his feet,
+bent his gaze up the river.
+
+Several boats, aided by oars as well as by the current,
+were coming swiftly down upon them.
+
+Michael's brow contracted, and a cry escaped him.
+
+"What is the matter?" asked the girl.
+
+But before Michael had time to reply one of the boatmen exclaimed
+in an accent of terror:
+
+"The Tartars! the Tartars!"
+
+There were indeed boats full of soldiers, and in a few minutes they must
+reach the ferryboat, it being too heavily laden to escape from them.
+
+The terrified boatmen uttered exclamations of despair and
+dropped their poles.
+
+"Courage, my friends!" cried Michael; "courage! Fifty roubles for you
+if we reach the right bank before the boats overtake us."
+
+Incited by these words, the boatmen again worked manfully but it soon
+become evident that they could not escape the Tartars.
+
+It was scarcely probable that they would pass without attacking them.
+On the contrary, there was everything to be feared from robbers
+such as these.
+
+"Do not be afraid, Nadia," said Michael; "but be ready for anything."
+
+"I am ready," replied Nadia.
+
+"Even to leap into the water when I tell you?"
+
+"Whenever you tell me."
+
+"Have confidence in me, Nadia."
+
+"I have, indeed!"
+
+The Tartar boats were now only a hundred feet distant.
+They carried a detachment of Bokharian soldiers, on their way
+to reconnoiter around Omsk.
+
+The ferryboat was still two lengths from the shore.
+The boatmen redoubled their efforts. Michael himself
+seized a pole and wielded it with superhuman strength.
+If he could land the tarantass and horses, and dash off
+with them, there was some chance of escaping the Tartars,
+who were not mounted.
+
+But all their efforts were in vain. "Saryn na kitchou!"
+shouted the soldiers from the first boat.
+
+Michael recognized the Tartar war-cry, which is usually answered
+by lying flat on the ground. As neither he nor the boatmen obeyed
+a volley was let fly, and two of the horses were mortally wounded.
+
+At the next moment a violent blow was felt. The boats had run
+into the ferryboat.
+
+"Come, Nadia!" cried Michael, ready to jump overboard.
+
+The girl was about to follow him, when a blow from a lance struck him,
+and he was thrown into the water. The current swept him away, his hand
+raised for an instant above the waves, and then he disappeared.
+
+Nadia uttered a cry, but before she had time to throw herself
+after him she was seized and dragged into one of the boats.
+The boatmen were killed, the ferryboat left to drift away,
+and the Tartars continued to descend the Irtych.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV MOTHER AND SON
+
+OMSK is the official capital of Western Siberia. It is not
+the most important city of the government of that name, for Tomsk
+has more inhabitants and is larger. But it is at Omsk that the
+Governor-General of this the first half of Asiatic Russia resides.
+Omsk, properly so called, is composed of two distinct towns:
+one which is exclusively inhabited by the authorities and officials;
+the other more especially devoted to the Siberian merchants,
+although, indeed, the trade of the town is of small importance.
+
+This city has about 12,000 to 13,000 inhabitants.
+It is defended by walls, but these are merely of earth,
+and could afford only insufficient protection. The Tartars,
+who were well aware of this fact, consequently tried at this
+period to carry it by main force, and in this they succeeded,
+after an investment of a few days.
+
+The garrison of Omsk, reduced to two thousand men, resisted valiantly.
+But driven back, little by little, from the mercantile portion
+of the place, they were compelled to take refuge in the upper town.
+
+It was there that the Governor-General, his officers, and soldiers
+had entrenched themselves. They had made the upper quarter of Omsk
+a kind of citadel, and hitherto they held out well in this species
+of improvised "kreml," but without much hope of the promised succor.
+The Tartar troops, who were descending the Irtych, received every
+day fresh reinforcements, and, what was more serious,
+they were led by an officer, a traitor to his country, but a man
+of much note, and of an audacity equal to any emergency.
+This man was Colonel Ivan Ogareff.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, terrible as any of the most savage Tartar chieftains,
+was an educated soldier. Possessing on his mother's side some
+Mongolian blood, he delighted in deceptive strategy and ambuscades,
+stopping short of nothing when he desired to fathom some secret
+or to set some trap. Deceitful by nature, he willingly had recourse
+to the vilest trickery; lying when occasion demanded, excelling in
+the adoption of all disguises and in every species of deception.
+Further, he was cruel, and had even acted as an executioner.
+Feofar-Khan possessed in him a lieutenant well capable of seconding
+his designs in this savage war.
+
+When Michael Strogoff arrived on the banks of the Irtych, Ivan Ogareff
+was already master of Omsk, and was pressing the siege of the upper
+quarter of the town all the more eagerly because he must hasten to Tomsk,
+where the main body of the Tartar army was concentrated.
+
+Tomsk, in fact, had been taken by Feofar-Khan some days previously,
+and it was thence that the invaders, masters of Central Siberia,
+were to march upon Irkutsk.
+
+Irkutsk was the real object of Ivan Ogareff. The plan of the traitor
+was to reach the Grand Duke under a false name, to gain his confidence,
+and to deliver into Tartar hands the town and the Grand Duke himself.
+With such a town, and such a hostage, all Asiatic Siberia must necessarily
+fall into the hands of the invaders. Now it was known that the Czar
+was acquainted with this conspiracy, and that it was for the purpose of
+baffling it that a courier had been intrusted with the important warning.
+Hence, therefore, the very stringent instructions which had been given
+to the young courier to pass incognito through the invaded district.
+
+This mission he had so far faithfully performed, but now could
+he carry it to a successful completion?
+
+The blow which had struck Michael Strogoff was not mortal.
+By swimming in a manner by which he had effectually concealed himself,
+he had reached the right bank, where he fell exhausted among the bushes.
+
+When he recovered his senses, he found himself in the cabin of a mujik,
+who had picked him up and cared for him. For how long a time had
+he been the guest of this brave Siberian? He could not guess.
+But when he opened his eyes he saw the handsome bearded face
+bending over him, and regarding him with pitying eyes.
+"Do not speak, little father," said the mujik, "Do not speak!
+Thou art still too weak. I will tell thee where thou art
+and everything that has passed."
+
+And the mujik related to Michael Strogoff the different incidents
+of the struggle which he had witnessed--the attack upon the ferry
+by the Tartar boats, the pillage of the tarantass, and the massacre
+of the boatmen.
+
+But Michael Strogoff listened no longer, and slipping his hand under
+his garment he felt the imperial letter still secured in his breast.
+He breathed a sigh of relief.
+
+But that was not all. "A young girl accompanied me," said he.
+
+"They have not killed her," replied the mujik, anticipating the anxiety
+which he read in the eyes of his guest. "They have carried her off
+in their boat, and have continued the descent of Irtych. It is only
+one prisoner more to join the many they are taking to Tomsk!"
+
+Michael Strogoff was unable to reply. He pressed his hand upon
+his heart to restrain its beating. But, notwithstanding these
+many trials, the sentiment of duty mastered his whole soul.
+"Where am I?" asked he.
+
+"Upon the right bank of the Irtych, only five versts from Omsk,"
+replied the mujik.
+
+"What wound can I have received which could have thus prostrated me?
+It was not a gunshot wound?"
+
+"No; a lance-thrust in the head, now healing," replied the mujik.
+"After a few days' rest, little father, thou wilt be able to proceed.
+Thou didst fall into the river; but the Tartars neither touched nor
+searched thee; and thy purse is still in thy pocket."
+
+Michael Strogoff gripped the mujik's hand. Then, recovering himself
+with a sudden effort, "Friend," said he, "how long have I been
+in thy hut?"
+
+"Three days."
+
+"Three days lost!"
+
+"Three days hast thou lain unconscious."
+
+"Hast thou a horse to sell me?"
+
+"Thou wishest to go?"
+
+"At once."
+
+"I have neither horse nor carriage, little father.
+Where the Tartar has passed there remains nothing!"
+
+"Well, I will go on foot to Omsk to find a horse."
+
+"A few more hours of rest, and thou wilt be in a better condition
+to pursue thy journey."
+
+"Not an hour!"
+
+"Come now," replied the mujik, recognizing the fact that it was useless
+to struggle against the will of his guest, "I will guide thee myself.
+Besides," he added, "the Russians are still in great force at Omsk,
+and thou couldst, perhaps, pass unperceived."
+
+"Friend," replied Michael Strogoff, "Heaven reward thee for all thou
+hast done for me!"
+
+"Only fools expect reward on earth," replied the mujik.
+
+Michael Strogoff went out of the hut. When he tried to walk he was
+seized with such faintness that, without the assistance of the mujik,
+he would have fallen; but the fresh air quickly revived him.
+He then felt the wound in his head, the violence of which his
+fur cap had lessened. With the energy which he possessed,
+he was not a man to succumb under such a trifle. Before his eyes
+lay a single goal--far-distant Irkutsk. He must reach it!
+But he must pass through Omsk without stopping there.
+
+"God protect my mother and Nadia!" he murmured. "I have no longer
+the right to think of them!"
+
+Michael Strogoff and the mujik soon arrived in the mercantile
+quarter of the lower town. The surrounding earthwork had been
+destroyed in many places, and there were the breaches through which
+the marauders who followed the armies of Feofar-Khan had penetrated.
+Within Omsk, in its streets and squares, the Tartar soldiers swarmed
+like ants; but it was easy to see that a hand of iron imposed
+upon them a discipline to which they were little accustomed.
+They walked nowhere alone, but in armed groups, to defend
+themselves against surprise.
+
+In the chief square, transformed into a camp, guarded by many sentries,
+2,000 Tartars bivouacked. The horses, picketed but still saddled,
+were ready to start at the first order. Omsk could only be a temporary
+halting-place for this Tartar cavalry, which preferred the rich plains
+of Eastern Siberia, where the towns were more wealthy, and, consequently,
+pillage more profitable.
+
+Above the mercantile town rose the upper quarter, which Ivan Ogareff,
+notwithstanding several assaults vigorously made but bravely repelled,
+had not yet been able to reduce. Upon its embattled walls floated
+the national colors of Russia.
+
+It was not without a legitimate pride that Michael Strogoff and his guide,
+vowing fidelity, saluted them.
+
+Michael Strogoff was perfectly acquainted with the town of Omsk,
+and he took care to avoid those streets which were much frequented.
+This was not from any fear of being recognized. In the town his old
+mother only could have called him by name, but he had sworn not to
+see her, and he did not. Besides--and he wished it with his whole heart--
+she might have fled into some quiet portion of the steppe.
+
+The mujik very fortunately knew a postmaster who, if well paid, would not
+refuse at his request either to let or to sell a carriage or horses.
+There remained the difficulty of leaving the town, but the breaches
+in the fortifications would, of course, facilitate his departure.
+
+The mujik was accordingly conducting his guest straight to
+the posting-house, when, in a narrow street, Michael Strogoff,
+coming to a sudden stop sprang behind a jutting wall.
+
+"What is the matter?" asked the astonished mujik.
+
+"Silence!" replied Michael, with his finger on his lips.
+At this moment a detachment debouched from the principal square
+into the street which Michael Strogoff and his companion had
+just been following.
+
+At the head of the detachment, composed of twenty horsemen,
+was an officer dressed in a very simple uniform.
+Although he glanced rapidly from one side to the other he could
+not have seen Michael Strogoff, owing to his precipitous retreat.
+
+The detachment went at full trot into the narrow street. Neither the
+officer nor his escort concerned themselves about the inhabitants.
+Several unlucky ones had scarcely time to make way for their passage.
+There were a few half-stifled cries, to which thrusts of the lance gave
+an instant reply, and the street was immediately cleared.
+
+When the escort had disappeared, "Who is that officer?"
+asked Michael Strogoff. And while putting the question his face
+was pale as that of a corpse.
+
+"It is Ivan Ogareff," replied the Siberian, in a deep voice
+which breathed hatred.
+
+"He!" cried Michael Strogoff, from whom the word escaped with
+a fury he could not conquer. He had just recognized in this
+officer the traveler who had struck him at the posting-house
+of Ichim. And, although he had only caught a glimpse of him,
+it burst upon his mind, at the same time, that this traveler
+was the old Zingari whose words he had overheard in the market
+place of Nijni-Novgorod.
+
+Michael Strogoff was not mistaken. The two men were one and the same.
+It was under the garb of a Zingari, mingling with the band of Sangarre,
+that Ivan Ogareff had been able to leave the town of Nijni-Novgorod,
+where he had gone to seek his confidants. Sangarre and her Zingari,
+well paid spies, were absolutely devoted to him. It was he who,
+during the night, on the fair-ground had uttered that singular sentence,
+which Michael Strogoff could not understand; it was he who was
+voyaging on board the Caucasus, with the whole of the Bohemian band;
+it was he who, by this other route, from Kasan to Ichim, across the Urals,
+had reached Omsk, where now he held supreme authority.
+
+Ivan Ogareff had been barely three days at Omsk, and had it not been
+for their fatal meeting at Ichim, and for the event which had detained
+him three days on the banks of the Irtych, Michael Strogoff would
+have evidently beaten him on the way to Irkutsk.
+
+And who knows how many misfortunes would have been avoided in the future!
+In any case--and now more than ever--Michael Strogoff must avoid
+Ivan Ogareff, and contrive not to be seen. When the moment of
+encountering him face to face should arrive, he knew how to meet it,
+even should the traitor be master of the whole of Siberia.
+
+The mujik and Michael resumed their way and arrived at
+the posting-house. To leave Omsk by one of the breaches
+would not be difficult after nightfall. As for purchasing
+a carriage to replace the tarantass, that was impossible.
+There were none to be let or sold. But what want had Michael Strogoff
+now for a carriage? Was he not alone, alas? A horse would
+suffice him; and, very fortunately, a horse could be had.
+It was an animal of strength and mettle, and Michael Strogoff,
+accomplished horseman as he was, could make good use of it.
+
+It was four o'clock in the afternoon. Michael Strogoff,
+compelled to wait till nightfall, in order to pass the fortifications,
+but not desiring to show himself, remained in the posting-house,
+and there partook of food.
+
+There was a great crowd in the public room. They were talking
+of the expected arrival of a corps of Muscovite troops,
+not at Omsk, but at Tomsk--a corps intended to recapture
+that town from the Tartars of Feofar-Khan.
+
+Michael Strogoff lent an attentive ear, but took no part
+in the conversation. Suddenly a cry made him tremble, a cry
+which penetrated to the depths of his soul, and these two words
+rushed into his ear: "My son!"
+
+His mother, the old woman Marfa, was before him! Trembling, she smiled
+upon him. She stretched forth her arms to him. Michael Strogoff arose.
+He was about to throw himself--
+
+The thought of duty, the serious danger for his mother and
+himself in this unfortunate meeting, suddenly stopped him,
+and such was his command over himself that not a muscle of his
+face moved. There were twenty people in the public room.
+Among them were, perhaps, spies, and was it not known in
+the town that the son of Marfa Strogoff belonged to the corps
+of the couriers of the Czar?
+
+Michael Strogoff did not move.
+
+"Michael!" cried his mother.
+
+"Who are you, my good lady?" Michael Strogoff stammered,
+unable to speak in his usual firm tone.
+
+"Who am I, thou askest! Dost thou no longer know thy mother?"
+
+"You are mistaken," coldly replied Michael Strogoff. "A resemblance
+deceives you."
+
+The old Marfa went up to him, and, looking straight into his eyes,
+said, "Thou art not the son of Peter and Marfa Strogoff?"
+
+Michael Strogoff would have given his life to have locked
+his mother in his arms; but if he yielded it was all over
+with him, with her, with his mission, with his oath!
+Completely master of himself, he closed his eyes,
+in order not to see the inexpressible anguish which agitated
+the revered countenance of his mother. He drew back his hands,
+in order not to touch those trembling hands which sought him.
+"I do not know in truth what it is you say, my good woman,"
+he replied, stepping back.
+
+"Michael!" again cried his aged mother.
+
+"My name is not Michael. I never was your son! I am Nicholas Korpanoff,
+a merchant at Irkutsk."
+
+And suddenly he left the public room, whilst for the last time
+the words re-echoed, "My son! my son!"
+
+Michael Strogoff, by a desperate effort, had gone. He did not see
+his old mother, who had fallen back almost inanimate upon a bench.
+But when the postmaster hastened to assist her, the aged
+woman raised herself. Suddenly a thought occurred to her.
+She denied by her son! It was not possible. As for being
+herself deceived, and taking another for him, equally impossible.
+It was certainly her son whom she had just seen; and if he had not
+recognized her it was because he would not, it was because he ought not,
+it was because he had some cogent reasons for acting thus!
+And then, her mother's feelings arising within her, she had only
+one thought--"Can I, unwittingly, have ruined him?"
+
+"I am mad," she said to her interrogators. "My eyes have deceived me!
+This young man is not my child. He had not his voice. Let us think
+no more of it; if we do I shall end by finding him everywhere."
+
+Less than ten minutes afterwards a Tartar officer appeared
+in the posting-house. "Marfa Strogoff?" he asked.
+
+"It is I," replied the old woman, in a tone so calm, and with a face
+so tranquil, that those who had witnessed the meeting with her son
+would not have known her.
+
+"Come," said the officer,
+
+Marfa Strogoff, with firm step, followed the Tartar. Some moments
+afterwards she found herself in the chief square in the presence
+of Ivan Ogareff, to whom all the details of this scene had
+been immediately reported.
+
+Ogareff, suspecting the truth, interrogated the old Siberian woman.
+"Thy name?" he asked in a rough voice.
+
+"Marfa Strogoff."
+
+"Thou hast a son?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He is a courier of the Czar?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"At Moscow."
+
+"Thou hast no news of him?"
+
+"No news."
+
+"Since how long?"
+
+"Since two months."
+
+"Who, then, was that young man whom thou didst call thy son a few
+moments ago at the posting-house?"
+
+"A young Siberian whom I took for him," replied Marfa Strogoff. "This is
+the tenth man in whom I have thought I recognized my son since the town
+has been so full of strangers. I think I see him everywhere."
+
+"So this young man was not Michael Strogoff?"
+
+"It was not Michael Strogoff."
+
+"Dost thou know, old woman, that I can torture thee until thou
+avowest the truth?"
+
+"I have spoken the truth, and torture will not cause me to alter
+my words in any way."
+
+"This Siberian was not Michael Strogoff?" asked a second
+time Ivan Ogareff.
+
+"No, it was not he," replied a second time Marfa Strogoff. "Do you
+think that for anything in the world I would deny a son whom God
+has given me?"
+
+Ivan Ogareff regarded with an evil eye the old woman who braved
+him to the face. He did not doubt but that she had recognized her
+son in this young Siberian. Now if this son had first renounced
+his mother, and if his mother renounced him in her turn, it could
+occur only from the most weighty motive. Ogareff had therefore
+no doubt that the pretended Nicholas Korpanoff was Michael Strogoff,
+courier of the Czar, seeking concealment under a false name,
+and charged with some mission which it would have been important
+for him to know. He therefore at once gave orders for his pursuit.
+Then "Let this woman be conducted to Tomsk," he said.
+
+While the soldiers brutally dragged her off, he added between his teeth,
+"When the moment arrives I shall know how to make her speak,
+this old sorceress!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XV THE MARSHES OF THE BARABA
+
+IT was fortunate that Michael Strogoff had left the posting-house
+so promptly. The orders of Ivan Ogareff had been immediately
+transmitted to all the approaches of the city, and a full
+description of Michael sent to all the various commandants,
+in order to prevent his departure from Omsk. But he had
+already passed through one of the breaches in the wall;
+his horse was galloping over the steppe, and the chances
+of escape were in his favor.
+
+It was on the 29th of July, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+that Michael Strogoff had left Omsk. This town is situated about halfway
+between Moscow and Irkutsk, where it was necessary that he should arrive
+within ten days if he wished to get ahead of the Tartar columns.
+It was evident that the unlucky chance which had brought him
+into the presence of his mother had betrayed his incognito.
+Ivan Ogareff was no longer ignorant of the fact that a courier of the Czar
+had just passed Omsk, taking the direction of Irkutsk. The dispatches
+which this courier bore must have been of immense importance.
+Michael Strogoff knew, therefore, that every effort would be made
+to capture him.
+
+But what he did not know, and could not know, was that Marfa Strogoff
+was in the hands of Ivan Ogareff, and that she was about to atone,
+perhaps with her life, for that natural exhibition of her feelings which
+she had been unable to restrain when she suddenly found herself in the
+presence of her son. And it was fortunate that he was ignorant of it.
+Could he have withstood this fresh trial?
+
+Michael Strogoff urged on his horse, imbuing him with all his own
+feverish impatience, requiring of him one thing only, namely, to bear
+him rapidly to the next posting-house, where he could be exchanged
+for a quicker conveyance.
+
+At midnight he had cleared fifty miles, and halted at the station
+of Koulikovo. But there, as he had feared, he found neither
+horses nor carriages. Several Tartar detachments had passed
+along the highway of the steppe. Everything had been stolen
+or requisitioned both in the villages and in the posting-houses.
+It was with difficulty that Michael Strogoff was even able
+to obtain some refreshment for his horse and himself.
+
+It was of great importance, therefore, to spare his horse, for he could
+not tell when or how he might be able to replace it. Desiring, however,
+to put the greatest possible distance between himself and the horsemen
+who had no doubt been dispatched in pursuit, he resolved to push on.
+After one hour's rest he resumed his course across the steppe.
+
+Hitherto the weather had been propitious for his journey.
+The temperature was endurable. The nights at this time of the year
+are very short, and as they are lighted by the moon, the route
+over the steppe is practicable. Michael Strogoff, moreover,
+was a man certain of his road and devoid of doubt or hesitation,
+and in spite of the melancholy thoughts which possessed him
+he had preserved his clearness of mind, and made for his
+destined point as though it were visible upon the horizon.
+When he did halt for a moment at some turn in the road it was
+to breathe his horse. Now he would dismount to ease his steed
+for a moment, and again he would place his ear to the ground
+to listen for the sound of galloping horses upon the steppe.
+Nothing arousing his suspicions, he resumed his way.
+
+On the 30th of July, at nine o'clock in the morning, Michael Strogoff
+passed through the station of Touroumoff and entered the swampy district
+of the Baraba.
+
+There, for a distance of three hundred versts, the natural obstacles
+would be extremely great. He knew this, but he also knew that he would
+certainly surmount them.
+
+These vast marshes of the Baraba, form the reservoir to all
+the rain-water which finds no outlet either towards the Obi
+or towards the Irtych. The soil of this vast depression is
+entirely argillaceous, and therefore impermeable, so that the waters
+remain there and make of it a region very difficult to cross
+during the hot season. There, however, lies the way to Irkutsk,
+and it is in the midst of ponds, pools, lakes, and swamps,
+from which the sun draws poisonous exhalations, that the road winds,
+and entails upon the traveler the greatest fatigue and danger.
+
+Michael Strogoff spurred his horse into the midst of a grassy prairie,
+differing greatly from the close-cropped sod of the steppe, where feed the
+immense Siberian herds. The grass here was five or six feet in height,
+and had made room for swamp-plants, to which the dampness of the place,
+assisted by the heat of summer, had given giant proportions.
+These were principally canes and rushes, which formed a tangled network,
+an impenetrable undergrowth, sprinkled everywhere with a thousand
+flowers remarkable for the brightness of their color.
+
+Michael Strogoff, galloping amongst this undergrowth of cane,
+was no longer visible from the swamps which bordered the road.
+The tall grass rose above him, and his track was indicated only
+by the flight of innumerable aquatic birds, which rose from the side
+of the road and dispersed into the air in screaming flocks.
+
+The way, however, was clearly traceable. Now it would lie
+straight between the dense thicket of marsh-plants; again it
+would follow the winding shores of vast pools, some of which,
+several versts in length and breadth, deserve the name of lakes.
+In other localities the stagnant waters through which the road
+lay had been avoided, not by bridges, but by tottering
+platforms ballasted with thick layers of clay, whose joists
+shook like a too weak plank thrown across an abyss.
+Some of these platforms extended over three hundred feet,
+and travelers by tarantass, when crossing them have experienced
+a nausea like sea-sickness.
+
+Michael Strogoff, whether the soil beneath his feet was solid
+or whether it sank under him, galloped on without halt,
+leaping the space between the rotten joists; but however
+fast they traveled the horse and the horseman were unable
+to escape from the sting of the two-winged insects which infest
+this marshy country.
+
+Travelers who are obliged to cross the Baraba during the summer
+take care to provide themselves with masks of horse-hair,
+to which is attached a coat of mail of very fine wire,
+which covers their shoulders. Notwithstanding these precautions,
+there are few who come out of these marshes without having
+their faces, necks, and hands covered with red spots.
+The atmosphere there seems to bristle with fine needles,
+and one would almost say that a knight's armor would not protect
+him against the darts of these dipterals. It is a dreary region,
+which man dearly disputes with tipulae, gnats, mosquitos,
+horse-flies, and millions of microscopic insects which are not
+visible to the naked eye; but, although they are not seen,
+they make themselves felt by their intolerable stinging,
+to which the most callous Siberian hunters have never been able
+to inure themselves.
+
+Michael Strogoff's horse, stung by these venomous insects, sprang forward
+as if the rowels of a thousand spurs had pierced his flanks.
+Mad with rage, he tore along over verst after verst with the speed
+of an express train, lashing his sides with his tail, seeking by
+the rapidity of his pace an alleviation of his torture.
+
+It required as good a horseman as Michael Strogoff not to be thrown
+by the plungings of his horse, and the sudden stops and bounds
+which he made to escape from the stings of his persecutors.
+Having become insensible, so to speak, to physical suffering,
+possessed only with the one desire to arrive at his destination
+at whatever cost, he saw during this mad race only one thing--
+that the road flew rapidly behind him.
+
+Who would have thought that this district of the Baraba, so unhealthy
+during the summer, could have afforded an asylum for human beings?
+Yet it did so. Several Siberian hamlets appeared from time
+to time among the giant canes. Men, women, children, and old men,
+clad in the skins of beasts, their faces covered with hardened
+blisters of skin, pastured their poor herds of sheep.
+In order to preserve the animals from the attack of the insects,
+they drove them to the leeward of fires of green wood, which were
+kept burning night and day, and the pungent smoke of which floated
+over the vast swamp.
+
+When Michael Strogoff perceived that his horse, tired out, was on
+the point of succumbing, he halted at one of these wretched hamlets,
+and there, forgetting his own fatigue, he himself rubbed the wounds
+of the poor animal with hot grease according to the Siberian custom;
+then he gave him a good feed; and it was only after he had well groomed
+and provided for him that he thought of himself, and recruited his
+strength by a hasty meal of bread and meat and a glass of kwass.
+One hour afterwards, or at the most two, he resumed with all speed
+the interminable road to Irkutsk.
+
+On the 30th of July, at four o'clock in the afternoon, Michael Strogoff,
+insensible of every fatigue, arrived at Elamsk. There it
+became necessary to give a night's rest to his horse.
+The brave animal could no longer have continued the journey.
+At Elamsk, as indeed elsewhere, there existed no means of transport,--
+for the same reasons as at the previous villages, neither carriages
+nor horses were to be had.
+
+Michael Strogoff resigned himself therefore to pass the night at Elamsk,
+to give his horse twelve hours' rest. He recalled the instructions which
+had been given to him at Moscow--to cross Siberia incognito, to arrive
+at Irkutsk, but not to sacrifice success to the rapidity of the journey;
+and consequently it was necessary that he should husband the sole means
+of transport which remained to him.
+
+On the morrow, Michael Strogoff left Elamsk at the moment when
+the first Tartar scouts were signaled ten versts behind upon the road
+to the Baraba, and he plunged again into the swampy region.
+The road was level, which made it easy, but very tortuous,
+and therefore long. It was impossible, moreover, to leave it,
+and to strike a straight line across that impassable network
+of pools and bogs.
+
+On the next day, the 1st of August, eighty miles farther,
+Michael Strogoff arrived at midday at the town of Spaskoe,
+and at two o'clock he halted at Pokrowskoe. His horse,
+jaded since his departure from Elamsk, could not have taken
+a single step more.
+
+There Michael Strogoff was again compelled to lose, for necessary rest,
+the end of that day and the entire night; but starting again on
+the following morning, and still traversing the semi-inundated soil,
+on the 2nd of August, at four o'clock in the afternoon, after a stage
+of fifty miles he reached Kamsk.
+
+The country had changed. This little village of Kamsk lies,
+like an island, habitable and healthy, in the midst of the
+uninhabitable district. It is situated in the very center
+of the Baraba. The emigration caused by the Tartar invasion had
+not yet depopulated this little town of Kamsk. Its inhabitants
+probably fancied themselves safe in the center of the Baraba,
+whence at least they thought they would have time to flee
+if they were directly menaced.
+
+Michael Strogoff, although exceedingly anxious for news,
+could ascertain nothing at this place. It would have been
+rather to him that the Governor would have addressed himself
+had he known who the pretended merchant of Irkutsk really was.
+Kamsk, in fact, by its very situation seemed to be outside
+the Siberian world and the grave events which troubled it.
+
+Besides, Michael Strogoff showed himself little, if at all.
+To be unperceived was not now enough for him: he would have
+wished to be invisible. The experience of the past made him
+more and more circumspect in the present and the future.
+Therefore he secluded himself, and not caring to traverse
+the streets of the village, he would not even leave the inn
+at which he had halted.
+
+As for his horse, he did not even think of exchanging him for
+another animal. He had become accustomed to this brave creature.
+He knew to what extent he could rely upon him. In buying him at Omsk
+he had been lucky, and in taking him to the postmaster the generous
+mujik had rendered him a great service. Besides, if Michael Strogoff
+had already become attached to his horse, the horse himself seemed
+to become inured, by degrees, to the fatigue of such a journey,
+and provided that he got several hours of repose daily, his rider
+might hope that he would carry him beyond the invaded provinces.
+
+So, during the evening and night of the 2nd of August, Michael Strogoff
+remained confined to his inn, at the entrance of the town; which was
+little frequented and out of the way of the importunate and curious.
+
+Exhausted with fatigue, he went to bed after having seen that his horse
+lacked nothing; but his sleep was broken. What he had seen since his
+departure from Moscow showed him the importance of his mission.
+The rising was an extremely serious one, and the treachery
+of Ogareff made it still more formidable. And when his eyes fell
+upon the letter bearing upon it the authority of the imperial seal--
+the letter which, no doubt, contained the remedy for so many evils,
+the safety of all this war-ravaged country--Michael Strogoff felt within
+himself a fierce desire to dash on across the steppe, to accomplish
+the distance which separated him from Irkutsk as the crow would fly it,
+to be an eagle that he might overtop all obstacles, to be a hurricane
+that he might sweep through the air at a hundred versts an hour,
+and to be at last face to face with the Grand Duke, and to exclaim:
+"Your highness, from his Majesty the Czar!"
+
+On the next morning at six o'clock, Michael Strogoff started off again.
+Thanks to his extreme prudence this part of the journey was signalized
+by no incident whatever. At Oubinsk he gave his horse a whole
+night's rest, for he wished on the next day to accomplish the hundred
+versts which lie between Oubinsk and Ikoulskoe without halting.
+He started therefore at dawn; but unfortunately the Baraba proved
+more detestable than ever.
+
+In fact, between Oubinsk and Kamakore the very heavy rains
+of some previous weeks were retained by this shallow depression
+as in a water-tight bowl. There was, for a long distance, no break
+in the succession of swamps, pools, and lakes. One of these lakes--
+large enough to warrant its geographical nomenclature--Tchang, Chinese
+in name, had to be coasted for more than twenty versts, and this
+with the greatest difficulty. Hence certain delays occurred,
+which all the impatience of Michael Strogoff could not avoid.
+He had been well advised in not taking a carriage at Kamsk,
+for his horse passed places which would have been impracticable
+for a conveyance on wheels.
+
+In the evening, at nine o'clock, Michael Strogoff arrived
+at Ikoulskoe, and halted there over night. In this remote
+village of the Baraba news of the war was utterly wanting.
+From its situation, this part of the province, lying in the fork
+formed by the two Tartar columns which had bifurcated,
+one upon Omsk and the other upon Tomsk, had hitherto escaped
+the horrors of the invasion.
+
+But the natural obstacles were now about to disappear, for, if he
+experienced no delay, Michael Strogoff should on the morrow be free
+of the Baraba and arrive at Kolyvan. There he would be within
+eighty miles of Tomsk. He would then be guided by circumstances,
+and very probably he would decide to go around Tomsk, which, if the news
+were true, was occupied by Feofar-Khan.
+
+But if the small towns of Ikoulskoe and Karguinsk, which he
+passed on the next day, were comparatively quiet, owing to
+their position in the Baraba, was it not to be dreaded that,
+upon the right banks of the Obi, Michael Strogoff would have much
+more to fear from man? It was probable. However, should it
+become necessary, he would not hesitate to abandon the beaten
+path to Irkutsk. To journey then across the steppe he would,
+no doubt, run the risk of finding himself without supplies.
+There would be, in fact, no longer a well-marked road.
+Still, there must be no hesitation.
+
+Finally, towards half past three in the afternoon, Michael Strogoff
+left the last depressions of the Baraba, and the dry and hard soil
+of Siberia rang out once more beneath his horse's hoofs.
+
+He had left Moscow on the 15th of July. Therefore on this day,
+the 5th of August, including more than seventy hours lost on the banks
+of the Irtych, twenty days had gone by since his departure.
+
+One thousand miles still separated him from Irkutsk.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI A FINAL EFFORT
+
+MICHAEL'S fear of meeting the Tartars in the plains beyond
+the Baraba was by no means ungrounded. The fields, trodden down
+by horses' hoofs, afforded but too clear evidence that their
+hordes had passed that way; the same, indeed, might be said
+of these barbarians as of the Turks: "Where the Turk goes,
+no grass grows."
+
+Michael saw at once that in traversing this country the greatest
+caution was necessary. Wreaths of smoke curling upwards on
+the horizon showed that huts and hamlets were still burning.
+Had these been fired by the advance guard, or had the Emir's
+army already advanced beyond the boundaries of the province?
+Was Feofar-Khan himself in the government of Yeniseisk? Michael could
+settle on no line of action until these questions were answered.
+Was the country so deserted that he could not discover a single
+Siberian to enlighten him?
+
+Michael rode on for two versts without meeting a human being.
+He looked carefully for some house which had not been deserted.
+Every one was tenantless.
+
+One hut, however, which he could just see between the trees,
+was still smoking. As he approached he perceived, at some yards from
+the ruins of the building, an old man surrounded by weeping children.
+A woman still young, evidently his daughter and the mother of
+the poor children, kneeling on the ground, was gazing on the scene
+of desolation. She had at her breast a baby but a few months old;
+shortly she would have not even that nourishment to give it.
+Ruin and desolation were all around!
+
+Michael approached the old man.
+
+"Will you answer me a few questions?" he asked.
+
+"Speak," replied the old man.
+
+"Have the Tartars passed this way?"
+
+"Yes, for my house is in flames."
+
+"Was it an army or a detachment?"
+
+"An army, for, as far as eye can reach, our fields are laid waste."
+
+"Commanded by the Emir?"
+
+"By the Emir; for the Obi's waters are red."
+
+"Has Feofar-Khan entered Tomsk?"
+
+"He has."
+
+"Do you know if his men have entered Kolyvan?"
+
+"No; for Kolyvan does not yet burn."
+
+"Thanks, friend. Can I aid you and yours?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Good-by."
+
+"Farewell."
+
+And Michael, having presented five and twenty roubles to
+the unfortunate woman, who had not even strength to thank him,
+put spurs to his horse once more.
+
+One thing he knew; he must not pass through Tomsk. To go to Kolyvan,
+which the Tartars had not yet reached, was possible. Yes, that is
+what he must do; there he must prepare himself for another long stage.
+There was nothing for it but, having crossed the Obi, to take the Irkutsk
+road and avoid Tomsk.
+
+This new route decided on, Michael must not delay an instant.
+Nor did he, but, putting his horse into a steady gallop, he took the road
+towards the left bank of the Obi, which was still forty versts distant.
+Would there be a ferry boat there, or should he, finding that the Tartars
+had destroyed all the boats, be obliged to swim across?
+
+As to his horse, it was by this time pretty well worn out, and Michael
+intended to make it perform this stage only, and then to exchange it
+for a fresh one at Kolyvan. Kolyvan would be like a fresh starting point,
+for on leaving that town his journey would take a new form.
+So long as he traversed a devastated country the difficulties must
+be very great; but if, having avoided Tomsk, he could r‚sum‚ the road
+to Irkutsk across the province of Yeniseisk, which was not yet laid waste,
+he would finish his journey in a few days.
+
+Night came on, bringing with it refreshing coolness after the heat
+of the day. At midnight the steppe was profoundly dark.
+The sound of the horses's hoofs alone was heard on the road, except when,
+every now and then, its master spoke a few encouraging words.
+In such darkness as this great care was necessary lest he should
+leave the road, bordered by pools and streams, tributaries of
+the Obi. Michael therefore advanced as quickly as was consistent
+with safety. He trusted no less to the excellence of his eyes,
+which penetrated the gloom, than to the well-proved sagacity
+of his horse.
+
+Just as Michael dismounted to discover the exact direction of the road,
+he heard a confused murmuring sound from the west. It was like
+the noise of horses' hoofs at some distance on the parched ground.
+Michael listened attentively, putting his ear to the ground.
+
+"It is a detachment of cavalry coming by the road from Omsk,"
+he said to himself. "They are marching very quickly,
+for the noise is increasing. Are they Russians or Tartars?"
+
+Michael again listened. "Yes," said he, "they are at a sharp trot.
+My horse cannot outstrip them. If they are Russians I will join them;
+if Tartars I must avoid them. But how? Where can I hide in this steppe?"
+
+He gave a look around, and, through the darkness, discovered a
+confused mass at a hundred paces before him on the left of the road.
+"There is a copse!" he exclaimed. "To take refuge there is
+to run the risk of being caught, if they are in search of me;
+but I have no choice."
+
+In a few moments Michael, dragging his horse by the bridle,
+reached a little larch wood, through which the road lay.
+Beyond this it was destitute of trees, and wound among bogs
+and pools, separated by dwarfed bushes, whins, and heather.
+The ground on either side was quite impracticable,
+and the detachment must necessarily pass through the wood.
+They were pursuing the high road to Irkutsk. Plunging in about
+forty feet, he was stopped by a stream running under the brushwood.
+But the shadow was so deep that Michael ran no risk of
+being seen, unless the wood should be carefully searched.
+He therefore led his horse to the stream and fastened him to a tree,
+returning to the edge of the road to listen and ascertain
+with what sort of people he had to do.
+
+Michael had scarcely taken up his position behind a group of larches
+when a confused light appeared, above which glared brighter lights
+waving about in the shadow.
+
+"Torches!" said he to himself. And he drew quickly back,
+gliding like a savage into the thickest underwood.
+
+As they approached the wood the horses' pace was slackened.
+The horsemen were probably lighting up the road with the intention
+of examining every turn.
+
+Michael feared this, and instinctively drew near to the bank
+of the stream, ready to plunge in if necessary.
+
+Arrived at the top of the wood, the detachment halted.
+The horsemen dismounted. There were about fifty.
+A dozen of them carried torches, lighting up the road.
+
+By watching their preparations Michael found to his joy
+that the detachment were not thinking of visiting the copse,
+but only bivouacking near, to rest their horses and allow the men
+to take some refreshment. The horses were soon unsaddled,
+and began to graze on the thick grass which carpeted the ground.
+The men meantime stretched themselves by the side of the road,
+and partook of the provisions they produced from their knapsacks.
+
+Michael's self-possession had never deserted him, and creeping amongst
+the high grass he endeavored not only to examine the new-comers,
+but to hear what they said. It was a detachment from Omsk,
+composed of Usbeck horsemen, a race of the Mongolian type.
+These men, well built, above the medium height, rough, and wild-featured,
+wore on their heads the "talpak," or black sheep-skin cap,
+and on their feet yellow high-heeled boots with turned-up toes,
+like the shoes of the Middle Ages. Their tunics were close-fitting,
+and confined at the waist by a leathern belt braided with red.
+They were armed defensively with a shield, and offensively with a
+curved sword, and a flintlock musket slung at the saddle-bow. From
+their shoulders hung gay-colored cloaks.
+
+The horses, which were feeding at liberty at the edge
+of the wood, were, like their masters, of the Usbeck race.
+These animals are rather smaller than the Turcomanian horses,
+but are possessed of remarkable strength, and know no other pace
+than the gallop.
+
+This detachment was commanded by a "pendja-baschi"; that is to say,
+a commander of fifty men, having under him a "deh-baschi,"
+or simple commander of ten men. These two officers wore helmets
+and half coats-of-mail; little trumpets fastened to their saddle-bows
+were the distinctive signs of their rank.
+
+The pendja-baschi had been obliged to let his men rest,
+fatigued with a long stage. He and the second officer,
+smoking "beng," the leaf which forms the base of the "has-chisch,"
+strolled up and down the wood, so that Michael Strogoff without
+being seen, could catch and understand their conversation,
+which was spoken in the Tartar language.
+
+Michael's attention was singularly excited by their very first words.
+It was of him they were speaking.
+
+"This courier cannot be much in advance of us," said the pendja-baschi;
+"and, on the other hand, it is absolutely impossible that he can have
+followed any other route than that of the Baraba."
+
+"Who knows if he has left Omsk?" replied the deh-baschi. "Perhaps
+he is still hidden in the town."
+
+"That is to be wished, certainly. Colonel Ogareff would have no fear
+then that the dispatches he bears should ever reach their destination."
+
+"They say that he is a native, a Siberian," resumed the deh-baschi.
+"If so, he must be well acquainted with the country, and it is possible
+that he has left the Irkutsk road, depending on rejoining it later."
+
+"But then we should be in advance of him," answered the pendja-baschi;
+"for we left Omsk within an hour after his departure, and have
+since followed the shortest road with all the speed of our horses.
+He has either remained in Omsk, or we shall arrive at Tomsk before him,
+so as to cut him off; in either case he will not reach Irkutsk."
+
+"A rugged woman, that old Siberian, who is evidently his mother,"
+said the deh-baschi.
+
+At this remark Michael's heart beat violently.
+
+"Yes," answered the pendja-baschi. "She stuck to it well that
+the pretended merchant was not her son, but it was too late.
+Colonel Ogareff was not to be taken in; and, as he said,
+he will know how to make the old witch speak when the time comes."
+
+These words were so many dagger-thrusts for Michael. He was
+known to be a courier of the Czar! A detachment of horsemen
+on his track could not fail to cut him off. And, worst of all,
+his mother was in the hands of the Tartars, and the cruel
+Ogareff had undertaken to make her speak when he wished!
+
+Michael well knew that the brave Siberian would sacrifice her life
+for him. He had fancied that he could not hate Ivan Ogareff more,
+yet a fresh tide of hate now rose in his heart. The wretch who had
+betrayed his country now threatened to torture his mother.
+
+The conversation between the two officers continued, and Michael
+understood that an engagement was imminent in the neighborhood
+of Kolyvan, between the Muscovite troops coming from the north
+and the Tartars. A small Russian force of two thousand men,
+reported to have reached the lower course of the Obi, were advancing
+by forced marches towards Tomsk. If such was the case,
+this force, which would soon find itself engaged with the main
+body of Feofar-Khan's army, would be inevitably overwhelmed,
+and the Irkutsk road would be in the entire possession
+of the invaders.
+
+As to himself, Michael learnt, by some words from the pendja-baschi,
+that a price was set on his head, and that orders had been given
+to take him, dead or alive.
+
+It was necessary, therefore, to get the start of the Usbeck horsemen
+on the Irkutsk road, and put the Obi between himself and them.
+But to do that, he must escape before the camp was broken up.
+
+His determination taken, Michael prepared to execute it.
+
+Indeed, the halt would not be prolonged, and the pendja-baschi did
+not intend to give his men more than an hour's rest, although their
+horses could not have been changed for fresh ones since Omsk,
+and must be as much fatigued as that of Michael Strogoff.
+
+There was not a moment to lose. It was within an hour of morning.
+It was needful to profit by the darkness to leave the little wood
+and dash along the road; but although night favored it the success
+of such a flight appeared to be almost impossible.
+
+Not wishing to do anything at random, Michael took time for reflection,
+carefully weighing the chances so as to take the best.
+From the situation of the place the result was this--
+that he could not escape through the back of the wood, the stream
+which bordered it being not only deep, but very wide and muddy.
+Beneath this thick water was a slimy bog, on which the foot
+could not rest. There was only one way open, the high-road. To
+endeavor to reach it by creeping round the edge of the wood,
+without attracting attention, and then to gallop at headlong speed,
+required all the remaining strength and energy of his noble steed.
+Too probably it would fall dead on reaching the banks of the Obi, when,
+either by boat or by swimming, he must cross this important river.
+This was what Michael had before him.
+
+His energy and courage increased in sight of danger.
+
+His life, his mission, his country, perhaps the safety of his mother,
+were at stake. He could not hesitate.
+
+There was not a moment to be lost. Already there was a slight
+movement among the men of the detachment. A few horsemen
+were strolling up and down the road in front of the wood.
+The rest were still lying at the foot of the trees, but their
+horses were gradually penetrating towards the center of the wood.
+
+Michael had at first thought of seizing one of these horses,
+but he recollected that, of course, they would be as fatigued
+as his own. It was better to trust to his own brave steed,
+which had already rendered him such important service.
+The good animal, hidden behind a thicket, had escaped the sight
+of the Usbecks. They, besides, had not penetrated so far
+into the wood.
+
+Michael crawled up to his horse through the grass, and found him
+lying down. He patted and spoke gently to him, and managed to raise
+him without noise. Fortunately, the torches were entirely consumed,
+and now went out, the darkness being still profound under shelter
+of the larches. After replacing the bit, Michael looked to his
+girths and stirrups, and began to lead his horse quietly away.
+The intelligent animal followed his master without even making
+the least neigh.
+
+A few Usbeck horses raised their heads, and began to wander towards
+the edge of the wood. Michael held his revolver in his hand,
+ready to blow out the brains of the first Tartar who should approach him.
+But happily the alarm was not given, and he was able to gain the angle
+made by the wood where it joined the road.
+
+To avoid being seen, Michael's intention was not to mount until
+after turning a corner some two hundred feet from the wood.
+Unfortunately, just at the moment that he was issuing from the wood,
+an Usbeck's horse, scenting him, neighed and began to trot along
+the road. His master ran to catch him, and seeing a shadowy form
+moving in the dim light, "Look out!" he shouted.
+
+At the cry, all the men of the bivouac jumped up, and ran to seize
+their horses. Michael leaped on his steed, and galloped away.
+The two officers of the detachment urged on their men to follow.
+
+Michael heard a report, and felt a ball pass through his tunic.
+Without turning his head, without replying, he spurred on, and,
+clearing the brushwood with a tremendous bound, he galloped at full
+speed toward the Obi.
+
+The Usbecks' horses being unsaddled gave him a small start,
+but in less than two minutes he heard the tramp of several
+horses gradually gaining on him.
+
+Day was now beginning to break, and objects at some distance were
+becoming visible. Michael turned his head, and perceived a horseman
+rapidly approaching him. It was the deh-baschi. Being better mounted,
+this officer had distanced his detachment.
+
+Without drawing rein, Michael extended his revolver, and took
+a moment's aim. The Usbeck officer, hit in the breast,
+rolled on the ground.
+
+But the other horsemen followed him closely, and without waiting
+to assist the deh-baschi, exciting each other by their shouts,
+digging their spurs into their horses' sides, they gradually
+diminished the distance between themselves and Michael.
+
+For half an hour only was the latter able to keep out of range
+of the Tartars, but he well knew that his horse was becoming weaker,
+and dreaded every instant that he would stumble never to rise again.
+
+It was now light, although the sun had not yet risen above the horizon.
+Two versts distant could be seen a pale line bordered by a few trees.
+
+This was the Obi, which flows from the southwest to the northeast,
+the surface almost level with the ground, its bed being but
+the steppe itself.
+
+Several times shots were fired at Michael, but without hitting him,
+and several times too he discharged his revolver on those of
+the soldiers who pressed him too closely. Each time an Usbeck
+rolled on the ground, midst cries of rage from his companions.
+But this pursuit could only terminate to Michael's disadvantage.
+His horse was almost exhausted. He managed to reach the bank
+of the river. The Usbeck detachment was now not more than fifty
+paces behind him.
+
+The Obi was deserted--not a boat of any description which could
+take him over the water!
+
+"Courage, my brave horse!" cried Michael. "Come! A last effort!"
+And he plunged into the river, which here was half a verst in width.
+
+It would have been difficult to stand against the current--
+indeed, Michael's horse could get no footing. He must therefore
+swim across the river, although it was rapid as a torrent.
+Even to attempt it showed Michael's marvelous courage.
+The soldiers reached the bank, but hesitated to plunge in.
+
+The pendja-baschi seized his musket and took aim at Michael,
+whom he could see in the middle of the stream.
+The shot was fired, and Michael's horse, struck in the side,
+was borne away by the current.
+
+His master, speedily disentangling himself from his stirrups,
+struck out boldly for the shore. In the midst of a hailstorm
+of balls he managed to reach the opposite side, and disappeared
+in the rushes.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII THE RIVALS
+
+MICHAEL was in comparative safety, though his situation was
+still terrible. Now that the faithful animal who had so bravely
+borne him had met his death in the waters of the river,
+how was he to continue his journey?
+
+He was on foot, without provisions, in a country devastated
+by the invasion, overrun by the Emir's scouts, and still at a
+considerable distance from the place he was striving to reach.
+"By Heaven, I will get there!" he exclaimed, in reply to all
+the reasons for faltering. "God will protect our sacred Russia."
+
+Michael was out of reach of the Usbeck horsemen.
+They had not dared to pursue him through the river.
+
+Once more on solid ground Michael stopped to consider what
+he should do next. He wished to avoid Tomsk, now occupied
+by the Tartar troops. Nevertheless, he must reach some town,
+or at least a post-house, where he could procure a horse.
+A horse once found, he would throw himself out of the beaten track,
+and not again take to the Irkutsk road until in the neighborhood
+of Krasnoiarsk. From that place, if he were quick, he hoped
+to find the way still open, and he intended to go through
+the Lake Baikal provinces in a southeasterly direction.
+
+Michael began by going eastward. By following the course
+of the Obi two versts further, he reached a picturesque little
+town lying on a small hill. A few churches, with Byzantine
+cupolas colored green and gold, stood up against the gray sky.
+This is Kolyvan, where the officers and people employed at Kamsk
+and other towns take refuge during the summer from the unhealthy
+climate of the Baraba. According to the latest news obtained
+by the Czar's courier, Kolyvan could not be yet in the hands
+of the invaders. The Tartar troops, divided into two columns,
+had marched to the left on Omsk, to the right on Tomsk,
+neglecting the intermediate country.
+
+Michael Strogoff's plan was simply this--to reach Kolyvan before
+the arrival of the Usbeck horsemen, who would ascend the other bank
+of the Obi to the ferry. There he would procure clothes and a horse,
+and r‚sum‚ the road to Irkutsk across the southern steppe.
+
+It was now three o'clock in the morning. The neighborhood of Kolyvan
+was very still, and appeared to have been totally abandoned.
+The country population had evidently fled to the northwards,
+to the province of Yeniseisk, dreading the invasion, which they
+could not resist.
+
+Michael was walking at a rapid pace towards Kolyvan when distant firing
+struck his ear. He stopped, and clearly distinguished the dull roar
+of artillery, and above it a crisp rattle which could not be mistaken.
+
+"It is cannon and musketry!" said he. "The little Russian body
+is engaged with the Tartar army! Pray Heaven that I may arrive
+at Kolyvan before them!"
+
+The firing became gradually louder, and soon to the left of Kolyvan
+a mist collected--not smoke, but those great white clouds produced
+by discharges of artillery.
+
+The Usbeck horsemen stopped on the left of the Obi, to await the result
+of the battle. From them Michael had nothing to fear as he hastened
+towards the town.
+
+In the meanwhile the firing increased, and became sensibly nearer.
+It was no longer a confused roar, but distinct reports.
+At the same time the smoke partially cleared, and it became
+evident that the combatants were rapidly moving southwards.
+It appeared that Kolyvan was to be attacked on the north side.
+But were the Russians defending it or the Tartars? It being
+impossible to decide this, Michael became greatly perplexed.
+
+He was not more than half a verst from Kolyvan when he observed
+flames shooting up among the houses of the town, and the steeple
+of a church fell in the midst of clouds of smoke and fire.
+Was the struggle, then, in Kolyvan? Michael was compelled to think so.
+It was evident that Russians and Tartars were fighting in
+the streets of the town. Was this a time to seek refuge there?
+Would he not run a risk of being taken prisoner? Should he succeed
+in escaping from Kolyvan, as he had escaped from Omsk? He hesitated
+and stopped a moment. Would it not be better to try, even on foot,
+to reach some small town, and there procure a horse at any price?
+This was the only thing to be done; and Michael, leaving the Obi,
+went forward to the right of Kolyvan.
+
+The firing had now increased in violence. Flames soon sprang
+up on the left of the town. Fire was devouring one entire
+quarter of Kolyvan.
+
+Michael was running across the steppe endeavoring to gain the covert
+of some trees when a detachment of Tartar cavalry appeared on the right.
+He dared not continue in that direction. The horsemen advanced rapidly,
+and it would have been difficult to escape them.
+
+Suddenly, in a thick clump of trees, he saw an isolated house,
+which it would be possible to reach before he was perceived.
+Michael had no choice but to run there, hide himself and ask
+or take something to recruit his strength, for he was exhausted
+with hunger and fatigue.
+
+He accordingly ran on towards this house, still about half
+a verst distant. As he approached, he could see that it
+was a telegraph office. Two wires left it in westerly and
+easterly directions, and a third went towards Kolyvan.
+
+It was to be supposed that under the circumstances this station
+was abandoned; but even if it was, Michael could take refuge there,
+and wait till nightfall, if necessary, to again set out across
+the steppe covered with Tartar scouts.
+
+He ran up to the door and pushed it open.
+
+A single person was in the room whence the telegraphic messages
+were dispatched. This was a clerk, calm, phlegmatic, indifferent to
+all that was passing outside. Faithful to his post, he waited behind
+his little wicket until the public claimed his services.
+
+Michael ran up to him, and in a voice broken by fatigue,
+"What do you know?" he asked.
+
+"Nothing," answered the clerk, smiling.
+
+"Are the Russians and Tartars engaged?"
+
+"They say so."
+
+"But who are the victors?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+Such calmness, such indifference, in the midst of these terrible events,
+was scarcely credible.
+
+"And is not the wire cut?" said Michael.
+
+"It is cut between Kolyvan and Krasnoiarsk, but it is still working
+between Kolyvan and the Russian frontier."
+
+"For the government?"
+
+"For the government, when it thinks proper. For the public,
+when they pay. Ten copecks a word, whenever you like, sir!"
+
+Michael was about to reply to this strange clerk that he had no
+message to send, that he only implored a little bread and water,
+when the door of the house was again thrown open.
+
+Thinking that it was invaded by Tartars, Michael made ready to leap
+out of the window, when two men only entered the room who had nothing
+of the Tartar soldier about them. One of them held a dispatch,
+written in pencil, in his hand, and, passing the other, he hurried
+up to the wicket of the imperturbable clerk.
+
+In these two men Michael recognized with astonishment,
+which everyone will understand, two personages of whom he was not
+thinking at all, and whom he had never expected to see again.
+They were the two reporters, Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet,
+no longer traveling companions, but rivals, enemies, now that they
+were working on the field of battle.
+
+They had left Ichim only a few hours after the departure of
+Michael Strogoff, and they had arrived at Kolyvan before him,
+by following the same road, in consequence of his losing three days
+on the banks of the Irtych. And now, after being both present
+at the engagement between the Russians and Tartars before the town,
+they had left just as the struggle broke out in the streets, and ran
+to the telegraph office, so as to send off their rival dispatches
+to Europe, and forestall each other in their report of events.
+
+Michael stood aside in the shadow, and without being seen
+himself he could see and hear all that was going on.
+He would now hear interesting news, and would find out whether
+or not he could enter Kolyvan.
+
+Blount, having distanced his companion, took possession of
+the wicket, whilst Alcide Jolivet, contrary to his usual habit,
+stamped with impatience.
+
+"Ten copecks a word," said the clerk.
+
+Blount deposited a pile of roubles on the shelf, whilst his rival
+looked on with a sort of stupefaction.
+
+"Good," said the clerk. And with the greatest coolness
+in the world he began to telegraph the following dispatch:
+"Daily Telegraph, London.
+
+"From Kolyvan, Government of Omsk, Siberia, 6th August.
+
+"Engagement between Russian and Tartar troops."
+
+The reading was in a distinct voice, so that Michael heard
+all that the English correspondent was sending to his paper.
+
+"Russians repulsed with great loss. Tartars entered Kolyvan to-day."
+These words ended the dispatch.
+
+"My turn now," cried Alcide Jolivet, anxious to send off his dispatch,
+addressed to his cousin.
+
+But that was not Blount's idea, who did not intend to give
+up the wicket, but have it in his power to send off the news
+just as the events occurred. He would therefore not make way
+for his companion.
+
+"But you have finished!" exclaimed Jolivet.
+
+"I have not finished," returned Harry Blount quietly.
+
+And he proceeded to write some sentences, which he handed in to the clerk,
+who read out in his calm voice: "John Gilpin was a citizen of credit
+and renown; a train-band captain eke was he of famous London town."
+
+Harry Blount was telegraphing some verses learned in his childhood,
+in order to employ the time, and not give up his place to his rival.
+It would perhaps cost his paper some thousands of roubles, but it
+would be the first informed. France could wait.
+
+Jolivet's fury may be imagined, though under any other
+circumstances he would have thought it fair warfare.
+He even endeavored to force the clerk to take his dispatch
+in preference to that of his rival.
+
+"It is that gentleman's right," answered the clerk coolly,
+pointing to Blount, and smiling in the most amiable manner.
+And he continued faithfully to transmit to the Daily Telegraph
+the well-known verses of Cowper.
+
+Whilst he was working Blount walked to the window and, his field
+glass to his eyes, watched all that was going on in the neighborhood
+of Kolyvan, so as to complete his information. In a few minutes
+he resumed his place at the wicket, and added to his telegram:
+"Two churches are in flames. The fire appears to gain on the right.
+'John Gilpin's spouse said to her dear, Though wedded we have been
+these twice ten tedious years, yet we no holiday have seen.'"
+
+Alcide Jolivet would have liked to strangle the honorable correspondent
+of the Daily Telegraph.
+
+He again interrupted the clerk, who, quite unmoved, merely replied:
+"It is his right, sir, it is his right--at ten copecks a word."
+
+And he telegraphed the following news, just brought him
+by Blount: "Russian fugitives are escaping from the town.
+'Away went Gilpin--who but he? His fame soon spread around:
+He carries weight! he rides a race! 'Tis for a thousand pound!'"
+And Blount turned round with a quizzical look at his rival.
+
+Alcide Jolivet fumed.
+
+In the meanwhile Harry Blount had returned to the window, but this
+time his attention was diverted by the interest of the scene
+before him. Therefore, when the clerk had finished telegraphing
+the last lines dictated by Blount, Alcide Jolivet noiselessly
+took his place at the wicket, and, just as his rival had done,
+after quietly depositing a respectable pile of roubles on the shelf,
+he delivered his dispatch, which the clerk read aloud:
+"Madeleine Jolivet, 10, Faubourg Montmartre, Paris.
+
+"From Kolyvan, Government of Omsk, Siberia, 6th August.
+
+"Fugitives are escaping from the town. Russians defeated.
+Fiercely pursued by the Tartar cavalry."
+
+And as Harry Blount returned he heard Jolivet completing his telegram
+by singing in a mocking tone:
+
+"II est un petit homme, Tout habille de gris, Dans Paris!"
+
+Imitating his rival, Alcide Jolivet had used a merry refrain of Beranger.
+
+"Hallo!" said Harry Blount.
+
+"Just so," answered Jolivet.
+
+In the meantime the situation at Kolyvan was alarming in the extreme.
+The battle was raging nearer, and the firing was incessant.
+
+At that moment the telegraph office shook to its foundations.
+A shell had made a hole in the wall, and a cloud of dust
+filled the office.
+
+Alcide was just finishing writing his lines; but to stop, dart on
+the shell, seize it in both hands, throw it out of the window,
+and return to the wicket, was only the affair of a moment.
+
+Five seconds later the shell burst outside. Continuing with
+the greatest possible coolness, Alcide wrote: "A six-inch
+shell has just blown up the wall of the telegraph office.
+Expecting a few more of the same size."
+
+Michael Strogoff had no doubt that the Russians were driven
+out of Kolyvan. His last resource was to set out across
+the southern steppe.
+
+Just then renewed firing broke out close to the telegraph house,
+and a perfect shower of bullets smashed all the glass in the windows.
+Harry Blount fell to the ground wounded in the shoulder.
+
+Jolivet even at such a moment, was about to add this postscript
+to his dispatch: "Harry Blount, correspondent of the Daily Telegraph,
+has fallen at my side struck by--" when the imperturbable clerk
+said calmly: "Sir, the wire has broken." And, leaving his wicket,
+he quietly took his hat, brushed it round with his sleeve, and,
+still smiling, disappeared through a little door which Michael
+had not before perceived.
+
+The house was surrounded by Tartar soldiers, and neither Michael
+nor the reporters could effect their retreat.
+
+Alcide Jolivet, his useless dispatch in his hand, had run
+to Blount, stretched on the ground, and had bravely lifted
+him on his shoulders, with the intention of flying with him.
+He was too late!
+
+Both were prisoners; and, at the same time, Michael, taken unawares
+as he was about to leap from the window, fell into the hands
+of the Tartars!
+
+END OF BOOK I
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+CHAPTER I A TARTAR CAMP
+
+AT a day's march from Kolyvan, several versts beyond
+the town of Diachinks, stretches a wide plain, planted here
+and there with great trees, principally pines and cedars.
+This part of the steppe is usually occupied during the warm
+season by Siberian shepherds, and their numerous flocks.
+But now it might have been searched in vain for one of its
+nomad inhabitants. Not that the plain was deserted.
+It presented a most animated appearance.
+
+There stood the Tartar tents; there Feofar-Khan, the terrible
+Emir of Bokhara, was encamped; and there on the following day,
+the 7th of August, were brought the prisoners taken at Kolyvan
+after the annihilation of the Russian force, which had
+vainly attempted to oppose the progress of the invaders.
+Of the two thousand men who had engaged with the two columns
+of the enemy, the bases of which rested on Tomsk and Omsk,
+only a few hundred remained. Thus events were going badly,
+and the imperial government appeared to have lost its power beyond
+the frontiers of the Ural--for a time at least, for the Russians could
+not fail eventually to defeat the savage hordes of the invaders.
+But in the meantime the invasion had reached the center
+of Siberia, and it was spreading through the revolted
+country both to the eastern, and the western provinces.
+If the troops of the Amoor and the province of Takutsk did not arrive
+in time to occupy it, Irkutsk, the capital of Asiatic Russia,
+being insufficiently garrisoned, would fall into the hands
+of the Tartars, and the Grand Duke, brother of the Emperor,
+would be sacrificed to the vengeance of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+What had become of Michael Strogoff? Had he broken down under
+the weight of so many trials? Did he consider himself conquered
+by the series of disasters which, since the adventure of Ichim,
+had increased in magnitude? Did he think his cause lost? that his
+mission had failed? that his orders could no longer be obeyed?
+
+Michael was one of those men who never give in while life exists.
+He was yet alive; he still had the imperial letter safe; his disguise
+had been undiscovered. He was included amongst the numerous
+prisoners whom the Tartars were dragging with them like cattle;
+but by approaching Tomsk he was at the same time drawing nearer
+to Irkutsk. Besides, he was still in front of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+"I will get there!" he repeated to himself.
+
+Since the affair of Kolyvan all the powers of his mind were
+concentrated on one object--to become free! How should he escape
+from the Emir's soldiers?
+
+Feofar's camp presented a magnificent spectacle.
+
+Numberless tents, of skin, felt, or silk, glistened in the rays
+of the sun. The lofty plumes which surmounted their conical
+tops waved amidst banners, flags, and pennons of every color.
+The richest of these tents belonged to the Seides and Khodjas,
+who are the principal personages of the khanat.
+A special pavilion, ornamented with a horse's tail issuing
+from a sheaf of red and white sticks artistically interlaced,
+indicated the high rank of these Tartar chiefs.
+Then in the distance rose several thousand of the Turcoman tents,
+called "karaoy," which had been carried on the backs of camels.
+
+The camp contained at least a hundred and fifty thousand soldiers,
+as many foot as horse soldiers, collected under the name
+of Alamanes. Amongst them, and as the principal types
+of Turkestan, would have been directly remarked the Tadjiks,
+from their regular features, white skin, tall forms, and black
+eyes and hair; they formed the bulk of the Tartar army,
+and of them the khanats of Khokhand and Koundouge had furnished
+a contingent nearly equal to that of Bokhara. With the Tadjiks
+were mingled specimens of different races who either reside
+in Turkestan or whose native countries border on it.
+There were Usbecks, red-bearded, small in stature,
+similar to those who had pursued Michael. Here were Kirghiz,
+with flat faces like the Kalmucks, dressed in coats of mail:
+some carried the lance, bows, and arrows of Asiatic manufacture;
+some the saber, a matchlock gun, and the "tschakane," a little
+short-handled ax, the wounds from which invariably prove fatal.
+There were Mongols--of middle height, with black hair plaited
+into pigtails, which hung down their back; round faces,
+swarthy complexions, lively deep-set eyes, scanty beards--
+dressed in blue nankeen trimmed with black plush, sword-belts of
+leather with silver buckles, coats gayly braided, and silk
+caps edged with fur and three ribbons fluttering behind.
+Brown-skinned Afghans, too, might have been seen.
+Arabs, having the primitive type of the beautiful Semitic races;
+and Turcomans, with eyes which looked as if they had lost
+the pupil,--all enrolled under the Emir's flag, the flag
+of incendiaries and devastators.
+
+Among these free soldiers were a certain number of slave soldiers,
+principally Persians, commanded by officers of the same nation,
+and they were certainly not the least esteemed of Feofar-Khan's army.
+
+If to this list are added the Jews, who acted as servants,
+their robes confined with a cord, and wearing on their heads instead
+of the turban, which is forbidden them, little caps of dark cloth;
+if with these groups are mingled some hundreds of "kalenders," a sort
+of religious mendicants, clothed in rags, covered by a leopard skin,
+some idea may be formed of the enormous agglomerations of different
+tribes included under the general denomination of the Tartar army.
+
+Nothing could be more romantic than this picture, in delineating
+which the most skillful artist would have exhausted all the colors
+of his palette.
+
+Feofar's tent overlooked the others. Draped in large folds
+of a brilliant silk looped with golden cords and tassels,
+surmounted by tall plumes which waved in the wind like fans,
+it occupied the center of a wide clearing, sheltered by a grove
+of magnificent birch and pine trees. Before this tent, on a japanned
+table inlaid with precious stones, was placed the sacred book of
+the Koran, its pages being of thin gold-leaf delicately engraved.
+Above floated the Tartar flag, quartered with the Emir's arms.
+
+In a semicircle round the clearing stood the tents of the great
+functionaries of Bokhara. There resided the chief of the stables,
+who has the right to follow the Emir on horseback even into the court
+of his palace; the grand falconer; the "housch-begui," bearer of
+the royal seal; the "toptschi-baschi," grand master of the artillery;
+the "khodja," chief of the council, who receives the prince's kiss,
+and may present himself before him with his girdle untied;
+the "scheikh-oul-islam," chief of the Ulemas, representing the priests;
+the "cazi-askev," who, in the Emir's absence settles all disputes
+raised among the soldiers; and lastly, the chief of the astrologers,
+whose great business is to consult the stars every time the Khan
+thinks of changing his quarters.
+
+When the prisoners were brought into the camp, the Emir was in his tent.
+He did not show himself. This was fortunate, no doubt. A sign,
+a word from him might have been the signal for some bloody execution.
+But he intrenched himself in that isolation which constitutes
+in part the majesty of Eastern kings. He who does not show himself
+is admired, and, above all, feared.
+
+As to the prisoners, they were to be penned up in some enclosure,
+where, ill-treated, poorly fed, and exposed to all the inclemencies
+of the weather, they would await Feofar's pleasure.
+
+The most docile and patient of them all was undoubtedly
+Michael Strogoff. He allowed himself to be led, for they were
+leading him where he wished to go, and under conditions of safety
+which free he could not have found on the road from Kolyvan
+to Tomsk. To escape before reaching that town was to risk
+again falling into the hands of the scouts, who were scouring
+the steppe. The most eastern line occupied by the Tartar
+columns was not situated beyond the eighty-fifth meridian,
+which passes through Tomsk. This meridian once passed,
+Michael considered that he should be beyond the hostile zones,
+that he could traverse Genisci without danger, and gain
+Krasnoiarsk before Feofar-Khan had invaded the province.
+
+"Once at Tomsk," he repeated to himself, to repress some feelings
+of impatience which he could not entirely master, "in a few minutes
+I should be beyond the outposts; and twelve hours gained on Feofar,
+twelve hours on Ogareff, that surely would be enough to give me
+a start of them to Irkutsk."
+
+The thing that Michael dreaded more than everything else was
+the presence of Ivan Ogareff in the Tartar camp. Besides the danger
+of being recognized, he felt, by a sort of instinct, that this
+was the traitor whom it was especially necessary to precede.
+He understood, too, that the union of Ogareff's troops with those
+of Feofar would complete the invading army, and that the junction
+once effected, the army would march en masse on the capital
+of Eastern Siberia. All his apprehensions came from this quarter,
+and he dreaded every instant to hear some flourish of trumpets,
+announcing the arrival of the lieutenant of the Emir.
+
+To this was added the thought of his mother, of Nadia,--
+the one a prisoner at Omsk; the other dragged on board
+the Irtych boats, and no doubt a captive, as Marfa Strogoff was.
+He could do nothing for them. Should he ever see them again?
+At this question, to which he dared not reply, his heart
+sank very low.
+
+At the same time with Michael Strogoff and so many other prisoners
+Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet had also been taken to the Tartar camp.
+Their former traveling companion, captured like them at the telegraph
+office, knew that they were penned up with him in the enclosure,
+guarded by numerous sentinels, but he did not wish to accost them.
+It mattered little to him, at this time especially, what they might think
+of him since the affair at Ichim. Besides, he desired to be alone,
+that he might act alone, if necessary. He therefore held himself aloof
+from his former acquaintances.
+
+From the moment that Harry Blount had fallen by his side, Jolivet had
+not ceased his attentions to him. During the journey from Kolyvan
+to the camp--that is to say, for several hours--Blount, by leaning on his
+companion's arm, had been enabled to follow the rest of the prisoners.
+He tried to make known that he was a British subject; but it had no effect
+on the barbarians, who only replied by prods with a lance or sword.
+The correspondent of the Daily Telegraph was, therefore, obliged to submit
+to the common lot, resolving to protest later, and obtain satisfaction
+for such treatment. But the journey was not the less disagreeable to him,
+for his wound caused him much pain, and without Alcide Jolivet's
+assistance he might never have reached the camp.
+
+Jolivet, whose practical philosophy never abandoned him, had physically
+and morally strengthened his companion by every means in his power.
+His first care, when they found themselves definitely established
+in the enclosure, was to examine Blount's wound. Having managed
+carefully to draw off his coat, he found that the shoulder had been
+only grazed by the shot.
+
+"This is nothing," he said. "A mere scratch! After two or three
+dressings you will be all to rights."
+
+"But these dressings?" asked Blount.
+
+"I will make them for you myself."
+
+"Then you are something of a doctor?"
+
+"All Frenchmen are something of doctors."
+
+And on this affirmation Alcide, tearing his handkerchief,
+made lint of one piece, bandages of the other, took some water
+from a well dug in the middle of the enclosure, bathed the wound,
+and skillfully placed the wet rag on Harry Blount's shoulder.
+
+"I treat you with water," he said. "This liquid is the most efficacious
+sedative known for the treatment of wounds, and is the most employed now.
+Doctors have taken six thousand years to discover that! Yes, six thousand
+years in round numbers!"
+
+"I thank you, M. Jolivet," answered Harry, stretching himself on a bed
+of dry leaves, which his companion had arranged for him in the shade
+of a birch tree.
+
+"Bah! it's nothing! You would do as much for me."
+
+"I am not quite so sure," said Blount candidly.
+
+"Nonsense, stupid! All English are generous."
+
+"Doubtless; but the French?"
+
+"Well, the French--they are brutes, if you like!
+But what redeems them is that they are French. Say nothing
+more about that, or rather, say nothing more at all.
+Rest is absolutely necessary for you."
+
+But Harry Blount had no wish to be silent. If the wound, in prudence,
+required rest, the correspondent of the Daily Telegraph was not a man
+to indulge himself.
+
+"M. Jolivet," he asked, "do you think that our last dispatches
+have been able to pass the Russian frontier?"
+
+"Why not?" answered Alcide. "By this time you may be sure
+that my beloved cousin knows all about the affair at Kolyvan."
+
+"How many copies does your cousin work off of her dispatches?"
+asked Blount, for the first time putting his question direct
+to his companion.
+
+"Well," answered Alcide, laughing, "my cousin is a very discreet person,
+who does not like to be talked about, and who would be in despair if she
+troubled the sleep of which you are in need."
+
+"I don't wish to sleep," replied the Englishman. "What will your cousin
+think of the affairs of Russia?"
+
+"That they seem for the time in a bad way. But, bah! the
+Muscovite government is powerful; it cannot be really uneasy
+at an invasion of barbarians."
+
+"Too much ambition has lost the greatest empires," answered Blount,
+who was not exempt from a certain English jealousy with regard
+to Russian pretensions in Central Asia.
+
+"Oh, do not let us talk politics," cried Jolivet. "It is forbidden
+by the faculty. Nothing can be worse for wounds in the shoulder--
+unless it was to put you to sleep."
+
+"Let us, then, talk of what we ought to do," replied Blount.
+"M. Jolivet, I have no intention at all of remaining a prisoner
+to these Tartars for an indefinite time."
+
+"Nor I, either, by Jove!"
+
+"We will escape on the first opportunity?"
+
+"Yes, if there is no other way of regaining our liberty."
+
+"Do you know of any other?" asked Blount, looking at his companion.
+
+"Certainly. We are not belligerents; we are neutral, and we
+will claim our freedom."
+
+"From that brute of a Feofar-Khan?"
+
+"No; he would not understand," answered Jolivet; "but from
+his lieutenant, Ivan Ogareff."
+
+"He is a villain."
+
+" No doubt; but the villain is a Russian. He knows that it does not do
+to trifle with the rights of men, and he has no interest to retain us;
+on the contrary. But to ask a favor of that gentleman does not quite
+suit my taste."
+
+"But that gentleman is not in the camp, or at least I have not seen
+him here," observed Blount.
+
+"He will come. He will not fail to do that. He must join
+the Emir. Siberia is cut in two now, and very certainly Feofar's
+army is only waiting for him to advance on Irkutsk."
+
+"And once free, what shall we do?"
+
+"Once free, we will continue our campaign, and follow the Tartars,
+until the time comes when we can make our way into the Russian camp.
+We must not give up the game. No, indeed; we have only just begun.
+You, friend, have already had the honor of being wounded in the service
+of the Daily Telegraph, whilst I--I have as yet suffered nothing
+in my cousin's service. Well, well! Good," murmured Alcide Jolivet;
+"there he is asleep. A few hours' sleep and a few cold water compresses
+are all that are required to set an Englishman on his legs again.
+These fellows are made of cast iron."
+
+And whilst Harry Blount rested, Alcide watched near him,
+after having drawn out his note book, which he loaded with notes,
+determined besides to share them with his companion, for the greater
+satisfaction of the readers of the Daily Telegraph. Events had
+united them one with the other. They were no longer jealous of
+each other. So, then, the thing that Michael Strogoff dreaded above
+everything was the most lively desire of the two correspondents.
+Ivan Ogareff's arrival would evidently be of use to them.
+Blount and Jolivet's interest was, therefore, contrary to
+that of Michael. The latter well understood the situation,
+and it was one reason, added to many others, which prevented
+him from approaching his former traveling companions.
+He therefore managed so as not to be seen by them.
+
+Four days passed thus without the state of things being in
+anywise altered. The prisoners heard no talk of the breaking
+up of the Tartar camp. They were strictly guarded.
+It would have been impossible for them to pass the cordon
+of foot and horse soldiers, which watched them night and day.
+As to the food which was given them it was barely sufficient.
+Twice in the twenty-four hours they were thrown a piece
+of the intestines of goats grilled on the coals, or a few
+bits of that cheese called "kroute," made of sour ewe's milk,
+and which, soaked in mare's milk, forms the Kirghiz dish,
+commonly called "koumyss." And this was all.
+It may be added that the weather had become detestable.
+There were considerable atmospheric commotions, bringing squalls
+mingled with rain. The unfortunate prisoners, destitute
+of shelter, had to bear all the inclemencies of the weather,
+nor was there the slightest alleviation to their misery.
+Several wounded women and children died, and the prisoners were
+themselves compelled to dig graves for the bodies of those whom
+their jailers would not even take the trouble to bury.
+
+During this trying period Alcide Jolivet and Michael Strogoff worked hard,
+each in the portions of the enclosure in which they found themselves.
+Healthy and vigorous, they suffered less than so many others,
+and could better endure the hardships to which they were exposed.
+By their advice, and the assistance they rendered, they were of the
+greatest possible use to their suffering and despairing fellow-captives.
+
+Was this state of things to last? Would Feofar-Khan, satisfied
+with his first success, wait some time before marching
+on Irkutsk? Such, it was to be feared, would be the case.
+But it was not so. The event so much wished for by Jolivet
+and Blount, so much dreaded by Michael, occurred on the morning
+of the 12th of August.
+
+On that day the trumpets sounded, the drums beat, the cannon roared.
+A huge cloud of dust swept along the road from Kolyvan. Ivan Ogareff,
+followed by several thousand men, made his entry into the Tartar camp.
+
+
+CHAPTER II CORRESPONDENTS IN TROUBLE
+
+IVAN OGAREFF was bringing up the main body of the army of
+the Emir. The cavalry and infantry now under him had formed part
+of the column which had taken Omsk. Ogareff, not having been
+able to reduce the high town, in which, it must be remembered,
+the governor and garrison had sought refuge, had decided to pass on,
+not wishing to delay operations which ought to lead to the conquest
+of Eastern Siberia. He therefore left a garrison in Omsk, and,
+reinforcing himself en route with the conquerors of Kolyvan,
+joined Feofar's army.
+
+Ivan Ogareff's soldiers halted at the outposts of the camp.
+They received no orders to bivouac. Their chief's plan,
+doubtless, was not to halt there, but to press on and reach
+Tomsk in the shortest possible time, it being an important town,
+naturally intended to become the center of future operations.
+
+Besides his soldiers, Ogareff was bringing a convoy
+of Russian and Siberian prisoners, captured either at Omsk
+or Kolyvan. These unhappy creatures were not led to
+the enclosure--already too crowded--but were forced to remain
+at the outposts without shelter, almost without nourishment.
+What fate was Feofar-Khan reserving for these unfortunates?
+Would he imprison them in Tomsk, or would some bloody execution,
+familiar to the Tartar chiefs, remove them when they were found
+too inconvenient? This was the secret of the capricious Emir.
+
+This army had not come from Omsk and Kolyvan without bringing in its
+train the usual crowd of beggars, freebooters, pedlars, and gypsies,
+which compose the rear-guard of an army on the march.
+
+All these people lived on the country traversed, and left
+little of anything behind them. There was, therefore,
+a necessity for pushing forward, if only to secure provisions
+for the troops. The whole region between Ichim and the Obi,
+now completely devastated, no longer offered any resources.
+The Tartars left a desert behind them.
+
+Conspicuous among the gypsies who had hastened from the western provinces
+was the Tsigane troop, which had accompanied Michael Strogoff as far
+as Perm. Sangarre was there. This fierce spy, the tool of Ivan Ogareff,
+had not deserted her master. Ogareff had traveled rapidly to Ichim,
+whilst Sangarre and her band had proceeded to Omsk by the southern part
+of the province.
+
+It may be easily understood how useful this woman was
+to Ogareff. With her gypsy-band she could penetrate anywhere.
+Ivan Ogareff was kept acquainted with all that was going on in
+the very heart of the invaded provinces. There were a hundred eyes,
+a hundred ears, open in his service. Besides, he paid liberally
+for this espionage, from which he derived so much advantage.
+
+Once Sangarre, being implicated in a very serious affair, had been
+saved by the Russian officer. She never forgot what she owed him,
+and had devoted herself to his service body and soul.
+
+When Ivan Ogareff entered on the path of treason,
+he saw at once how he might turn this woman to account.
+Whatever order he might give her, Sangarre would execute it.
+An inexplicable instinct, more powerful still than that of gratitude,
+had urged her to make herself the slave of the traitor
+to whom she had been attached since the very beginning of his
+exile in Siberia.
+
+Confidante and accomplice, Sangarre, without country, without family,
+had been delighted to put her vagabond life to the service of the invaders
+thrown by Ogareff on Siberia. To the wonderful cunning natural to her
+race she added a wild energy, which knew neither forgiveness nor pity.
+She was a savage worthy to share the wigwam of an Apache or the hut
+of an Andaman.
+
+Since her arrival at Omsk, where she had rejoined him with
+her Tsiganes, Sangarre had not again left Ogareff. The circumstance
+that Michael and Marfa Strogoff had met was known to her.
+She knew and shared Ogareff's fears concerning the journey
+of a courier of the Czar. Having Marfa Strogoff in her power,
+she would have been the woman to torture her with all the refinement
+of a RedSkin in order to wrest her secret from her. But the hour
+had not yet come in which Ogareff wished the old Siberian to speak.
+Sangarre had to wait, and she waited, without losing sight
+of her whom she was watching, observing her slightest gestures,
+her slightest words, endeavoring to catch the word "son" escaping
+from her lips, but as yet always baffled by Marfa's taciturnity.
+
+At the first flourish of the trumpets several officers of high rank,
+followed by a brilliant escort of Usbeck horsemen, moved to the front
+of the camp to receive Ivan Ogareff. Arrived in his presence,
+they paid him the greatest respect, and invited him to accompany them
+to Feofar-Khan's tent.
+
+Imperturbable as usual, Ogareff replied coldly to the deference paid
+to him. He was plainly dressed; but, from a sort of impudent bravado,
+he still wore the uniform of a Russian officer.
+
+As he was about to enter the camp, Sangarre, passing among
+the officers approached and remained motionless before him.
+"Nothing?" asked Ogareff.
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"Have patience."
+
+"Is the time approaching when you will force the old woman to speak?"
+
+"It is approaching, Sangarre."
+
+"When will the old woman speak?"
+
+"When we reach Tomsk."
+
+"And we shall be there--"
+
+"In three days."
+
+A strange gleam shot from Sangarre's great black eyes, and she
+retired with a calm step. Ogareff pressed his spurs into his
+horse's flanks, and, followed by his staff of Tartar officers,
+rode towards the Emir's tent.
+
+Feofar-Khan was expecting his lieutenant. The council,
+composed of the bearer of the royal seal, the khodja,
+and some high officers, had taken their places in the tent.
+Ivan Ogareff dismounted and entered.
+
+Feofar-Khan was a man of forty, tall, rather pale, of a fierce
+countenance, and evil eyes. A curly black beard flowed over his chest.
+With his war costume, coat of mail of gold and silver, cross-belt and
+scabbard glistening with precious stones, boots with golden spurs,
+helmet ornamented with an aigrette of brilliant diamonds, Feofar presented
+an aspect rather strange than imposing for a Tartar Sardana-palus,
+an undisputed sovereign, who directs at his pleasure the life and fortune
+of his subjects.
+
+When Ivan Ogareff appeared, the great dignitaries remained seated
+on their gold-embroidered cushions; but Feofar rose from a rich
+divan which occupied the back part of the tent, the ground being
+hidden under the thick velvet-pile of a Bokharian carpet.
+
+The Emir approached Ogareff and gave him a kiss, the meaning of which
+he could not mistake. This kiss made the lieutenant chief of the council,
+and placed him temporarily above the khodja.
+
+Then Feofar spoke. "I have no need to question you," said he;
+"speak, Ivan. You will find here ears very ready to listen to you."
+
+"Takhsir," answered Ogareff, "this is what I have to make
+known to you." He spoke in the Tartar language, giving to his
+phrases the emphatic turn which distinguishes the languages of
+the Orientals. "Takhsir, this is not the time for unnecessary words.
+What I have done at the head of your troops, you know.
+The lines of the Ichim and the Irtych are now in our power; and the
+Turcoman horsemen can bathe their horses in the now Tartar waters.
+The Kirghiz hordes rose at the voice of Feofar-Khan. You can
+now push your troops towards the east, and where the sun rises,
+or towards the west, where he sets."
+
+"And if I march with the sun?" asked the Emir, without his countenance
+betraying any of his thoughts.
+
+"To march with the sun," answered Ogareff, "is to throw yourself
+towards Europe; it is to conquer rapidly the Siberian provinces
+of Tobolsk as far as the Ural Mountains."
+
+"And if I go to meet this luminary of the heavens?"
+
+"It is to subdue to the Tartar dominion, with Irkutsk, the richest
+countries of Central Asia."
+
+"But the armies of the Sultan of St. Petersburg?" said Feofar-Khan,
+designating the Emperor of Russia by this strange title.
+
+"You have nothing to fear from them," replied Ivan Ogareff.
+"The invasion has been sudden; and before the Russian army can
+succor them, Irkutsk or Tobolsk will have fallen into your power.
+The Czar's troops have been overwhelmed at Kolyvan, as they
+will be everywhere where yours meet them."
+
+"And what advice does your devotion to the Tartar cause suggest?"
+asked the Emir, after a few moments' silence.
+
+"My advice," answered Ivan Ogareff quickly, "is to march to meet the sun.
+It is to give the grass of the eastern steppes to the Turcoman horses
+to consume. It is to take Irkutsk, the capital of the eastern provinces,
+and with it a hostage, the possession of whom is worth a whole country.
+In the place of the Czar, the Grand Duke his brother must fall
+into your hands."
+
+This was the great result aimed at by Ivan Ogareff. To listen
+to him, one would have taken him for one of the cruel
+descendants of Stephan Razine, the celebrated pirate
+who ravaged Southern Russia in the eighteenth century.
+To seize the Grand Duke, murder him pitilessly, would fully
+satisfy his hatred. Besides, with the capture of Irkutsk,
+all Eastern Siberia would pass to the Tartars.
+
+"It shall be thus, Ivan," replied Feofar.
+
+"What are your orders, Takhsir?"
+
+"To-day our headquarters shall be removed to Tomsk."
+
+Ogareff bowed, and, followed by the housch-begui, he retired
+to execute the Emir's orders.
+
+As he was about to mount his horse, to return to the outposts,
+a tumult broke out at some distance, in the part of the camp reserved
+for the prisoners. Shouts were heard, and two or three shots fired.
+Perhaps it was an attempt at revolt or escape, which must
+be summarily suppressed.
+
+Ivan Ogareff and the housch-begui walked forward and almost
+immediately two men, whom the soldiers had not been able to keep
+back appeared before them.
+
+The housch-begui, without more information, made a sign which
+was an order for death, and the heads of the two prisoners
+would have rolled on the ground had not Ogareff uttered
+a few words which arrested the sword already raised aloft.
+The Russian had perceived that these prisoners were strangers,
+and he ordered them to be brought to him.
+
+They were Harry Blount and Alcide jolivet.
+
+On Ogareff's arrival in the camp, they had demanded to be
+conducted to his presence. The soldiers had refused.
+In consequence, a struggle, an attempt at flight, shots fired
+which happily missed the two correspondents, but their execution
+would not have been long delayed, if it had not been for
+the intervention of the Emir's lieutenant.
+
+The latter observed the prisoners for some moments, they being absolutely
+unknown to him. They had been present at that scene in the post-house
+at Ichim, in which Michael Strogoff had been struck by Ogareff;
+but the brutal traveler had paid no attention to the persons then
+collected in the common room.
+
+Blount and Jolivet, on the contrary, recognized him at once,
+and the latter said in a low voice, "Hullo! It seems that Colonel Ogareff
+and the rude personage of Ichim are one!" Then he added in his
+companion's ear, "Explain our affair, Blount. You will do me a service.
+This Russian colonel in the midst of a Tartar camp disgusts me;
+and although, thanks to him, my head is still on my shoulders,
+my eyes would exhibit my feelings were I to attempt to look him
+in the face."
+
+So saying, Alcide Jolivet assumed a look of complete
+and haughty indifference.
+
+Whether or not Ivan Ogareff perceived that the prisoner's
+attitude was insulting towards him, he did not let it appear.
+"Who are you, gentlemen?" he asked in Russian, in a cold tone,
+but free from its usual rudeness.
+
+"Two correspondents of English and French newspapers,"
+replied Blount laconically.
+
+"You have, doubtless, papers which will establish your identity?"
+
+"Here are letters which accredit us in Russia, from the English
+and French chancellor's office."
+
+Ivan Ogareff took the letters which Blount held out, and read
+them attentively. "You ask," said he, "authorization to follow
+our military operations in Siberia?"
+
+"We ask to be free, that is all," answered the English
+correspondent dryly.
+
+"You are so, gentlemen," answered Ogareff; "I am curious to read
+your articles in the Daily Telegraph."
+
+"Sir," replied Blount, with the most imperturbable coolness,
+"it is sixpence a number, including postage." And thereupon
+he returned to his companion, who appeared to approve completely
+of his replies.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, without frowning, mounted his horse, and going to the head
+of his escort, soon disappeared in a cloud of dust.
+
+"Well, Jolivet, what do you think of Colonel Ivan Ogareff,
+general-in-chief of the Tartar troops?" asked Blount.
+
+"I think, my dear friend," replied Alcide, smiling, "that the housch-begui
+made a very graceful gesture when he gave the order for our heads
+to be cut off."
+
+Whatever was the motive which led Ogareff to act thus in regard
+to the two correspondents, they were free and could rove at their
+pleasure over the scene of war. Their intention was not to leave it.
+The sort of antipathy which formerly they had entertained for each
+other had given place to a sincere friendship. Circumstances having
+brought them together, they no longer thought of separating.
+The petty questions of rivalry were forever extinguished.
+Harry Blount could never forget what he owed his companion,
+who, on the other hand, never tried to remind him of it.
+This friendship too assisted the reporting operations, and was
+thus to the advantage of their readers.
+
+"And now," asked Blount, "what shall we do with our liberty?"
+
+"Take advantage of it, of course," replied Alcide, "and go quietly
+to Tomsk to see what is going on there."
+
+"Until the time--very near, I hope--when we may rejoin
+some Russian regiment?"
+
+"As you say, my dear Blount, it won't do to Tartarise ourselves
+too much. The best side is that of the most civilized army,
+and it is evident that the people of Central Asia will have
+everything to lose and absolutely nothing to gain from
+this invasion, while the Russians will soon repulse them.
+It is only a matter of time."
+
+The arrival of Ivan Ogareff, which had given Jolivet and Blount their
+liberty, was to Michael Strogoff, on the contrary, a serious danger.
+Should chance bring the Czar's courier into Ogareff's presence, the latter
+could not fail to recognize in him the traveler whom he had so brutally
+treated at the Ichim post-house, and although Michael had not replied
+to the insult as he would have done under any other circumstances,
+attention would be drawn to him, and at once the accomplishment of his
+plans would be rendered more difficult.
+
+This was the unpleasant side of the business. A favorable
+result of his arrival, however, was the order which was given
+to raise the camp that very day, and remove the headquarters
+to Tomsk. This was the accomplishment of Michael's most
+fervent desire. His intention, as has been said, was to reach
+Tomsk concealed amongst the other prisoners; that is to say,
+without any risk of falling into the hands of the scouts
+who swarmed about the approaches to this important town.
+However, in consequence of the arrival of Ivan Ogareff,
+he questioned whether it would not be better to give up his
+first plan and attempt to escape during the journey.
+
+Michael would, no doubt, have kept to the latter plan had he not learnt
+that Feofar-Khan and Ogareff had already set out for the town with
+some thousands of horsemen. "I will wait, then," said he to himself;
+"at least, unless some exceptional opportunity for escape occurs.
+The adverse chances are numerous on this side of Tomsk, while beyond
+I shall in a few hours have passed the most advanced Tartar posts
+to the east. Still three days of patience, and may God aid me!"
+
+It was indeed a journey of three days which the prisoners, under the guard
+of a numerous detachment of Tartars, were to make across the steppe.
+A hundred and fifty versts lay between the camp and the town--
+an easy march for the Emir's soldiers, who wanted for nothing,
+but a wretched journey for these people, enfeebled by privations.
+More than one corpse would show the road they had traversed.
+
+It was two o'clock in the afternoon, on the 12th of August,
+under a hot sun and cloudless sky, that the toptschi-baschi
+gave the order to start.
+
+Alcide and Blount, having bought horses, had already taken the road
+to Tomsk, where events were to reunite the principal personages
+of this story.
+
+Amongst the prisoners brought by Ivan Ogareff to the Tartar camp
+was an old woman, whose taciturnity seemed to keep her apart from
+all those who shared her fate. Not a murmur issued from her lips.
+She was like a statue of grief. This woman was more strictly
+guarded than anyone else, and, without her appearing to notice,
+was constantly watched by the Tsigane Sangarre. Notwithstanding her
+age she was compelled to follow the convoy of prisoners on foot,
+without any alleviation of her suffering.
+
+However, a kind Providence had placed near her a courageous,
+kind-hearted being to comfort and assist her. Amongst her companions
+in misfortune a young girl, remarkable for beauty and taciturnity,
+seemed to have given herself the task of watching over her.
+No words had been exchanged between the two captives, but the girl
+was always at the old woman's side when help was useful.
+At first the mute assistance of the stranger was accepted with
+some mistrust. Gradually, however, the young girl's clear glance,
+her reserve, and the mysterious sympathy which draws together
+those who are in misfortune, thawed Marfa Strogoff's coldness.
+
+Nadia--for it was she--was thus able, without knowing it, to render
+to the mother those attentions which she had herself received
+from the son. Her instinctive kindness had doubly inspired her.
+In devoting herself to her service, Nadia secured to her youth
+and beauty the protection afforded by the age of the old prisoner.
+
+On the crowd of unhappy people, embittered by sufferings,
+this silent pair--one seeming to be the grandmother, the other
+the grand-daughter--imposed a sort of respect.
+
+After being carried off by the Tartar scouts on the Irtych, Nadia had been
+taken to Omsk. Kept prisoner in the town, she shared the fate of all
+those captured by Ivan Ogareff, and consequently that of Marfa Strogoff.
+
+If Nadia had been less energetic, she would have succumbed to this
+double blow. The interruption to her journey, the death of Michael,
+made her both desperate and excited. Divided, perhaps forever,
+from her father, after so many happy efforts had brought her
+near him, and, to crown her grief, separated from the intrepid
+companion whom God seemed to have placed in her way to lead her.
+The image of Michael Strogoff, struck before her eyes with
+a lance and disappearing beneath the waters of the Irtych,
+never left her thoughts.
+
+Could such a man have died thus? For whom was God reserving His
+miracles if this good man, whom a noble object was urging onwards,
+had been allowed to perish so miserably? Then anger would
+prevail over grief. The scene of the affront so strangely borne
+by her companion at the Ichim relay returned to her memory.
+Her blood boiled at the recollection.
+
+"Who will avenge him who can no longer avenge himself?" she said.
+
+And in her heart, she cried, "May it be I!" If before his death
+Michael had confided his secret to her, woman, aye girl though
+she was, she might have been able to carry to a successful
+conclusion the interrupted task of that brother whom God had
+so soon taken from her.
+
+Absorbed in these thoughts, it can be understood how Nadia
+could remain insensible to the miseries even of her captivity.
+Thus chance had united her to Marfa Strogoff without her having
+the least suspicion of who she was. How could she imagine that
+this old woman, a prisoner like herself, was the mother of him,
+whom she only knew as the merchant Nicholas Korpanoff? And on
+the other hand, how could Marfa guess that a bond of gratitude
+connected this young stranger with her son?
+
+The thing that first struck Nadia in Marfa Strogoff was
+the similarity in the way in which each bore her hard fate.
+This stoicism of the old woman under the daily hardships,
+this contempt of bodily suffering, could only be caused by a moral
+grief equal to her own. So Nadia thought; and she was not mistaken.
+It was an instinctive sympathy for that part of her misery
+which Marfa did not show which first drew Nadia towards her.
+This way of bearing her sorrow went to the proud heart of
+the young girl. She did not offer her services; she gave them.
+Marfa had neither to refuse nor accept them. In the difficult
+parts of the journey, the girl was there to support her.
+When the provisions were given out, the old woman would not
+have moved, but Nadia shared her small portion with her; and thus
+this painful journey was performed. Thanks to her companion,
+Marfa was able to follow the soldiers who guarded the prisoners
+without being fastened to a saddle-bow, as were many other
+unfortunate wretches, and thus dragged along this road of sorrow.
+
+"May God reward you, my daughter, for what you have done for my old age!"
+said Marfa Strogoff once, and for some time these were the only words
+exchanged between the two unfortunate beings.
+
+During these few days, which to them appeared like centuries,
+it would seem that the old woman and the girl would have been led
+to speak of their situation. But Marfa Strogoff, from a caution
+which may be easily understood, never spoke about herself except
+with the greatest brevity. She never made the smallest allusion
+to her son, nor to the unfortunate meeting.
+
+Nadia also, if not completely silent, spoke little. However, one day
+her heart overflowed, and she told all the events which had occurred
+from her departure from Wladimir to the death of Nicholas Korpanoff.
+
+All that her young companion told intensely interested
+the old Siberian. "Nicholas Korpanoff!" said she.
+"Tell me again about this Nicholas. I know only one man,
+one alone, in whom such conduct would not have astonished me.
+Nicholas Korpanoff! Was that really his name? Are you sure
+of it, my daughter?"
+
+"Why should he have deceived me in this," replied Nadia,
+"when he deceived me in no other way?"
+
+Moved, however, by a kind of presentiment, Marfa Strogoff put
+questions upon questions to Nadia.
+
+"You told me he was fearless, my daughter. You have proved
+that he has been so?" asked she.
+
+"Yes, fearless indeed!" replied Nadia.
+
+"It was just what my son would have done," said Marfa to herself.
+
+Then she resumed, "Did you not say that nothing stopped him,
+nor astonished him; that he was so gentle in his strength that you
+had a sister as well as a brother in him, and he watched over you
+like a mother?"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Nadia. "Brother, sister, mother--he has been
+all to me!"
+
+"And defended you like a lion?"
+
+"A lion indeed!" replied Nadia. "A lion, a hero!"
+
+"My son, my son!" thought the old Siberian. "But you said, however,
+that he bore a terrible insult at that post-house in Ichim?"
+
+"He did bear it," answered Nadia, looking down.
+
+"He bore it!" murmured Marfa, shuddering.
+
+"Mother, mother," cried Nadia, "do not blame him! He had a secret.
+A secret of which God alone is as yet the judge!"
+
+"And," said Marfa, raising her head and looking at Nadia as though
+she would read the depths of her heart, "in that hour of humiliation
+did you not despise this Nicholas Korpanoff?"
+
+"I admired without understanding him," replied the girl.
+"I never felt him more worthy of respect."
+
+The old woman was silent for a minute.
+
+"Was he tall?" she asked.
+
+"Very tall."
+
+"And very handsome? Come, speak, my daughter."
+
+"He was very handsome," replied Nadia, blushing.
+
+"It was my son! I tell you it was my son!" exclaimed the
+old woman, embracing Nadia.
+
+"Your son!" said Nadia amazed, "your son!"
+
+"Come," said Marfa; "let us get to the bottom of this, my child.
+Your companion, your friend, your protector had a mother.
+Did he never speak to you of his mother?"
+
+"Of his mother?" said Nadia. "He spoke to me of his mother as I
+spoke to him of my father--often, always. He adored her."
+
+"Nadia, Nadia, you have just told me about my own son,"
+said the old woman.
+
+And she added impetuously, "Was he not going to see this mother,
+whom you say he loved, in Omsk?"
+
+"No," answered Nadia, "no, he was not."
+
+"Not!" cried Marfa. "You dare to tell me not!"
+
+"I say so: but it remains to me to tell you that from motives which
+outweighed everything else, motives which I do not know, I understand
+that Nicholas Korpanoff had to traverse the country completely in secret.
+To him it was a question of life and death, and still more, a question
+of duty and honor."
+
+"Duty, indeed, imperious duty," said the old Siberian,
+"of those who sacrifice everything, even the joy of giving
+a kiss, perhaps the last, to his old mother. All that you do
+not know, Nadia--all that I did not know myself--I now know.
+You have made me understand everything. But the light which you
+have thrown on the mysteries of my heart, I cannot return on yours.
+Since my son has not told you his secret, I must keep it.
+Forgive me, Nadia; I can never repay what you have done for me."
+
+"Mother, I ask you nothing," replied Nadia.
+
+All was thus explained to the old Siberian, all, even the conduct
+of her son with regard to herself in the inn at Omsk. There was
+no doubt that the young girl's companion was Michael Strogoff,
+and that a secret mission in the invaded country obliged him
+to conceal his quality of the Czar's courier.
+
+"Ah, my brave boy!" thought Marfa. "No, I will not betray you,
+and tortures shall not wrest from me the avowal that it was you
+whom I saw at Omsk."
+
+Marfa could with a word have paid Nadia for all her devotion to her.
+She could have told her that her companion, Nicholas Korpanoff,
+or rather Michael Strogoff, had not perished in the waters of the Irtych,
+since it was some days after that incident that she had met him,
+that she had spoken to him.
+
+But she restrained herself, she was silent, and contented herself
+with saying, "Hope, my child! Misfortune will not overwhelm you.
+You will see your father again; I feel it; and perhaps he who gave
+you the name of sister is not dead. God cannot have allowed your
+brave companion to perish. Hope, my child, hope! Do as I do.
+The mourning which I wear is not yet for my son."
+
+
+CHAPTER III BLOW FOR BLOW
+
+SUCH were now the relative situations of Marfa Strogoff
+and Nadia. All was understood by the old Siberian, and though the young
+girl was ignorant that her much-regretted companion still lived,
+she at least knew his relationship to her whom she had made her mother;
+and she thanked God for having given her the joy of taking the place
+of the son whom the prisoner had lost.
+
+But what neither of them could know was that Michael, having been
+captured at Kolyvan, was in the same convoy and was on his way
+to Tomsk with them.
+
+The prisoners brought by Ivan Ogareff had been added to those already kept
+by the Emir in the Tartar camp. These unfortunate people, consisting
+of Russians, Siberians, soldiers and civilians, numbered some thousands,
+and formed a column which extended over several versts. Some among them
+being considered dangerous were handcuffed and fastened to a long chain.
+There were, too, women and children, many of the latter suspended
+to the pommels of the saddles, while the former were dragged mercilessly
+along the road on foot, or driven forward as if they were animals.
+The horsemen compelled them to maintain a certain order, and there were
+no laggards with the exception of those who fell never to rise again.
+
+In consequence of this arrangement, Michael Strogoff,
+marching in the first ranks of those who had left the Tartar camp--
+that is to say, among the Kolyvan prisoners--was unable to mingle
+with the prisoners who had arrived after him from Omsk. He had
+therefore no suspicion that his mother and Nadia were present in
+the convoy, nor did they suppose that he was among those in front.
+This journey from the camp to Tomsk, performed under the lashes and
+spear-points of the soldiers, proved fatal to many, and terrible to all.
+The prisoners traveled across the steppe, over a road made
+still more dusty by the passage of the Emir and his vanguard.
+Orders had been given to march rapidly. The short halts were rare.
+The hundred miles under a burning sky seemed interminable,
+though they were performed as rapidly as possible.
+
+The country, which extends from the right of the Obi to
+the base of the spur detached from the Sayanok Mountains,
+is very sterile. Only a few stunted and burnt-up shrubs
+here and there break the monotony of the immense plain.
+There was no cultivation, for there was no water; and it was water
+that the prisoners, parched by their painful march, most needed.
+To find a stream they must have diverged fifty versts eastward,
+to the very foot of the mountains.
+
+There flows the Tom, a little affluent of the Obi, which passes near
+Tomsk before losing itself in one of the great northern arteries.
+There water would have been abundant, the steppe less arid,
+the heat less severe. But the strictest orders had been given
+to the commanders of the convoy to reach Tomsk by the shortest way,
+for the Emir was much afraid of being taken in the flank and cut
+off by some Russian column descending from the northern provinces.
+
+It is useless to dwell upon the sufferings of the unhappy prisoners.
+Many hundreds fell on the steppe, where their bodies would lie
+until winter, when the wolves would devour the remnants of their bones.
+
+As Nadia helped the old Siberian, so in the same way did Michael
+render to his more feeble companions in misfortune such services
+as his situation allowed. He encouraged some, supported others,
+going to and fro, until a prick from a soldier's lance obliged him
+to r‚sum‚ the place which had been assigned him in the ranks.
+
+Why did he not endeavor to escape?
+
+The reason was that he had now quite determined not to venture until
+the steppe was safe for him. He was resolved in his idea of going
+as far as Tomsk "at the Emir's expense," and indeed he was right.
+As he observed the numerous detachments which scoured the plain
+on the convoy's flanks, now to the south, now to the north,
+it was evident that before he could have gone two versts
+he must have been recaptured. The Tartar horsemen swarmed--
+it actually appeared as if they sprang from the earth--like insects
+which a thunderstorm brings to the surface of the ground.
+Flight under these conditions would have been extremely difficult,
+if not impossible. The soldiers of the escort displayed
+excessive vigilance, for they would have paid for the slightest
+carelessness with their heads.
+
+At nightfall of the 15th of August, the convoy reached the little
+village of Zabediero, thirty versts from Tomsk.
+
+The prisoners' first movement would have been to rush into the river,
+but they were not allowed to leave the ranks until the halt
+had been organized. Although the current of the Tom was just
+now like a torrent, it might have favored the flight of some
+bold or desperate man, and the strictest measures of vigilance
+were taken. Boats, requisitioned at Zabediero, were brought up
+to the Tom and formed a line of obstacles impossible to pass.
+As to the encampment on the outskirts of the village, it was
+guarded by a cordon of sentinels.
+
+Michael Strogoff, who now naturally thought of escape, saw,
+after carefully surveying the situation, that under these
+conditions it was perfectly impossible; so, not wishing
+to compromise himself, he waited.
+
+The prisoners were to encamp for the whole night on the banks
+of the Tom, for the Emir had put off the entrance of his troops
+into Tomsk. It had been decided that a military fete should mark
+the inauguration of the Tartar headquarters in this important city.
+Feofar-Khan already occupied the fortress, but the bulk of his army
+bivouacked under its walls, waiting until the time came for them
+to make a solemn entry.
+
+Ivan Ogareff left the Emir at Tomsk, where both had arrived
+the evening before, and returned to the camp at Zabediero. From here
+he was to start the next day with the rear-guard of the Tartar army.
+A house had been arranged for him in which to pass the night.
+At sunrise horse and foot soldiers were to proceed to Tomsk,
+where the Emir wished to receive them with the pomp usual
+to Asiatic sovereigns. As soon as the halt was organized,
+the prisoners, worn out with their three days' journey, and suffering
+from burning thirst, could drink and take a little rest.
+The sun had already set, when Nadia, supporting Marfa Strogoff,
+reached the banks of the Tom. They had not till then been able
+to get through those who crowded the banks, but at last they came
+to drink in their turn.
+
+The old woman bent over the clear stream, and Nadia, plunging in
+her hand, carried it to Marfa's lips. Then she refreshed herself.
+They found new life in these welcome waters. Suddenly Nadia started up;
+an involuntary cry escaped her.
+
+Michael Strogoff was there, a few steps from her. It was he.
+The dying rays of the sun fell upon him.
+
+At Nadia's cry Michael started. But he had sufficient command over
+himself not to utter a word by which he might have been compromised.
+And yet, when he saw Nadia, he also recognized his mother.
+
+Feeling he could not long keep master of himself at this
+unexpected meeting, he covered his eyes with his hands and
+walked quickly away.
+
+Nadia's impulse was to run after him, but the old Siberian murmured
+in her ear, "Stay, my daughter!"
+
+"It is he!" replied Nadia, choking with emotion. "He lives, mother!
+It is he!"
+
+"It is my son," answered Marfa, "it is Michael Strogoff,
+and you see that I do not make a step towards him!
+Imitate me, my daughter."
+
+Michael had just experienced the most violent emotion which a man
+can feel. His mother and Nadia were there!
+
+The two prisoners who were always together in his heart,
+God had brought them together in this common misfortune.
+Did Nadia know who he was? Yes, for he had seen Marfa's gesture,
+holding her back as she was about to rush towards him.
+Marfa, then, had understood all, and kept his secret.
+
+During that night, Michael was twenty times on the point
+of looking for and joining his mother; but he knew that he must
+resist the longing he felt to take her in his arms, and once
+more press the hand of his young companion. The least imprudence
+might be fatal. He had besides sworn not to see his mother.
+Once at Tomsk, since he could not escape this very night,
+he would set off without having even embraced the two beings
+in whom all the happiness of his life was centered, and whom
+he should leave exposed to so many perils.
+
+Michael hoped that this fresh meeting at the Zabediero camp would
+have no disastrous consequences either to his mother or to himself.
+But he did not know that part of this scene, although it passed
+so rapidly, had been observed by Sangarre, Ogareff's spy.
+
+The Tsigane was there, a few paces off, on the bank, as usual,
+watching the old Siberian woman. She had not caught sight
+of Michael, for he disappeared before she had time to look around;
+but the mother's gesture as she kept back Nadia had not escaped her,
+and the look in Marfa's eyes told her all.
+
+It was now beyond doubt that Marfa Strogoff's son, the Czar's courier,
+was at this moment in Zabediero, among Ivan Ogareff's prisoners.
+Sangarre did not know him, but she knew that he was there.
+She did not then attempt to discover him, for it would have been
+impossible in the dark and the immense crowd.
+
+As for again watching Nadia and Marfa Strogoff, that was equally useless.
+It was evident that the two women would keep on their guard, and it
+would be impossible to overhear anything of a nature to compromise
+the courier of the Czar. The Tsigane's first thought was to tell
+Ivan Ogareff. She therefore immediately left the encampment.
+A quarter of an hour after, she reached Zabediero, and was shown
+into the house occupied by the Emir's lieutenant. Ogareff received
+the Tsigane directly.
+
+"What have you to tell me, Sangarre?" he asked.
+
+"Marfa Strogoff's son is in the encampment."
+
+"A prisoner?"
+
+"A prisoner."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Ogareff, "I shall know--"
+
+"You will know nothing, Ivan," replied Tsigane; "for you do not
+even know him by sight."
+
+"But you know him; you have seen him, Sangarre?"
+
+"I have not seen him; but his mother betrayed herself by a gesture,
+which told me everything."
+
+"Are you not mistaken?"
+
+"I am not mistaken."
+
+"You know the importance which I attach to the apprehension
+of this courier," said Ivan Ogareff. "If the letter which he has
+brought from Moscow reaches Irkutsk, if it is given to the Grand Duke,
+the Grand Duke will be on his guard, and I shall not be able
+to get at him. I must have that letter at any price.
+Now you come to tell me that the bearer of this letter is in my power.
+I repeat, Sangarre, are you not mistaken?"
+
+Ogareff spoke with great animation. His emotion showed the extreme
+importance he attached to the possession of this letter. Sangarre was not
+at all put out by the urgency with which Ogareff repeated his question.
+"I am not mistaken, Ivan," she said.
+
+"But, Sangarre, there are thousands of prisoners; and you say
+that you do not know Michael Strogoff."
+
+"No," answered the Tsigane, with a look of savage joy, "I do not know him;
+but his mother knows him. Ivan, we must make his mother speak."
+
+"To-morrow she shall speak!" cried Ogareff. So saying,
+he extended his hand to the Tsigane, who kissed it; for there
+is nothing servile in this act of respect, it being usual among
+the Northern races.
+
+Sangarre returned to the camp. She found out Nadia and
+Marfa Strogoff, and passed the night in watching them.
+Although worn out with fatigue, the old woman and the girl
+did not sleep. Their great anxiety kept them awake.
+Michael was living, but a prisoner. Did Ogareff know him,
+or would he not soon find him out? Nadia was occupied by
+the one thought that he whom she had thought dead still lived.
+But Marfa saw further into the future: and, although she did
+not care what became of herself, she had every reason to fear
+for her son.
+
+Sangarre, under cover of the night, had crept near the two women,
+and remained there several hours listening. She heard nothing.
+From an instinctive feeling of prudence not a word was exchanged between
+Nadia and Marfa Strogoff. The next day, the 16th of August, about ten
+in the morning, trumpet-calls resounded throughout the encampment.
+The Tartar soldiers were almost immediately under arms.
+
+Ivan Ogareff arrived, surrounded by a large staff of Tartar officers.
+His face was more clouded than usual, and his knitted brow gave signs
+of latent wrath which was waiting for an occasion to break forth.
+
+Michael Strogoff, hidden in a group of prisoners, saw this man pass.
+He had a presentiment that some catastrophe was imminent:
+for Ivan Ogareff knew now that Marfa was the mother of Michael Strogoff.
+
+Ogareff dismounted, and his escort cleared a large circle round him.
+Just then Sangarre approached him, and said, "I have no news."
+
+Ivan Ogareff's only reply was to give an order to one of his officers.
+Then the ranks of prisoners were brutally hurried up by the soldiers.
+The unfortunate people, driven on with whips, or pushed on with lances,
+arranged themselves round the camp. A strong guard of soldiers drawn
+up behind, rendered escape impossible.
+
+Silence then ensued, and, on a sign from Ivan Ogareff, Sangarre advanced
+towards the group, in the midst of which stood Marfa.
+
+The old Siberian saw her, and knew what was going to happen.
+A scornful smile passed over her face. Then leaning towards Nadia,
+she said in a low tone, "You know me no longer, my daughter.
+Whatever may happen, and however hard this trial may be, not a word,
+not a sign. It concerns him, and not me."
+
+At that moment Sangarre, having regarded her for an instant,
+put her hand on her shoulder.
+
+"What do you want with me?" said Marfa.
+
+"Come!" replied Sangarre, and pushing the old Siberian before her,
+she took her to Ivan Ogareff, in the middle of the cleared ground.
+Michael cast down his eyes that their angry flashings might not appear.
+
+Marfa, standing before Ivan Ogareff, drew herself up, crossed her arms
+on her breast, and waited.
+
+"You are Marfa Strogoff?" asked Ogareff.
+
+"Yes," replied the old Siberian calmly.
+
+"Do you retract what you said to me when, three days ago,
+I interrogated you at Omsk?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"Then you do not know that your son, Michael Strogoff,
+courier of the Czar, has passed through Omsk?"
+
+"I do not know it."
+
+"And the man in whom you thought you recognized your son,
+was not he your son?"
+
+"He was not my son."
+
+"And since then you have not seen him amongst the prisoners?"
+
+"No."
+
+"If he were pointed out, would you recognize him?"
+
+"No."
+
+On this reply, which showed such determined resolution,
+a murmur was heard amongst the crowd.
+
+Ogareff could not restrain a threatening gesture.
+
+"Listen," said he to Marfa, "your son is here, and you shall
+immediately point him out to me."
+
+"No."
+
+"All these men, taken at Omsk and Kolyvan, will defile before you;
+and if you do not show me Michael Strogoff, you shall receive
+as many blows of the knout as men shall have passed before you."
+
+Ivan Ogareff saw that, whatever might be his threats,
+whatever might be the tortures to which he submitted her,
+the indomitable Siberian would not speak. To discover the courier
+of the Czar, he counted, then, not on her, but on Michael himself.
+He did not believe it possible that, when mother and son were in each
+other's presence, some involuntary movement would not betray him.
+Of course, had he wished to seize the imperial letter,
+he would simply have given orders to search all the prisoners;
+but Michael might have destroyed the letter, having learnt
+its contents; and if he were not recognized, if he were to
+reach Irkutsk, all Ivan Ogareff's plans would be baffled.
+It was thus not only the letter which the traitor must have,
+but the bearer himself.
+
+Nadia had heard all, and she now knew who was Michael Strogoff,
+and why he had wished to cross, without being recognized,
+the invaded provinces of Siberia.
+
+On an order from Ivan Ogareff the prisoners defiled, one by one,
+past Marfa, who remained immovable as a statue, and whose face
+expressed only perfect indifference.
+
+Her son was among the last. When in his turn he passed before
+his mother, Nadia shut her eyes that she might not see him.
+Michael was to all appearance unmoved, but the palm of his hand
+bled under his nails, which were pressed into them.
+
+Ivan Ogareff was baffled by mother and son.
+
+Sangarre, close to him, said one word, "The knout!"
+
+"Yes," cried Ogareff, who could no longer restrain himself;
+"the knout for this wretched old woman--the knout to the death!"
+
+A Tartar soldier bearing this terrible instrument of torture
+approached Marfa. The knout is composed of a certain number of leathern
+thongs, at the end of which are attached pieces of twisted iron wire.
+It is reckoned that a sentence to one hundred and twenty blows of this
+whip is equivalent to a sentence of death.
+
+Marfa knew it, but she knew also that no torture would make her speak.
+She was sacrificing her life.
+
+Marfa, seized by two soldiers, was forced on her knees
+on the ground. Her dress torn off left her back bare.
+A saber was placed before her breast, at a few inches' distance only.
+Directly she bent beneath her suffering, her breast would
+be pierced by the sharp steel.
+
+The Tartar drew himself up. He waited. "Begin!" said Ogareff. The whip
+whistled in the air.
+
+But before it fell a powerful hand stopped the Tartar's arm.
+Michael was there. He had leapt forward at this horrible scene.
+If at the relay at Ichim he had restrained himself when Ogareff's whip
+had struck him, here before his mother, who was about to be struck,
+he could not do so. Ivan Ogareff had succeeded.
+
+"Michael Strogoff!" cried he. Then advancing, "Ah, the man of Ichim?"
+
+"Himself!" said Michael. And raising the knout he struck Ogareff
+a sharp blow across the face. "Blow for blow!" said he.
+
+"Well repaid!" cried a voice concealed by the tumult.
+
+Twenty soldiers threw themselves on Michael, and in another instant
+he would have been slain.
+
+But Ogareff, who on being struck had uttered a cry of rage and pain,
+stopped them. "This man is reserved for the Emir's judgment,"
+said he. "Search him!"
+
+The letter with the imperial arms was found in Michael's bosom;
+he had not had time to destroy it; it was handed to Ogareff.
+
+The voice which had pronounced the words, "Well repaid!"
+was that of no other than Alcide Jolivet. "Par-dieu!" said
+he to Blount, "they are rough, these people.
+Acknowledge that we owe our traveling companion a good turn.
+Korpanoff or Strogoff is worthy of it. Oh, that was fine
+retaliation for the little affair at Ichim."
+
+"Yes, retaliation truly," replied Blount; "but Strogoff is a dead man.
+I suspect that, for his own interest at all events, it would have been
+better had he not possessed quite so lively a recollection of the event."
+
+"And let his mother perish under the knout?"
+
+"Do you think that either she or his sister will be a bit better
+off from this outbreak of his?"
+
+"I do not know or think anything except that I should have done
+much the same in his position," replied Alcide. "What a scar
+the Colonel has received! Bah! one must boil over sometimes.
+We should have had water in our veins instead of blood had it been
+incumbent on us to be always and everywhere unmoved to wrath."
+
+"A neat little incident for our journals," observed Blount,
+"if only Ivan Ogareff would let us know the contents of that letter."
+
+Ivan Ogareff, when he had stanched the blood which was trickling
+down his face, had broken the seal. He read and re-read
+the letter deliberately, as if he was determined to discover
+everything it contained.
+
+Then having ordered that Michael, carefully bound and guarded,
+should be carried on to Tomsk with the other prisoners, he took
+command of the troops at Zabediero, and, amid the deafening
+noise of drums and trumpets, he marched towards the town
+where the Emir awaited him.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV THE TRIUMPHAL ENTRY
+
+TOMSK, founded in 1604, nearly in the heart of the Siberian provinces,
+is one of the most important towns in Asiatic Russia. Tobolsk, situated
+above the sixtieth parallel; Irkutsk, built beyond the hundredth meridian--
+have seen Tomsk increase at their expense.
+
+And yet Tomsk, as has been said, is not the capital of this
+important province. It is at Omsk that the Governor-General
+of the province and the official world reside. But Tomsk
+is the most considerable town of that territory. The country
+being rich, the town is so likewise, for it is in the center
+of fruitful mines. In the luxury of its houses, its arrangements,
+and its equipages, it might rival the greatest European capitals.
+It is a city of millionaires, enriched by the spade and pickax,
+and though it has not the honor of being the residence of the
+Czar's representative, it can boast of including in the first
+rank of its notables the chief of the merchants of the town,
+the principal grantees of the imperial government's mines.
+
+But the millionaires were fled now, and except for the crouching poor,
+the town stood empty to the hordes of Feofar-Khan. At four o'clock the
+Emir made his entry into the square, greeted by a flourish of trumpets,
+the rolling sound of the big drums, salvoes of artillery and musketry.
+
+Feofar mounted his favorite horse, which carried on its head
+an aigrette of diamonds. The Emir still wore his uniform.
+He was accompanied by a numerous staff, and beside him walked
+the Khans of Khokhand and Koundouge and the grand dignitaries
+of the Khanats.
+
+At the same moment appeared on the terrace the chief
+of Feofar's wives, the queen, if this title may be given
+to the sultana of the states of Bokhara. But, queen or slave,
+this woman of Persian origin was wonderfully beautiful.
+Contrary to the Mahometan custom, and no doubt by some
+caprice of the Emir, she had her face uncovered. Her hair,
+divided into four plaits, fell over her dazzling white shoulders,
+scarcely concealed by a veil of silk worked in gold, which fell
+from the back of a cap studded with gems of the highest value.
+Under her blue-silk petticoat, fell the "zirdjameh" of
+silken gauze, and above the sash lay the "pirahn." But from
+the head to the little feet, such was the profusion of jewels--
+gold beads strung on silver threads, chaplets of turquoises,
+"firouzehs" from the celebrated mines of Elbourz,
+necklaces of cornelians, agates, emeralds, opals, and sapphires--
+that her dress seemed to be literally made of precious stones.
+The thousands of diamonds which sparkled on her neck, arms, hands,
+at her waist, and at her feet might have been valued at almost
+countless millions of roubles.
+
+The Emir and the Khans dismounted, as did the dignitaries
+who escorted them. All entered a magnificent tent erected
+on the center of the first terrace. Before the tent, as usual,
+the Koran was laid.
+
+Feofar's lieutenant did not make them wait, and before five
+o'clock the trumpets announced his arrival. Ivan Ogareff--
+the Scarred Cheek, as he was already nick-named--wearing the
+uniform of a Tartar officer, dismounted before the Emir's tent.
+He was accompanied by a party of soldiers from the camp
+at Zabediero, who ranged up at the sides of the square,
+in the middle of which a place for the sports was reserved.
+A large scar could be distinctly seen cut obliquely across
+the traitor's face.
+
+Ogareff presented his principal officers to the Emir, who,
+without departing from the coldness which composed the main
+part of his dignity, received them in a way which satisfied
+them that they stood well in the good graces of their chief.
+
+At least so thought Harry Blount and Alcide Jolivet, the two
+inseparables, now associated together in the chase after news.
+After leaving Zabediero, they had proceeded rapidly to Tomsk. The plan
+they had agreed upon was to leave the Tartars as soon as possible,
+and to join a Russian regiment, and, if they could, to go
+with them to Irkutsk. All that they had seen of the invasion,
+its burnings, its pillages, its murders, had perfectly sickened them,
+and they longed to be among the ranks of the Siberian army.
+Jolivet had told his companion that he could not leave Tomsk without
+making a sketch of the triumphal entry of the Tartar troops,
+if it was only to satisfy his cousin's curiosity; but the same
+evening they both intended to take the road to Irkutsk, and being
+well mounted hoped to distance the Emir's scouts.
+
+Alcide and Blount mingled therefore in the crowd, so as to lose no
+detail of a festival which ought to supply them with a hundred good
+lines for an article. They admired the magnificence of Feofar-Khan,
+his wives, his officers, his guards, and all the Eastern pomp,
+of which the ceremonies of Europe can give not the least idea.
+But they turned away with disgust when Ivan Ogareff presented
+himself before the Emir, and waited with some impatience for
+the amusements to begin.
+
+"You see, my dear Blount," said Alcide, "we have come too soon,
+like honest citizens who like to get their money's worth.
+All this is before the curtain rises, it would have been better
+to arrive only for the ballet."
+
+"What ballet?" asked Blount.
+
+"The compulsory ballet, to be sure. But see, the curtain is going
+to rise." Alcide Jolivet spoke as if he had been at the Opera,
+and taking his glass from its case, he prepared, with the air
+of a connoisseur, "to examine the first act of Feofar's company."
+
+A painful ceremony was to precede the sports. In fact,
+the triumph of the vanquisher could not be complete without
+the public humiliation of the vanquished. This was why several
+hundreds of prisoners were brought under the soldiers' whips.
+They were destined to march past Feofar-Khan and his allies
+before being crammed with their companions into the prisons
+in the town.
+
+In the first ranks of these prisoners figured Michael Strogoff.
+As Ogareff had ordered, he was specially guarded by a file of soldiers.
+His mother and Nadia were there also.
+
+The old Siberian, although energetic enough when her own safety
+was in question, was frightfully pale. She expected some
+terrible scene. It was not without reason that her son had been
+brought before the Emir. She therefore trembled for him.
+Ivan Ogareff was not a man to forgive having been struck
+in public by the knout, and his vengeance would be merciless.
+Some frightful punishment familiar to the barbarians of
+Central Asia would, no doubt, be inflicted on Michael. Ogareff had
+protected him against the soldiers because he well knew what would
+happen by reserving him for the justice of the Emir.
+
+The mother and son had not been able to speak together since
+the terrible scene in the camp at Zabediero. They had been
+pitilessly kept apart--a bitter aggravation of their misery,
+for it would have been some consolation to have been together
+during these days of captivity. Marfa longed to ask her son's
+pardon for the harm she had unintentionally done him, for she
+reproached herself with not having commanded her maternal feelings.
+If she had restrained herself in that post-house at Omsk,
+when she found herself face to face with him, Michael would
+have passed unrecognized, and all these misfortunes would
+have been avoided.
+
+Michael, on his side, thought that if his mother was there,
+if Ogareff had brought her with him, it was to make her suffer
+with the sight of his own punishment, or perhaps some frightful
+death was reserved for her also.
+
+As to Nadia, she only asked herself how she could save
+them both, how come to the aid of son and mother.
+As yet she could only wonder, but she felt instinctively that she
+must above everything avoid drawing attention upon herself,
+that she must conceal herself, make herself insignificant.
+Perhaps she might at least gnaw through the meshes which
+imprisoned the lion. At any rate if any opportunity was given
+her she would seize upon it, and sacrifice herself, if need be,
+for the son of Marfa Strogoff.
+
+In the meantime the greater part of the prisoners were passing before
+the Emir, and as they passed each was obliged to prostrate himself,
+with his forehead in the dust, in token of servitude. Slavery begins
+by humiliation. When the unfortunate people were too slow in bending,
+the rough guards threw them violently to the ground.
+
+Alcide Jolivet and his companion could not witness such a sight
+without feeling indignant.
+
+"It is cowardly--let us go," said Alcide.
+
+"No," answered Blount; "we must see it all."
+
+"See it all!--ah!" cried Alcide, suddenly, grasping his companion's arm.
+
+"What is the matter with you?" asked the latter.
+
+"Look, Blount; it is she!"
+
+"What she?"
+
+"The sister of our traveling companion--alone, and a prisoner!
+We must save her."
+
+"Calm yourself," replied Blount coolly. "Any interference on our part
+in behalf of the young girl would be worse than useless."
+
+Alcide Jolivet, who had been about to rush forward, stopped, and Nadia--
+who had not perceived them, her features being half hidden by her hair--
+passed in her turn before the Emir without attracting his attention.
+
+However, after Nadia came Marfa Strogoff; and as she did not throw
+herself quickly in the dust, the guards brutally pushed her.
+She fell.
+
+Her son struggled so violently that the soldiers who were guarding
+him could scarcely hold him back. But the old woman rose,
+and they were about to drag her on, when Ogareff interposed,
+saying, "Let that woman stay!"
+
+As to Nadia, she happily regained the crowd of prisoners.
+Ivan Ogareff had taken no notice of her.
+
+Michael was then led before the Emir, and there he remained standing,
+without casting down his eyes.
+
+"Your forehead to the ground!" cried Ogareff.
+
+"No!" answered Michael.
+
+Two soldiers endeavored to make him bend, but they were themselves
+laid on the ground by a buffet from the young man's fist.
+
+Ogareff approached Michael. "You shall die!" he said.
+
+"I can die," answered Michael fiercely; "but your traitor's face, Ivan,
+will not the less carry forever the infamous brand of the knout."
+
+At this reply Ivan Ogareff became perfectly livid.
+
+"Who is this prisoner?" asked the Emir, in a tone of voice terrible
+from its very calmness.
+
+"A Russian spy," answered Ogareff. In asserting that Michael was a spy
+he knew that the sentence pronounced against him would be terrible.
+
+The Emir made a sign at which all the crowd bent low their heads.
+Then he pointed with his hand to the Koran, which was brought him.
+He opened the sacred book and placed his finger on one of its pages.
+
+It was chance, or rather, according to the ideas of
+these Orientals, God Himself who was about to decide the fate
+of Michael Strogoff. The people of Central Asia give the name
+of "fal" to this practice. After having interpreted the sense
+of the verse touched by the judge's finger, they apply the sentence
+whatever it may be.
+
+The Emir had let his finger rest on the page of the Koran. The chief
+of the Ulemas then approached, and read in a loud voice a verse
+which ended with these words, "And he will no more see the things
+of this earth."
+
+"Russian spy!" exclaimed Feofar-Kahn in a voice trembling with fury,
+"you have come to see what is going on in the Tartar camp.
+Then look while you may."
+
+
+CHAPTER V "LOOK WHILE YOU MAY!"
+
+MICHAEL was held before the Emir's throne, at the foot
+of the terrace, his hands bound behind his back.
+His mother overcome at last by mental and physical torture,
+had sunk to the ground, daring neither to look nor listen.
+
+"Look while you may," exclaimed Feofar-Kahn, stretching his arm
+towards Michael in a threatening manner. Doubtless Ivan Ogareff,
+being well acquainted with Tartar customs, had taken in the full meaning
+of these words, for his lips curled for an instant in a cruel smile;
+he then took his place by Feofar-Khan.
+
+A trumpet call was heard. This was the signal for the amusements
+to begin. "Here comes the ballet," said Alcide to Blount;
+"but, contrary to our customs, these barbarians give it
+before the drama."
+
+Michael had been commanded to look at everything. He looked.
+A troop of dancers poured into the open space before the Emir's tent.
+Different Tartar instruments, the "doutare," a long-handled guitar,
+the "kobize," a kind of violoncello, the "tschibyzga," a long
+reed flute; wind instruments, tom-toms, tambourines, united with
+the deep voices of the singers, formed a strange harmony.
+Added to this were the strains of an aerial orchestra, composed of
+a dozen kites, which, fastened by strings to their centers,
+resounded in the breeze like AEolian harps.
+
+Then the dancers began. The performers were all of Persian origin;
+they were no longer slaves, but exercised their profession at liberty.
+Formerly they figured officially in the ceremonies at the court
+of Teheran, but since the accession of the reigning family,
+banished or treated with contempt, they had been compelled to seek
+their fortune elsewhere. They wore the national costume, and were
+adorned with a profusion of jewels. Little triangles of gold,
+studded with jewels, glittered in their ears. Circles of silver,
+marked with black, surrounded their necks and legs.
+
+These performers gracefully executed various dances, sometimes alone,
+sometimes in groups. Their faces were uncovered, but from time
+to time they threw a light veil over their heads, and a gauze
+cloud passed over their bright eyes as smoke over a starry sky.
+Some of these Persians wore leathern belts embroidered
+with pearls, from which hung little triangular bags.
+From these bags, embroidered with golden filigree, they drew
+long narrow bands of scarlet silk, on which were braided verses
+of the Koran. These bands, which they held between them,
+formed a belt under which the other dancers darted; and, as they
+passed each verse, following the precept it contained, they either
+prostrated themselves on the earth or lightly bounded upwards,
+as though to take a place among the houris of Mohammed's heaven.
+
+But what was remarkable, and what struck Alcide,
+was that the Persians appeared rather indolent than fiery.
+Their passion had deserted them, and, by the kind of dances
+as well as by their execution, they recalled rather the calm
+and self-possessed nauch girls of India than the impassioned
+dancers of Egypt.
+
+When this was over, a stern voice was heard saying:
+
+"Look while you may!"
+
+The man who repeated the Emir's words--a tall spare Tartar--
+was he who carried out the sentences of Feofar-Khan against offenders.
+He had taken his place behind Michael, holding in his hand a broad
+curved saber, one of those Damascene blades which are forged
+by the celebrated armorers of Karschi or Hissar.
+
+Behind him guards were carrying a tripod supporting a chafing-dish
+filled with live coals. No smoke arose from this, but a light
+vapor surrounded it, due to the incineration of a certain aromatic
+and resinous substance which he had thrown on the surface.
+
+The Persians were succeeded by another party of dancers,
+whom Michael recognized. The journalists also appeared to
+recognize them, for Blount said to his companion, "These are
+the Tsiganes of Nijni-Novgorod."
+
+"No doubt of it," cried Alcide. "Their eyes, I imagine,
+bring more money to these spies than their legs."
+
+In putting them down as agents in the Emir's service, Alcide Jolivet was,
+by all accounts, not mistaken.
+
+In the first rank of the Tsiganes, Sangarre appeared,
+superb in her strange and picturesque costume, which set off
+still further her remarkable beauty.
+
+Sangarre did not dance, but she stood as a statue in the midst
+of the performers, whose style of dancing was a combination
+of that of all those countries through which their race
+had passed--Turkey, Bohemia, Egypt, Italy, and Spain. They were
+enlivened by the sound of cymbals, which clashed on their arms,
+and by the hollow sounds of the "daires"--a sort of tambourine
+played with the fingers.
+
+Sangarre, holding one of those daires, which she played between
+her hands, encouraged this troupe of veritable corybantes.
+A young Tsigane, of about fifteen years of age, then advanced.
+He held in his hand a "doutare," strings of which he made
+to vibrate by a simple movement of the nails. He sung.
+During the singing of each couplet, of very peculiar rhythm,
+a dancer took her position by him and remained there immovable,
+listening to him, but each time that the burden came from the lips
+of the young singer, she resumed her dance, dinning in his ears
+with her daire, and deafening him with the clashing of her cymbals.
+Then, after the last chorus, the remainder surrounded the Tsigane
+in the windings of their dance.
+
+At that moment a shower of gold fell from the hands of the Emir and
+his train, and from the hands of his officers of all ranks; to the noise
+which the pieces made as they struck the cymbals of the dancers,
+being added the last murmurs of the doutares and tambourines.
+
+"Lavish as robbers," said Alcide in the ear of his companion.
+And in fact it was the result of plunder which was falling;
+for, with the Tartar tomans and sequins, rained also Russian
+ducats and roubles.
+
+Then silence followed for an instant, and the voice of the executioner,
+who laid his hand on Michael's shoulder, once more pronounced the words,
+which this repetition rendered more and more sinister:
+
+"Look while you may"
+
+But this time Alcide observed that the executioner no longer held
+the saber bare in his hand.
+
+Meanwhile the sun had sunk behind the horizon. A semi-obscurity began
+to envelop the plain. The mass of cedars and pines became blacker
+and blacker, and the waters of the Tom, totally obscured in the distance,
+mingled with the approaching shadows.
+
+But at that instant several hundreds of slaves, bearing lighted
+torches, entered the square. Led by Sangarre, Tsiganes and
+Persians reappeared before the Emir's throne, and showed off,
+by the contrast, their dances of styles so different.
+The instruments of the Tartar orchestra sounded forth in harmony
+still more savage, accompanied by the guttural cries of the singers.
+The kites, which had fallen to the ground, once more winged
+their way into the sky, each bearing a parti-colored lantern,
+and under a fresher breeze their harps vibrated with intenser
+sound in the midst of the aerial illumination.
+
+Then a squadron of Tartars, in their brilliant uniforms,
+mingled in the dances, whose wild fury was increasing rapidly,
+and then began a performance which produced a very strange effect.
+Soldiers came on the ground, armed with bare sabers and
+long pistols, and, as they executed dances, they made the air
+re-echo with the sudden detonations of their firearms,
+which immediately set going the rumbling of the tambourines,
+and grumblings of the daires, and the gnashing of doutares.
+
+Their arms, covered with a colored powder of some metallic ingredient,
+after the Chinese fashion, threw long jets--red, green, and blue--
+so that the groups of dancers seemed to be in the midst of fireworks.
+In some respects, this performance recalled the military dance
+of the ancients, in the midst of naked swords; but this Tartar dance
+was rendered yet more fantastic by the colored fire, which wound,
+serpent-like, above the dancers, whose dresses seemed to be embroidered
+with fiery hems. It was like a kaleidoscope of sparks, whose infinite
+combinations varied at each movement of the dancers.
+
+Though it may be thought that a Parisian reporter would be perfectly
+hardened to any scenic effect, which our modern ideas have carried so far,
+yet Alcide Jolivet could not restrain a slight movement of the head,
+which at home, between the Boulevard Montmartre and La Madeleine would
+have said--"Very fair, very fair."
+
+Then, suddenly, at a signal, all the lights of the fantasia
+were extinguished, the dances ceased, and the performers disappeared.
+The ceremony was over, and the torches alone lighted up the plateau,
+which a few instants before had been so brilliantly illuminated.
+
+On a sign from the Emir, Michael was led into the middle of the square.
+
+"Blount," said Alcide to his companion, "are you going to see
+the end of all this?"
+
+"No, that I am not," replied Blount.
+
+"The readers of the Daily Telegraph are, I hope, not very eager
+for the details of an execution a la mode Tartare?"
+
+"No more than your cousin!"
+
+"Poor fellow!" added Alcide, as he watched Michael. "That valiant
+soldier should have fallen on the field of battle!"
+
+"Can we do nothing to save him?" said Blount.
+
+"Nothing!"
+
+The reporters recalled Michael's generous conduct towards them;
+they knew now through what trials he must have passed,
+ever obedient to his duty; and in the midst of these Tartars,
+to whom pity is unknown, they could do nothing for him.
+Having little desire to be present at the torture reserved
+for the unfortunate man, they returned to the town.
+An hour later, they were on the road to Irkutsk, for it was among
+the Russians that they intended to follow what Alcide called,
+by anticipation, "the campaign of revenge."
+
+Meantime, Michael was standing ready, his eyes returning the Emir's
+haughty glance, while his countenance assumed an expression of intense
+scorn whenever he cast his looks on Ivan Ogareff. He was prepared to die,
+yet not a single sign of weakness escaped him.
+
+The spectators, waiting around the square, as well as Feofar-Khan's
+body-guard, to whom this execution was only one of the attractions,
+were eagerly expecting it. Then, their curiosity satisfied,
+they would rush off to enjoy the pleasures of intoxication.
+
+The Emir made a sign. Michael was thrust forward by his
+guards to the foot of the terrace, and Feofar said to him,
+"You came to see our goings out and comings in, Russian spy.
+You have seen for the last time. In an instant your eyes
+will be forever shut to the day."
+
+Michael's fate was to be not death, but blindness;
+loss of sight, more terrible perhaps than loss of life.
+The unhappy man was condemned to be blinded.
+
+However, on hearing the Emir's sentence Michael's heart did not
+grow faint. He remained unmoved, his eyes wide open, as though
+he wished to concentrate his whole life into one last look.
+To entreat pity from these savage men would be useless, besides,
+it would be unworthy of him. He did not even think of it.
+His thoughts were condensed on his mission, which had apparently
+so completely failed; on his mother, on Nadia, whom he should never
+more see! But he let no sign appear of the emotion he felt.
+Then, a feeling of vengeance to be accomplished came over him.
+"Ivan," said he, in a stern voice, "Ivan the Traitor, the last
+menace of my eyes shall be for you!"
+
+Ivan Ogareff shrugged his shoulders.
+
+But Michael was not to be looking at Ivan when his eyes were put out.
+Marfa Strogoff stood before him.
+
+"My mother!" cried he. "Yes! yes! my last glance shall be
+for you, and not for this wretch! Stay there, before me!
+Now I see once more your well-beloved face! Now shall my eyes
+close as they rest upon it . . . !"
+
+The old woman, without uttering a word, advanced.
+
+"Take that woman away!" said Ivan.
+
+Two soldiers were about to seize her, but she stepped back and remained
+standing a few paces from Michael.
+
+The executioner appeared. This time, he held his saber
+bare in his hand, and this saber he had just drawn from
+the chafing-dish, where he had brought it to a white heat.
+Michael was going to be blinded in the Tartar fashion,
+with a hot blade passed before his eyes!
+
+Michael did not attempt to resist. Nothing existed before
+his eyes but his mother, whom his eyes seemed to devour.
+All his life was in that last look.
+
+Marfa Strogoff, her eyes open wide, her arms extended towards
+where he stood, was gazing at him. The incandescent blade passed
+before Michael's eyes.
+
+A despairing cry was heard. His aged mother fell senseless
+to the ground. Michael Strogoff was blind.
+
+His orders executed, the Emir retired with his train.
+There remained in the square only Ivan Ogareff and the torch bearers.
+Did the wretch intend to insult his victim yet further,
+and yet to give him a parting blow?
+
+Ivan Ogareff slowly approached Michael, who, feeling him coming,
+drew himself up. Ivan drew from his pocket the Imperial letter,
+he opened it, and with supreme irony he held it up before
+the sightless eyes of the Czar's courier, saying, "Read, now,
+Michael Strogoff, read, and go and repeat at Irkutsk what you have read.
+The true Courier of the Czar is Ivan Ogareff."
+
+This said, the traitor thrust the letter into his breast.
+Then, without looking round he left the square, followed
+by the torch-bearers.
+
+Michael was left alone, at a few paces from his mother, lying lifeless,
+perhaps dead. He heard in the distance cries and songs, the varied
+noises of a wild debauch. Tomsk, illuminated, glittered and gleamed.
+
+Michael listened. The square was silent and deserted. He went,
+groping his way, towards the place where his mother had fallen.
+He found her with his hand, he bent over her, he put his face
+close to hers, he listened for the beating of her heart.
+Then he murmured a few words.
+
+Did Marfa still live, and did she hear her son's words?
+Whether she did so or not, she made not the slightest movement.
+Michael kissed her forehead and her white locks. He then
+raised himself, and, groping with his foot, trying to stretch
+out his hand to guide himself, he walked by degrees to the edge
+of the square.
+
+Suddenly Nadia appeared. She walked straight to her companion.
+A knife in her hand cut the cords which bound Michael's arms.
+The blind man knew not who had freed him, for Nadia had not
+spoken a word.
+
+But this done: "Brother!" said she.
+
+"Nadia!" murmured Michael, "Nadia!"
+
+"Come, brother," replied Nadia, "use my eyes whilst yours sleep.
+I will lead you to Irkutsk."
+
+
+CHAPTER VI A FRIEND ON THE HIGHWAY
+
+HALF an hour afterwards, Michael and Nadia had left Tomsk.
+
+Many others of the prisoners were that night able to escape
+from the Tartars, for officers and soldiers, all more or
+less intoxicated, had unconsciously relaxed the vigilant guard
+which they had hitherto maintained. Nadia, after having
+been carried off with the other prisoners, had been able
+to escape and return to the square, at the moment when Michael
+was led before the Emir. There, mingling with the crowd,
+she had witnessed the terrible scene. Not a cry escaped her
+when the scorching blade passed before her companion's eyes.
+She kept, by her strength of will, mute and motionless.
+A providential inspiration bade her restrain herself and retain
+her liberty that she might lead Marfa's son to that goal which
+he had sworn to reach. Her heart for an instant ceased to beat
+when the aged Siberian woman fell senseless to the ground,
+but one thought restored her to her former energy.
+"I will be the blind man's dog," said she.
+
+On Ogareff's departure, Nadia had concealed herself in the shade.
+She had waited till the crowd left the square. Michael, abandoned as
+a wretched being from whom nothing was to be feared, was alone.
+She saw him draw himself towards his mother, bend over her,
+kiss her forehead, then rise and grope his way in flight.
+
+A few instants later, she and he, hand in hand, had descended
+the steep slope, when, after having followed the high banks
+of the Tom to the furthest extremity of the town, they happily
+found a breach in the inclosure.
+
+The road to Irkutsk was the only one which penetrated towards the east.
+It could not be mistaken. It was possible that on the morrow,
+after some hours of carousal, the scouts of the Emir, once more
+scattering over the steppes, might cut off all communication.
+It was of the greatest importance therefore to get in advance of them.
+How could Nadia bear the fatigues of that night, from the l6th
+to the 17th of August? How could she have found strength for so long
+a stage? How could her feet, bleeding under that forced march,
+have carried her thither? It is almost incomprehensible.
+But it is none the less true that on the next morning, twelve hours
+after their departure from Tomsk, Michael and she reached the town
+of Semilowskoe, after a journey of thirty-five miles.
+
+Michael had not uttered a single word. It was not Nadia who held
+his hand, it was he who held that of his companion during the whole
+of that night; but, thanks to that trembling little hand which guided him,
+he had walked at his ordinary pace.
+
+Semilowskoe was almost entirely abandoned. The inhabitants had fled.
+Not more than two or three houses were still occupied.
+All that the town contained, useful or precious, had been carried off
+in wagons. However, Nadia was obliged to make a halt of a few hours.
+They both required food and rest.
+
+The young girl led her companion to the extremity of the town.
+There they found an empty house, the door wide open.
+An old rickety wooden bench stood in the middle of the room,
+near the high stove which is to be found in all Siberian houses.
+They silently seated themselves.
+
+Nadia gazed in her companion's face as she had never before gazed.
+There was more than gratitude, more than pity, in that look.
+Could Michael have seen her, he would have read in that sweet
+desolate gaze a world of devotion and tenderness.
+
+The eyelids of the blind man, made red by the heated blade,
+fell half over his eyes. The pupils seemed to be singularly enlarged.
+The rich blue of the iris was darker than formerly. The eyelashes
+and eyebrows were partly burnt, but in appearance, at least,
+the old penetrating look appeared to have undergone no change.
+If he could no longer see, if his blindness was complete,
+it was because the sensibility of the retina and optic nerve
+was radically destroyed by the fierce heat of the steel.
+
+Then Michael stretched out his hands.
+
+"Are you there, Nadia?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," replied the young girl; "I am close to you, and I will not go
+away from you, Michael."
+
+At his name, pronounced by Nadia for the first time, a thrill passed
+through Michael's frame. He perceived that his companion knew all,
+who he was.
+
+"Nadia," replied he, "we must separate!"
+
+"We separate? How so, Michael?"
+
+"I must not be an obstacle to your journey! Your father is waiting
+for you at Irkutsk! You must rejoin your father!"
+
+"My father would curse me, Michael, were I to abandon you now,
+after all you have done for me!"
+
+"Nadia, Nadia," replied Michael, "you should think only of your father!"
+
+"Michael," replied Nadia, "you have more need of me than my father.
+Do you mean to give up going to Irkutsk?"
+
+"Never!" cried Michael, in a tone which plainly showed that none
+of his energy was gone.
+
+"But you have not the letter!"
+
+"That letter of which Ivan Ogareff robbed me! Well! I shall
+manage without it, Nadia! They have treated me as a spy!
+I will act as a spy! I will go and repeat at Irkutsk all I
+have seen, all I have heard; I swear it by Heaven above!
+The traitor shall meet me one day face to face! But I must
+arrive at Irkutsk before him."
+
+"And yet you speak of our separating, Michael?"
+
+"Nadia, they have taken everything from me!"
+
+"I have some roubles still, and my eyes! I can see for you, Michael;
+and I will lead you thither, where you could not go alone!"
+
+"And how shall we go?"
+
+"On foot."
+
+"And how shall we live?"
+
+"By begging."
+
+"Let us start, Nadia."
+
+"Come, Michael."
+
+The two young people no longer kept the names "brother" and "sister."
+In their common misfortune, they felt still closer united.
+They left the house after an hour's repose. Nadia had procured
+in the town some morsels of "tchornekhleb," a sort of barley bread,
+and a little mead, called "meod" in Russia. This had cost
+her nothing, for she had already begun her plan of begging.
+The bread and mead had in some degree appeased Michael's hunger
+and thirst. Nadia gave him the lion's share of this scanty meal.
+He ate the pieces of bread his companion gave him, drank from
+the gourd she held to his lips.
+
+"Are you eating, Nadia?" he asked several times.
+
+"Yes, Michael," invariably replied the young girl, who contented
+herself with what her companion left.
+
+Michael and Nadia quitted Semilowskoe, and once more set
+out on the laborious road to Irkutsk. The girl bore up
+in a marvelous way against fatigue. Had Michael seen her,
+perhaps he would not have had the courage to go on.
+But Nadia never complained, and Michael, hearing no sigh,
+walked at a speed he was unable to repress. And why?
+Did he still expect to keep before the Tartars? He was on foot,
+without money; he was blind, and if Nadia, his only guide,
+were to be separated from him, he could only lie down
+by the side of the road and there perish miserably.
+But if, on the other hand, by energetic perseverance he could
+reach Krasnoiarsk, all was perhaps not lost, since the governor,
+to whom he would make himself known, would not hesitate to give
+him the means of reaching Irkutsk.
+
+Michael walked on, speaking little, absorbed in his own thoughts.
+He held Nadia's hand. The two were in incessant communication. It seemed
+to them that they had no need of words to exchange their thoughts.
+From time to time Michael said, "Speak to me, Nadia."
+
+"Why should I, Michael? We are thinking together!" the young
+girl would reply, and contrived that her voice should not betray
+her extreme fatigue.
+
+But sometimes, as if her heart had ceased to beat for an instant,
+her limbs tottered, her steps flagged, her arms fell to her sides,
+she dropped behind. Michael then stopped, he fixed his eyes on the poor
+girl, as though he would try to pierce the gloom which surrounded him;
+his breast heaved; then, supporting his companion more than before,
+he started on afresh.
+
+However, amidst these continual miseries, a fortunate circumstance
+on that day occurred which it appeared likely would considerably ease
+their fatigue. They had been walking from Semilowskoe for two hours
+when Michael stopped.
+
+"Is there no one on the road?"
+
+"Not a single soul," replied Nadia.
+
+"Do you not hear some noise behind us? If they are Tartars we must hide.
+Keep a good look-out!"
+
+"Wait, Michael!" replied Nadia, going back a few steps to where the road
+turned to the right.
+
+Michael Strogoff waited alone for a minute, listening attentively.
+
+Nadia returned almost immediately and said, "It is a cart.
+A young man is leading it."
+
+"Is he alone?"
+
+"Alone."
+
+Michael hesitated an instant. Should he hide? or should he,
+on the contrary, try to find a place in the vehicle, if not
+for himself, at least for her? For himself, he would be quite
+content to lay one hand on the cart, to push it if necessary,
+for his legs showed no sign of failing him; but he felt sure
+that Nadia, compelled to walk ever since they crossed the Obi,
+that is, for eight days, must be almost exhausted. He waited.
+
+The cart was soon at the corner of the road. It was a very
+dilapidated vehicle, known in the country as a kibitka, just capable
+of holding three persons. Usually the kibitka is drawn by three horses,
+but this had but one, a beast with long hair and a very long tail.
+It was of the Mongol breed, known for strength and courage.
+
+A young man was leading it, with a dog beside him.
+Nadia saw at once that the young man was Russian; his face
+was phlegmatic, but pleasant, and at once inspired confidence.
+He did not appear to be in the slightest hurry; he was not
+walking fast that he might spare his horse, and, to look at him,
+it would not have been believed that he was following a road
+which might at any instant be swarming with Tartars.
+
+Nadia, holding Michael by the hand, made way for the vehicle.
+The kibitka stopped, and the driver smilingly looked at the young girl.
+
+"And where are you going to in this fashion?" he asked,
+opening wide his great honest eyes.
+
+At the sound of his voice, Michael said to himself that he had heard
+it before. And it was satisfactory to him to recognize the man
+for his brow at once cleared.
+
+"Well, where are you going?" repeated the young man, addressing himself
+more directly to Michael.
+
+"We are going to Irkutsk," he replied.
+
+"Oh! little father, you do not know that there are still versts
+and versts between you and Irkutsk?"
+
+"I know it."
+
+"And you are going on foot?"
+
+"On foot."
+
+"You, well! but the young lady?"
+
+"She is my sister," said Michael, who judged it prudent to give
+again this name to Nadia.
+
+"Yes, your sister, little father! But, believe me, she will never be
+able to get to Irkutsk!"
+
+"Friend," returned Michael, approaching him, "the Tartars have
+robbed us of everything, and I have not a copeck to offer you;
+but if you will take my sister with you, I will follow your cart on foot;
+I will run when necessary, I will not delay you an hour!"
+
+"Brother," exclaimed Nadia, "I will not! I will not!
+Sir, my brother is blind!"
+
+"Blind!" repeated the young man, much moved.
+
+"The Tartars have burnt out his eyes!" replied Nadia, extending her hands,
+as if imploring pity.
+
+"Burnt out his eyes! Oh! poor little father! I am going
+to Krasnoiarsk. Well, why should not you and your sister mount
+in the kibitka? By sitting a little close, it will hold us
+all three. Besides, my dog will not refuse to go on foot;
+only I don't go fast, I spare my horse."
+
+"Friend, what is your name?" asked Michael.
+
+"My name is Nicholas Pigassof."
+
+"It is a name that I will never forget," said Michael.
+
+"Well, jump up, little blind father. Your sister will be
+beside you, in the bottom of the cart; I sit in front to drive.
+There is plenty of good birch bark and straw in the bottom;
+it's like a nest. Serko, make room!"
+
+The dog jumped down without more telling. He was an animal of the
+Siberian race, gray hair, of medium size, with an honest big head,
+just made to pat, and he, moreover, appeared to be much attached
+to his master.
+
+In a moment more, Michael and Nadia were seated in the kibitka.
+Michael held out his hands as if to feel for those of Pigassof. "You wish
+to shake my hands!" said Nicholas. "There they are, little father!
+shake them as long as it will give you any pleasure."
+
+The kibitka moved on; the horse, which Nicholas never touched with
+the whip, ambled along. Though Michael did not gain any in speed,
+at least some fatigue was spared to Nadia.
+
+Such was the exhaustion of the young girl, that, rocked by
+the monotonous movement of the kibitka, she soon fell into
+a sleep, its soundness proving her complete prostration.
+Michael and Nicholas laid her on the straw as comfortably as possible.
+The compassionate young man was greatly moved, and if a tear
+did not escape from Michael's eyes, it was because the red-hot
+iron had dried up the last!
+
+"She is very pretty," said Nicholas.
+
+"Yes," replied Michael.
+
+"They try to be strong, little father, they are brave,
+but they are weak after all, these dear little things!
+Have you come from far."
+
+"Very far."
+
+"Poor young people! It must have hurt you very much when they
+burnt your eyes!"
+
+"Very much," answered Michael, turning towards Nicholas as if
+he could see him.
+
+"Did you not weep?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I should have wept too. To think that one could never
+again see those one loves. But they can see you, however;
+that's perhaps some consolation!"
+
+"Yes, perhaps. Tell me, my friend," continued Michael,
+"have you never seen me anywhere before?"
+
+"You, little father? No, never."
+
+"The sound of your voice is not unknown to me."
+
+"Why!" returned Nicholas, smiling, "he knows the sound of my voice!
+Perhaps you ask me that to find out where I come from.
+I come from Kolyvan."
+
+"From Kolyvan?" repeated Michael. "Then it was there I met you;
+you were in the telegraph office?"
+
+"That may be," replied Nicholas. "I was stationed there.
+I was the clerk in charge of the messages."
+
+"And you stayed at your post up to the last moment?"
+
+"Why, it's at that moment one ought to be there!"
+
+"It was the day when an Englishman and a Frenchman were disputing,
+roubles in hand, for the place at your wicket, and the Englishman
+telegraphed some poetry."
+
+"That is possible, but I do not remember it."
+
+"What! you do not remember it?"
+
+"I never read the dispatches I send. My duty being to forget them,
+the shortest way is not to know them."
+
+This reply showed Nicholas Pigassof's character.
+In the meanwhile the kibitka pursued its way, at a pace which Michael
+longed to render more rapid. But Nicholas and his horse were
+accustomed to a pace which neither of them would like to alter.
+The horse went for two hours and rested one--so on, day and night.
+During the halts the horse grazed, the travelers ate in company
+with the faithful Serko. The kibitka was provisioned for at
+least twenty persons, and Nicholas generously placed his
+supplies at the disposal of his two guests, whom he believed
+to be brother and sister.
+
+After a day's rest, Nadia recovered some strength.
+Nicholas took the best possible care of her.
+The journey was being made under tolerable circumstances,
+slowly certainly, but surely. It sometimes happened that during
+the night, Nicholas, although driving, fell asleep, and snored
+with a clearness which showed the calmness of his conscience.
+Perhaps then, by looking close, Michael's hand might have been seen
+feeling for the reins, and giving the horse a more rapid pace,
+to the great astonishment of Serko, who, however, said nothing.
+The trot was exchanged for the amble as soon as Nicholas awoke,
+but the kibitka had not the less gained some versts.
+
+Thus they passed the river Ichirnsk, the villages
+of Ichisnokoe, Berikylokoe, Kuskoe, the river Marunsk, the village
+of the same name, Bogostowskoe, and, lastly, the Ichoula, a little
+stream which divides Western from Eastern Siberia. The road
+now lay sometimes across wide moors, which extended as far
+as the eye could reach, sometimes through thick forests of firs,
+of which they thought they should never get to the end.
+Everywhere was a desert; the villages were almost entirely abandoned.
+The peasants had fled beyond the Yenisei, hoping that this wide
+river would perhaps stop the Tartars.
+
+On the 22d of August, the kibitka entered the town of Atchinsk,
+two hundred and fifty miles from Tomsk. Eighty miles still lay
+between them and Krasnoiarsk.
+
+No incident had marked the journey. For the six days during which they
+had been together, Nicholas, Michael, and Nadia had remained the same,
+the one in his unchange-able calm, the other two, uneasy, and thinking
+of the time when their companion would leave them.
+
+Michael saw the country through which they traveled with the eyes
+of Nicholas and the young girl. In turns, they each described to him
+the scenes they passed. He knew whether he was in a forest or on a plain,
+whether a hut was on the steppe, or whether any Siberian was in sight.
+Nicholas was never silent, he loved to talk, and, from his peculiar
+way of viewing things, his friends were amused by his conversation.
+One day, Michael asked him what sort of weather it was.
+
+"Fine enough, little father," he answered, "but soon we shall feel
+the first winter frosts. Perhaps the Tartars will go into winter
+quarters during the bad season."
+
+Michael Strogoff shook his head with a doubtful air.
+
+"You do not think so, little father?" resumed Nicholas. "You think
+that they will march on to Irkutsk?"
+
+"I fear so," replied Michael.
+
+"Yes . . . you are right; they have with them a bad man,
+who will not let them loiter on the way. You have heard speak
+of Ivan Ogareff?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You know that it is not right to betray one's country!"
+
+"No . . . it is not right . . ." answered Michael, who wished
+to remain unmoved.
+
+"Little father," continued Nicholas, "it seems to me that you
+are not half indignant enough when Ivan Ogareff is spoken of.
+Your Russian heart ought to leap when his name is uttered."
+
+"Believe me, my friend, I hate him more than you can ever
+hate him," said Michael.
+
+"It is not possible," replied Nicholas; "no, it is not possible!
+When I think of Ivan Ogareff, of the harm which he is doing
+to our sacred Russia, I get into such a rage that if I could
+get hold of him--"
+
+"If you could get hold of him, friend?"
+
+"I think I should kill him."
+
+"And I, I am sure of it," returned Michael quietly.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII THE PASSAGE OF THE YENISEI
+
+AT nightfall, on the 25th of August, the kibitka came in sight
+of Krasnoiarsk. The journey from Tomsk had taken eight days.
+If it had not been accomplished as rapidly as it might,
+it was because Nicholas had slept little. Consequently, it was
+impossible to increase his horse's pace, though in other hands,
+the journey would not have taken sixty hours.
+
+Happily, there was no longer any fear of Tartars. Not a scout
+had appeared on the road over which the kibitka had just traveled.
+This was strange enough, and evidently some serious cause
+had prevented the Emir's troops from marching without delay
+upon Irkutsk. Something had occurred. A new Russian corps,
+hastily raised in the government of Yeniseisk, had marched to Tomsk
+to endeavor to retake the town. But, being too weak to withstand
+the Emir's troops, now concentrated there, they had been forced
+to effect a retreat. Feofar-Khan, including his own soldiers,
+and those of the Khanats of Khokhand and Koun-douze, had now
+under his command two hundred and fifty thousand men, to which
+the Russian government could not as yet oppose a sufficient force.
+The invasion could not, therefore, be immediately stopped,
+and the whole Tartar army might at once march upon Irkutsk. The battle
+of Tomsk was on the 22nd of August, though this Michael did not know,
+but it explained why the vanguard of the Emir's army had not
+appeared at Krasnoiarsk by the 25th.
+
+However, though Michael Strogoff could not know the events
+which had occurred since his departure, he at least knew that
+he was several days in advance of the Tartars, and that he need
+not despair of reaching before them the town of Irkutsk,
+still six hundred miles distant.
+
+Besides, at Krasnoiarsk, of which the population is about twelve
+thousand souls, he depended upon obtaining some means of transport.
+Since Nicholas Pigassof was to stop in that town, it would be
+necessary to replace him by a guide, and to change the kibitka
+for another more rapid vehicle. Michael, after having addressed
+himself to the governor of the town, and established his identity
+and quality as Courier of the Czar--which would be easy--
+doubted not that he would be enabled to get to Irkutsk in the shortest
+possible time. He would thank the good Nicholas Pigassof,
+and set out immediately with Nadia, for he did not wish
+to leave her until he had placed her in her father's arms.
+Though Nicholas had resolved to stop at Krasnoiarsk, it was
+only as he said, "on condition of finding employment there."
+In fact, this model clerk, after having stayed to the last
+minute at his post in Kolyvan, was endeavoring to place
+himself again at the disposal of the government.
+"Why should I receive a salary which I have not earned?"
+he would say.
+
+In the event of his services not being required at Krasnoiarsk,
+which it was expected would be still in telegraphic communication
+with Irkutsk, he proposed to go to Oudinsk, or even to the capital
+of Siberia itself. In the latter case, he would continue to travel
+with the brother and sister; and where would they find a surer guide,
+or a more devoted friend?
+
+The kibitka was now only half a verst from Krasnoiarsk. The numerous
+wooden crosses which are erected at the approaches to the town, could be
+seen to the right and left of the road. It was seven in the evening;
+the outline of the churches and of the houses built on the high
+bank of the Yenisei were clearly defined against the evening sky,
+and the waters of the river reflected them in the twilight.
+
+"Where are we, sister?" asked Michael.
+
+"Half a verst from the first houses," replied Nadia.
+
+"Can the town be asleep?" observed Michael. "Not a sound
+strikes my ear."
+
+"And I cannot see the slightest light, nor even smoke mounting
+into the air," added Nadia.
+
+"What a queer town!" said Nicholas. "They make no noise in it,
+and go to bed uncommonly early!"
+
+A presentiment of impending misfortune passed across Michael's heart.
+He had not said to Nadia that he had placed all his hopes on Krasnoiarsk,
+where he expected to find the means of safely finishing his journey.
+He much feared that his anticipations would again be disappointed.
+
+But Nadia had guessed his thoughts, although she could not understand why
+her companion should be so anxious to reach Irkutsk, now that the Imperial
+letter was gone. She one day said something of the sort to him.
+"I have sworn to go to Irkutsk," he replied.
+
+But to accomplish his mission, it was necessary that at
+Krasnoiarsk he should find some more rapid mode of locomotion.
+"Well, friend," said he to Nicholas, "why are we not going on?"
+
+"Because I am afraid of waking up the inhabitants of the town
+with the noise of my carriage!" And with a light fleck of the whip,
+Nicholas put his horse in motion.
+
+Ten minutes after they entered the High Street. Krasnoiarsk was deserted;
+there was no longer an Athenian in this "Northern Athens,"
+as Madame de Bourboulon has called it. Not one of their
+dashing equipages swept through the wide, clean streets.
+Not a pedestrian enlivened the footpaths raised at the bases
+of the magnificent wooden houses, of monumental aspect!
+Not a Siberian belle, dressed in the last French fashion,
+promenaded the beautiful park, cleared in a forest of birch trees,
+which stretches away to the banks of the Yenisei! The great bell
+of the cathedral was dumb; the chimes of the churches were silent.
+Here was complete desolation. There was no longer a living being
+in this town, lately so lively!
+
+The last telegram sent from the Czar's cabinet, before the rupture
+of the wire, had ordered the governor, the garrison, the inhabitants,
+whoever they might be, to leave Krasnoiarsk, to carry with them
+any articles of value, or which might be of use to the Tartars,
+and to take refuge at Irkutsk. The same injunction was given to all
+the villages of the province. It was the intention of the Muscovite
+government to lay the country desert before the invaders.
+No one thought for an instant of disputing these orders.
+They were executed, and this was the reason why not a single human
+being remained in Krasnoiarsk.
+
+Michael Strogoff, Nadia, and Nicholas passed silently through
+the streets of the town. They felt half-stupefied. They
+themselves made the only sound to be heard in this dead city.
+Michael allowed nothing of what he felt to appear,
+but he inwardly raged against the bad luck which pursued him,
+his hopes being again disappointed.
+
+"Alack, alack!" cried Nicholas, "I shall never get any employment
+in this desert!"
+
+"Friend," said Nadia, "you must go on with us."
+
+"I must indeed!" replied Nicholas. "The wire is no doubt
+still working between Oudinsk and Irkutsk, and there--
+Shall we start, little father?"
+
+"Let us wait till to-morrow," answered Michael.
+
+"You are right," said Nicholas. "We have the Yenisei to cross,
+and need light to see our way there!"
+
+"To see!" murmured Nadia, thinking of her blind companion.
+
+Nicholas heard her, and turning to Michael, "Forgive me, little father,"
+said he. "Alas! night and day, it is true, are all the same to you!"
+
+"Do not reproach yourself, friend," replied Michael, pressing his
+hand over his eyes. "With you for a guide I can still act.
+Take a few hours' repose. Nadia must rest too. To-morrow we
+will recommence our journey!"
+
+Michael and his friends had not to search long for a place of rest.
+The first house, the door of which they pushed open, was empty,
+as well as all the others. Nothing could be found within but a
+few heaps of leaves. For want of better fodder the horse had
+to content himself with this scanty nourishment. The provisions
+of the kibitka were not yet exhausted, so each had a share.
+Then, after having knelt before a small picture of the Panaghia,
+hung on the wall, and still lighted up by a flickering lamp,
+Nicholas and the young girl slept, whilst Michael, over whom
+sleep had no influence, watched.
+
+Before daybreak the next morning, the 26th of August, the horse
+was drawing the kibitka through the forests of birch trees
+towards the banks of the Yenisei. Michael was in much anxiety.
+How was he to cross the river, if, as was probable, all boats
+had been destroyed to retard the Tartars' march? He knew
+the Yenisei, its width was considerable, its currents strong.
+Ordinarily by means of boats specially built for the conveyance
+of travelers, carriages, and horses, the passage of the Yenisei
+takes about three hours, and then it is with extreme difficulty
+that the boats reach the opposite bank. Now, in the absence
+of any ferry, how was the kibitka to get from one bank
+to the other?
+
+Day was breaking when the kibitka reached the left bank,
+where one of the wide alleys of the park ended.
+They were about a hundred feet above the Yenisei, and could
+therefore survey the whole of its wide course.
+
+"Do you see a boat?" asked Michael, casting his eyes eagerly
+about from one side to the other, mechanically, no doubt,
+as if he could really see.
+
+"It is scarcely light yet, brother," replied Nadia. "The fog
+is still thick, and we cannot see the water."
+
+"But I hear it roaring," said Michael.
+
+Indeed, from the fog issued a dull roaring sound.
+The waters being high rushed down with tumultuous violence.
+All three waited until the misty curtain should rise.
+The sun would not be long in dispersing the vapors.
+
+"Well?" asked Michael.
+
+"The fog is beginning to roll away, brother," replied Nadia,
+"and it will soon be clear."
+
+"Then you do not see the surface of the water yet?"
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"Have patience, little father," said Nicholas. "All this
+will soon disappear. Look! here comes the breeze!
+It is driving away the fog. The trees on the opposite
+hills are already appearing. It is sweeping, flying away.
+The kindly rays of the sun have condensed all that mass of mist.
+Ah! how beautiful it is, my poor fellow, and how unfortunate
+that you cannot see such a lovely sight!"
+
+"Do you see a boat?" asked Michael.
+
+"I see nothing of the sort," answered Nicholas.
+
+"Look well, friend, on this and the opposite bank, as far as your eye
+can reach. A raft, even a canoe?"
+
+Nicholas and Nadia, grasping the bushes on the edge of the cliff,
+bent over the water. The view they thus obtained was extensive.
+At this place the Yenisei is not less than a mile in width, and forms
+two arms, of unequal size, through which the waters flow swiftly.
+Between these arms lie several islands, covered with alders,
+willows, and poplars, looking like verdant ships, anchored in
+the river. Beyond rise the high hills of the Eastern shore,
+crowned with forests, whose tops were then empurpled with light.
+The Yenisei stretched on either side as far as the eye could reach.
+The beautiful panorama lay before them for a distance of fifty versts.
+
+But not a boat was to be seen. All had been taken away or destroyed,
+according to order. Unless the Tartars should bring with them materials
+for building a bridge of boats, their march towards Irkutsk would
+certainly be stopped for some time by this barrier, the Yenisei.
+
+"I remember," said Michael, "that higher up, on the outskirts
+of Krasnoiarsk, there is a little quay. There the boats touch.
+Friend, let us go up the river, and see if some boat has not been
+forgotten on the bank."
+
+Nadia seized Michael's hand and started off at a rapid pace in
+the direction indicated. If only a boat or a barge large enough
+to hold the kibitka could be found, or even one that would carry
+just themselves, Michael would not hesitate to attempt the passage!
+Twenty minutes after, all three had reached the little quay,
+with houses on each side quite down to the water's edge.
+It was like a village standing beyond the town of Krasnoiarsk.
+
+But not a boat was on the shore, not a barge at the little wharf,
+nothing even of which a raft could be made large enough to carry
+three people. Michael questioned Nicholas, who made the discouraging
+reply that the crossing appeared to him absolutely impracticable.
+
+"We shall cross!" answered Michael.
+
+The search was continued. They examined the houses on the shore,
+abandoned like all the rest of Krasnoiarsk. They had merely to push open
+the doors and enter. The cottages were evidently those of poor people,
+and quite empty. Nicholas visited one, Nadia entered another,
+and even Michael went here and there and felt about, hoping to light
+upon some article that might be useful.
+
+Nicholas and the girl had each fruitlessly rummaged these cottages
+and were about to give up the search, when they heard themselves called.
+Both ran to the bank and saw Michael standing on the threshold of a door.
+
+"Come!" he exclaimed. Nicholas and Nadia went towards him and followed
+him into the cottage.
+
+"What are these?" asked Michael, touching several objects piled
+up in a corner.
+
+"They are leathern bottles," answered Nicholas.
+
+"Are they full?"
+
+"Yes, full of koumyss. We have found them very opportunely
+to renew our provisions!"
+
+"Koumyss" is a drink made of mare's or camel's milk, and is
+very sustaining, and even intoxicating; so that Nicholas and his
+companions could not but congratulate themselves on the discovery.
+
+"Save one," said Michael, "but empty the others."
+
+"Directly, little father."
+
+"These will help us to cross the Yenisei."
+
+"And the raft?"
+
+"Will be the kibitka itself, which is light enough to float.
+Besides, we will sustain it, as well as the horse, with these bottles."
+
+"Well thought of, little father," exclaimed Nicholas, "and by God's help
+we will get safely over . . . though perhaps not in a straight line,
+for the current is very rapid!"
+
+"What does that matter?" replied Michael. "Let us get across first,
+and we shall soon find out the road to Irkutsk on the other side
+of the river."
+
+"To work, then," said Nicholas, beginning to empty the bottles.
+
+One full of koumyss was reserved, and the rest, with the air carefully
+fastened in, were used to form a floating apparatus. Two bottles
+were fastened to the horse's sides to support it in the water.
+Two others were attached to the shafts to keep them on a level
+with the body of the machine, thus transformed into a raft.
+This work was soon finished.
+
+"You will not be afraid, Nadia?" asked Michael.
+
+"No, brother," answered the girl.
+
+"And you, friend?"
+
+"I?" cried Nicholas. "I am now going to have one of my dreams realized--
+that of sailing in a cart."
+
+At the spot where they were now standing, the bank sloped,
+and was suitable for the launching of the kibitka.
+The horse drew it into the water, and they were soon both floating.
+As to Serko, he was swimming bravely.
+
+The three passengers, seated in the vehicle, had with due
+precaution taken off their shoes and stockings; but, thanks to
+the bottles, the water did not even come over their ankles.
+Michael held the reins, and, according to Nicholas's directions,
+guided the animal obliquely, but cautiously, so as not to exhaust
+him by struggling against the current. So long as the kibitka
+went with the current all was easy, and in a few minutes it
+had passed the quays of Krasnoiarsk. It drifted northwards,
+and it was soon evident that it would only reach the opposite
+bank far below the town. But that mattered little.
+The crossing would have been made without great difficulty,
+even on this imperfect apparatus, had the current been regular;
+but, unfortunately, there were whirlpools in numbers,
+and soon the kibitka, notwithstanding all Michael's efforts,
+was irresistibly drawn into one of these.
+
+There the danger was great. The kibitka no longer drifted,
+but spun rapidly round, inclining towards the center of the eddy,
+like a rider in a circus. The horse could scarcely keep his
+head above water, and ran a great risk of being suffocated.
+Serko had been obliged to take refuge in the carriage.
+
+Michael knew what was happening. He felt himself drawn round
+in a gradually narrowing line, from which they could not get free.
+How he longed to see, to be better able to avoid this peril,
+but that was no longer possible. Nadia was silent, her hands
+clinging to the sides of the cart, which was inclining more
+and more towards the center of depression.
+
+And Nicholas, did he not understand the gravity of the situation?
+Was it with him phlegm or contempt of danger, courage or indifference?
+Was his life valueless in his eyes, and, according to the Eastern
+expression, "an hotel for five days," which, whether one is willing
+or not, must be left the sixth? At any rate, the smile on his rosy
+face never faded for an instant.
+
+The kibitka was thus in the whirlpool, and the horse was
+nearly exhausted, when, all at once, Michael, throwing off
+such of his garments as might impede him, jumped into the water;
+then, seizing with a strong hand the bridle of the terrified horse,
+he gave him such an impulse that he managed to struggle out
+of the circle, and getting again into the current, the kibitka
+drifted along anew.
+
+"Hurrah!" exclaimed Nicholas.
+
+Two hours after leaving the wharf, the kibitka had crossed the widest
+arm of the river, and had landed on an island more than six versts
+below the starting point.
+
+There the horse drew the cart onto the bank, and an hour's rest
+was given to the courageous animal; then the island having been
+crossed under the shade of its magnificent birches, the kibitka
+found itself on the shore of the smaller arm of the Yenisei.
+
+This passage was much easier; no whirlpools broke the course
+of the river in this second bed; but the current was so rapid
+that the kibitka only reached the opposite side five versts below.
+They had drifted eleven versts in all.
+
+These great Siberian rivers across which no bridges have
+as yet been thrown, are serious obstacles to the facility
+of communication. All had been more or less unfortunate
+to Michael Strogoff. On the Irtych, the boat which carried
+him and Nadia had been attacked by Tartars. On the Obi,
+after his horse had been struck by a bullet, he had only by
+a miracle escaped from the horsemen who were pursuing him.
+In fact, this passage of the Yenisei had been performed
+the least disastrously.
+
+"That would not have been so amusing," exclaimed Nicholas,
+rubbing his hands, as they disembarked on the right bank of the river,
+"if it had not been so difficult."
+
+"That which has only been difficult to us, friend,"
+answered Michael Strogoff, "will, perhaps, be impossible
+to the Tartars."
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII A HARE CROSSES THE ROAD
+
+MICHAEL STROGOFF might at last hope that the road to Irkutsk
+was clear. He had distanced the Tartars, now detained at Tomsk,
+and when the Emir's soldiers should arrive at Krasnoiarsk they
+would find only a deserted town. There being no communication
+between the two banks of the Yenisei, a delay of some days
+would be caused until a bridge of boats could be established,
+and to accomplish this would be a difficult undertaking.
+For the first time since the encounter with Ivan Ogareff at Omsk,
+the courier of the Czar felt less uneasy, and began to hope
+that no fresh obstacle would delay his progress.
+
+The road was good, for that part of it which extends
+between Krasnoiarsk and Irkutsk is considered the best
+in the whole journey; fewer jolts for travelers, large trees
+to shade them from the heat of the sun, sometimes forests
+of pines or cedars covering an extent of a hundred versts.
+It was no longer the wide steppe with limitless horizon;
+but the rich country was empty. Everywhere they came upon
+deserted villages. The Siberian peasantry had vanished.
+It was a desert, but a desert by order of the Czar.
+
+The weather was fine, but the air, which cooled during the night,
+took some time to get warm again. Indeed it was now near September,
+and in this high region the days were sensibly shortening.
+Autumn here lasts but a very little while, although this part of
+Siberian territory is not situated above the fifty-fifth parallel,
+that of Edinburgh and Copenhagen. However, winter succeeds summer
+almost unexpectedly. These winters of Asiatic Russia may be said
+to be precocious, considering that during them the thermometer falls
+until the mercury is frozen nearly 42 degrees below zero, and that 20
+degrees below zero is considered an unsupportable temperature.
+
+The weather favored our travelers. It was neither stormy nor rainy.
+The health of Nadia and Michael was good, and since leaving Tomsk they
+had gradually recovered from their past fatigues.
+
+As to Nicholas Pigassof, he had never been better in his life.
+To him this journey was a trip, an agreeable excursion in which
+he employed his enforced holiday.
+
+"Decidedly," said he, "this is pleasanter than sitting twelve hours a day,
+perched on a stool, working the manip-ulator!"
+
+
+Michael had managed to get Nicholas to make his horse quicken his pace.
+To obtain this result, he had confided to Nicholas that Nadia
+and he were on their way to join their father, exiled at Irkutsk,
+and that they were very anxious to get there. Certainly, it would
+not do to overwork the horse, for very probably they would not be
+able to exchange him for another; but by giving him frequent rests--
+every ten miles, for instance--forty miles in twenty-four hours
+could easily be accomplished. Besides, the animal was strong,
+and of a race calculated to endure great fatigue. He was in no want
+of rich pasturage along the road, the grass being thick and abundant.
+Therefore, it was possible to demand an increase of work from him.
+
+Nicholas gave in to all these reasons. He was much moved at the situation
+of these two young people, going to share their father's exile.
+Nothing had ever appeared so touching to him. With what a smile he said
+to Nadia: "Divine goodness! what joy will Mr. Korpanoff feel, when his
+eyes behold you, when his arms open to receive you! If I go to Irkutsk--
+and that appears very probable now--will you permit me to be present at
+that interview! You will, will you not?" Then, striking his forehead:
+"But, I forgot, what grief too when he sees that his poor son is blind!
+Ah! everything is mingled in this world!"
+
+However, the result of all this was the kibitka went faster,
+and, according to Michael's calculations, now made almost eight
+miles an hour.
+
+After crossing the little river Biriousa, the kibitka reached Biriousensk
+on the morning of the 4th of September. There, very fortunately,
+for Nicholas saw that his provisions were becoming exhausted,
+he found in an oven a dozen "pogatchas," a kind of cake prepared
+with sheep's fat and a large supply of plain boiled rice.
+This increase was very opportune, for something would soon have
+been needed to replace the koumyss with which the kibitka had been
+stored at Krasnoiarsk.
+
+After a halt, the journey was continued in the afternoon.
+The distance to Irkutsk was not now much over three hundred miles.
+There was not a sign of the Tartar vanguard. Michael Strogoff had
+some grounds for hoping that his journey would not be again delayed,
+and that in eight days, or at most ten, he would be in the presence
+of the Grand Duke.
+
+On leaving Biriousinsk, a hare ran across the road, in front
+of the kibitka. "Ah!" exclaimed Nicholas.
+
+"What is the matter, friend?" asked Michael quickly, like a blind
+man whom the least sound arouses.
+
+"Did you not see?" said Nicholas, whose bright face had become
+suddenly clouded. Then he added, "Ah! no! you could not see,
+and it's lucky for you, little father!"
+
+"But I saw nothing," said Nadia.
+
+"So much the better! So much the better! But I--I saw!"
+
+"What was it then?" asked Michael.
+
+"A hare crossing our road!" answered Nicholas.
+
+In Russia, when a hare crosses the path, the popular belief is that it
+is the sign of approaching evil. Nicholas, superstitious like the greater
+number of Russians, stopped the kibitka.
+
+Michael understood his companion's hesitation, without sharing
+his credulity, and endeavored to reassure him, "There is nothing
+to fear, friend," said he.
+
+"Nothing for you, nor for her, I know, little father," answered Nicholas,
+"but for me!"
+
+"It is my fate," he continued. And he put his horse in
+motion again. However, in spite of these forebodings the day
+passed without any accident.
+
+At twelve o'clock the next day, the 6th of September, the kibitka
+halted in the village of Alsalevok, which was as deserted
+as the surrounding country. There, on a doorstep, Nadia found
+two of those strong-bladed knives used by Siberian hunters.
+She gave one to Michael, who concealed it among his clothes,
+and kept the other herself.
+
+Nicholas had not recovered his usual spirits. The ill-omen had
+affected him more than could have been believed, and he who formerly
+was never half an hour without speaking, now fell into long
+reveries from which Nadia found it difficult to arouse him.
+The kibitka rolled swiftly along the road. Yes, swiftly!
+Nicholas no longer thought of being so careful of his horse,
+and was as anxious to arrive at his journey's end as Michael himself.
+Notwithstanding his fatalism, and though resigned,
+he would not believe himself in safety until within the walls
+of Irkutsk. Many Russians would have thought as he did,
+and more than one would have turned his horse and gone back again,
+after a hare had crossed his path.
+
+Some observations made by him, the justice of which was proved by Nadia
+transmitting them to Michael, made them fear that their trials were not
+yet over. Though the land from Krasnoiarsk had been respected in its
+natural productions, its forests now bore trace of fire and steel;
+and it was evident that some large body of men had passed that way.
+
+Twenty miles before Nijni-Oudinsk, the indications of recent
+devastation could not be mistaken, and it was impossible to attribute
+them to others than the Tartars. It was not only that the fields
+were trampled by horse's feet, and that trees were cut down.
+The few houses scattered along the road were not only empty,
+some had been partly demolished, others half burnt down.
+The marks of bullets could be seen on their walls.
+
+Michael's anxiety may be imagined. He could no longer doubt
+that a party of Tartars had recently passed that way, and yet
+it was impossible that they could be the Emir's soldiers,
+for they could not have passed without being seen.
+But then, who were these new invaders, and by what out-of-the-way
+path across the steppe had they been able to join the highroad
+to Irkutsk? With what new enemies was the Czar's courier
+now to meet?
+
+He did not communicate his apprehensions either to Nicholas or Nadia,
+not wishing to make them uneasy. Besides, he had resolved
+to continue his way, as long as no insurmountable obstacle
+stopped him. Later, he would see what it was best to do.
+During the ensuing day, the recent passage of a large
+body of foot and horse became more and more apparent.
+Smoke was seen above the horizon. The kibitka advanced cautiously.
+Several houses in deserted villages still burned, and could not
+have been set on fire more than four and twenty hours before.
+
+At last, during the day, on the 8th of September,
+the kibitka stopped suddenly. The horse refused to advance.
+Serko barked furiously.
+
+"What is the matter?" asked Michael.
+
+"A corpse!" replied Nicholas, who had leapt out of the kibitka.
+The body was that of a moujik, horribly mutilated, and already cold.
+Nicholas crossed himself. Then, aided by Michael, he carried
+the body to the side of the road. He would have liked to give it
+decent burial, that the wild beasts of the steppe might not feast
+on the miserable remains, but Michael could not allow him the time.
+
+"Come, friend, come!" he exclaimed, "we must not delay,
+even for an hour!" And the kibitka was driven on.
+
+Besides, if Nicholas had wished to render the last duties
+to all the dead bodies they were now to meet with on
+the Siberian highroad, he would have had enough to do!
+As they approached Nijni-Oudinsk, they were found by twenties,
+stretched on the ground.
+
+It was, however, necessary to follow this road until it was manifestly
+impossible to do so longer without falling into the hands of
+the invaders. The road they were following could not be abandoned,
+and yet the signs of devastation and ruin increased at every village
+they passed through. The blood of the victims was not yet dry.
+As to gaining information about what had occurred, that was impossible.
+There was not a living being left to tell the tale.
+
+About four o'clock in the afternoon of this day, Nicholas caught sight
+of the tall steeples of the churches of Nijni-Oudinsk. Thick vapors,
+which could not have been clouds, were floating around them.
+
+Nicholas and Nadia looked, and communicated the result of their
+observations to Michael. They must make up their minds what to do.
+If the town was abandoned, they could pass through without risk,
+but if, by some inexplicable maneuver, the Tartars occupied it,
+they must at every cost avoid the place.
+
+"Advance cautiously," said Michael Strogoff, "but advance!"
+
+A verst was soon traversed.
+
+"Those are not clouds, that is smoke!" exclaimed Nadia. "Brother, they
+are burning the town!"
+
+It was, indeed, only too plain. Flashes of light appeared in the midst
+of the vapor. It became thicker and thicker as it mounted upwards.
+But were they Tartars who had done this? They might be Russians,
+obeying the orders of the Grand Duke. Had the government of the Czar
+determined that from Krasnoiarsk, from the Yenisei, not a town,
+not a village should offer a refuge to the Emir's soldiers?
+What was Michael to do?
+
+He was undecided. However, having weighed the pros and cons,
+he thought that whatever might be the difficulties of a journey
+across the steppe without a beaten path, he ought not to risk
+capture a second time by the Tartars. He was just proposing to
+Nicholas to leave the road, when a shot was heard on their right.
+A ball whistled, and the horse of the kibitka fell dead,
+shot through the head.
+
+A dozen horsemen dashed forward, and the kibitka was surrounded.
+Before they knew where they were, Michael, Nadia, and Nicholas
+were prisoners, and were being dragged rapidly towards Nijni-Oudinsk.
+
+Michael, in this second attack, had lost none of his presence of mind.
+Being unable to see his enemies, he had not thought of defending himself.
+Even had he possessed the use of his eyes, he would not have
+attempted it. The consequences would have been his death and that
+of his companions. But, though he could not see, he could listen
+and understand what was said.
+
+From their language he found that these soldiers were Tartars,
+and from their words, that they preceded the invading army.
+
+In short, what Michael learnt from the talk at the present moment,
+as well as from the scraps of conversation he overheard later,
+was this. These men were not under the direct orders of the Emir,
+who was now detained beyond the Yenisei. They made part of a third
+column chiefly composed of Tartars from the khanats of Khokland
+and Koondooz, with which Feofar's army was to affect a junction
+in the neighborhood of Irkutsk.
+
+By Ogareff's advice, in order to assure the success of the invasion
+in the Eastern provinces, this column had skirted the base
+of the Altai Mountains. Pillaging and ravaging, it had reached
+the upper course of the Yenisei. There, guessing what had been
+done at Krasnoiarsk by order of the Czar, and to facilitate
+the passage of the river to the Emir's troops, this column
+had launched a flotilla of boats, which would enable Feofar
+to cross and r‚sum‚ the road to Irkutsk. Having done this,
+it had descended the valley of the Yenisei and struck the road on
+a level with Alsalevsk. From this little town began the frightful
+course of ruin which forms the chief part of Tartar warfare.
+Nijni-Oudinsk had shared the common fate, and the Tartars,
+to the number of fifty thousand, had now quitted it to take up
+a position before Irkutsk. Before long, they would be reinforced
+by the Emir's troops.
+
+Such was the state of affairs at this date, most serious for this
+isolated part of Eastern Siberia, and for the comparatively few
+defenders of its capital.
+
+It can be imagined with what thoughts Michael's mind was now occupied!
+Who could have been astonished had he, in his present situation,
+lost all hope and all courage? Nothing of the sort, however; his lips
+muttered no other words than these: "I will get there!"
+
+Half an hour after the attack of the Tartar horsemen,
+Michael Strogoff, Nadia, and Nicholas entered Nijni-Oudinsk. The
+faithful dog followed them, though at a distance.
+They could not stay in the town, as it was in flames,
+and about to be left by the last of the marauders.
+The prisoners were therefore thrown on horses and hurried away;
+Nicholas resigned as usual, Nadia, her faith in Michael unshaken,
+and Michael himself, apparently indifferent, but ready to seize
+any opportunity of escaping.
+
+The Tartars were not long in perceiving that one of their
+prisoners was blind, and their natural barbarity led them to make
+game of their unfortunate victim. They were traveling fast.
+Michael's horse, having no one to guide him, often started aside,
+and so made confusion among the ranks. This drew on his rider
+such abuse and brutality as wrung Nadia's heart, and filled Nicholas
+with indignation. But what could they do? They could not speak
+the Tartar language, and their assistance was mercilessly refused.
+Soon it occurred to these men, in a refinement of cruelty,
+to exchange the horse Michael was riding for one which was blind.
+The motive of the change was explained by a remark which
+Michael overheard, "Perhaps that Russian can see, after all!"
+
+Michael was placed on this horse, and the reins ironically put
+into his hand. Then, by dint of lashing, throwing stones,
+and shouting, the animal was urged into a gallop.
+The horse, not being guided by his rider, blind as himself,
+sometimes ran into a tree, sometimes went quite off the road--
+in consequence, collisions and falls, which might have
+been extremely dangerous.
+
+Michael did not complain. Not a murmur escaped him.
+When his horse fell, he waited until it got up.
+It was, indeed, soon assisted up, and the cruel fun continued.
+At sight of this wicked treatment, Nicholas could not
+contain himself; he endeavored to go to his friend's aid.
+He was prevented, and treated brutally.
+
+This game would have been prolonged, to the Tartars'
+great amusement, had not a serious accident put an end to it.
+On the 10th of September the blind horse ran away, and made
+straight for a pit, some thirty or forty feet deep, at the side
+of the road.
+
+Nicholas tried to go after him. He was held back.
+The horse, having no guide, fell with his rider to the bottom.
+Nicholas and Nadia uttered a piercing cry! They believed
+that their unfortunate companion had been killed.
+
+However, when they went to his assistance, it was found that Michael,
+having been able to throw himself out of the saddle, was unhurt,
+but the miserable horse had two legs broken, and was quite useless.
+He was left there to die without being put out of his suffering,
+and Michael, fastened to a Tartar's saddle, was obliged to follow
+the detachment on foot.
+
+Even now, not a protest, not a complaint! He marched with
+a rapid step, scarcely drawn by the cord which tied him.
+He was still "the Man of Iron," of whom General Kissoff had
+spoken to the Czar!
+
+The next day, the 11th of September, the detachment passed
+through the village of Chibarlinskoe. Here an incident
+occurred which had serious consequences. It was nightfall.
+The Tartar horsemen, having halted, were more or less intoxicated.
+They were about to start. Nadia, who till then, by a miracle,
+had been respectfully treated by the soldiers, was insulted
+by one of them.
+
+Michael could not see the insult, nor the insulter, but Nicholas
+saw for him. Then, quietly, without thinking, without perhaps
+knowing what he was doing, Nicholas walked straight up to the man,
+and, before the latter could make the least movement to stop him,
+had seized a pistol from his holster and discharged it full
+at his breast.
+
+The officer in command of the detachment hastened up on hearing
+the report. The soldiers would have cut the unfortunate Nicholas
+to pieces, but at a sign from their officer, he was bound instead,
+placed across a horse, and the detachment galloped off.
+
+The rope which fastened Michael, gnawed through by him,
+broke by the sudden start of the horse, and the half-tipsy rider
+galloped on without perceiving that his prisoner had escaped.
+
+Michael and Nadia found themselves alone on the road.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX IN THE STEPPE
+
+MICHAEL STROGOFF and Nadia were once more as free as they had been
+in the journey from Perm to the banks of the Irtych. But how
+the conditions under which they traveled were altered!
+Then, a comfortable tarantass, fresh horses, well-kept post-horses
+assured the rapidity of their journey. Now they were on foot;
+it was utterly impossible to procure any other means of locomotion,
+they were without resources, not knowing how to obtain even food,
+and they had still nearly three hundred miles to go!
+Moreover, Michael could now only see with Nadia's eyes.
+
+As to the friend whom chance had given them, they had just
+lost him, and fearful might be his fate. Michael had thrown
+himself down under the brushwood at the side of the road.
+Nadia stood beside him, waiting for the word from him to
+continue the march.
+
+It was ten o'clock. The sun had more than three hours before
+disappeared below the horizon. There was not a house in sight.
+The last of the Tartars was lost in the distance.
+Michael and Nadia were quite alone.
+
+"What will they do with our friend?" exclaimed the girl.
+"Poor Nicholas! Our meeting will have been fatal to him!"
+Michael made no response.
+
+"Michael," continued Nadia, "do you not know that he defended you
+when you were the Tartars' sport; that he risked his life for me?"
+
+Michael was still silent. Motionless, his face buried in his hands;
+of what was he thinking? Perhaps, although he did not answer,
+he heard Nadia speak.
+
+Yes! he heard her, for when the young girl added, "Where shall
+I lead you, Michael?"
+
+"To Irkutsk!" he replied.
+
+"By the highroad?"
+
+"Yes, Nadia."
+
+Michael was still the same man who had sworn, whatever happened,
+to accomplish his object. To follow the highroad, was certainly to go
+the shortest way. If the vanguard of Feofar-Khan's troops appeared,
+it would then be time to strike across the country.
+
+Nadia took Michael's hand, and they started.
+
+The next morning, the 13th of September, twenty versts further,
+they made a short halt in the village of Joulounov-skoe. It was
+burnt and deserted. All night Nadia had tried to see if the body
+of Nicholas had not been left on the road, but it was in vain
+that she looked among the ruins, and searched among the dead.
+Was he reserved for some cruel torture at Irkutsk?
+
+Nadia, exhausted with hunger, was fortunate enough to find in one
+of the houses a quantity of dried meat and "soukharis," pieces
+of bread, which, dried by evaporation, preserve their nutritive
+qualities for an indefinite time.
+
+Michael and the girl loaded themselves with as much as they could carry.
+They had thus a supply of food for several days, and as to water,
+there would be no want of that in a district rendered fertile
+by the numerous little affluents of the Angara.
+
+They continued their journey. Michael walked with a firm step,
+and only slackened his pace for his companion's sake.
+Nadia, not wishing to retard him, obliged herself to walk.
+Happily, he could not see to what a miserable state fatigue
+had reduced her.
+
+However, Michael guessed it. "You are quite done up, poor child,"
+he said sometimes.
+
+"No," she would reply.
+
+"When you can no longer walk, I will carry you."
+
+"Yes, Michael."
+
+During this day they came to the little river Oka, but it was fordable,
+and they had no difficulty in crossing. The sky was cloudy
+and the temperature moderate. There was some fear that the rain
+might come on, which would much have increased their misery.
+A few showers fell, but they did not last.
+
+They went on as before, hand in hand, speaking little,
+Nadia looking about on every side; twice a day they halted.
+Six hours of the night were given to sleep. In a few huts Nadia
+again found a little mutton; but, contrary to Michael's hopes,
+there was not a single beast of burden in the country;
+horses, camels--all had been either killed or carried off.
+They must still continue to plod on across this weary
+steppe on foot.
+
+The third Tartar column, on its way to Irkutsk, had left plain traces:
+here a dead horse, there an abandoned cart. The bodies of unfortunate
+Siberians lay along the road, principally at the entrances to villages.
+Nadia, overcoming her repugnance, looked at all these corpses!
+
+The chief danger lay, not before, but behind.
+The advance guard of the Emir's army, commanded by Ivan Ogareff,
+might at any moment appear. The boats sent down the lower
+Yenisei must by this time have reached Krasnoiarsk and been
+made use of. The road was therefore open to the invaders.
+No Russian force could be opposed to them between Krasnoiarsk
+and Lake Baikal, Michael therefore expected before long
+the appearance of the Tartar scouts.
+
+At each halt, Nadia climbed some hill and looked anxiously
+to the Westward, but as yet no cloud of dust had signaled
+the approach of a troop of horse.
+
+Then the march was resumed; and when Michael felt that he was
+dragging poor Nadia forward too rapidly, he went at a slower pace.
+They spoke little, and only of Nicholas. The young girl recalled
+all that this companion of a few days had done for them.
+
+In answering, Michael tried to give Nadia some hope of which he did
+not feel a spark himself, for he well knew that the unfortunate fellow
+would not escape death.
+
+One day Michael said to the girl, "You never speak to me
+of my mother, Nadia."
+
+His mother! Nadia had never wished to do so. Why renew his grief?
+Was not the old Siberian dead? Had not her son given the last kiss
+to her corpse stretched on the plain of Tomsk?
+
+"Speak to me of her, Nadia," said Michael. "Speak--you will please me."
+
+And then Nadia did what she had not done before. She told all
+that had passed between Marfa and herself since their meeting
+at Omsk, where they had seen each other for the first time.
+She said how an inexplicable instinct had led her towards the old
+prisoner without knowing who she was, and what encouragement she
+had received in return. At that time Michael Strogoff had been
+to her but Nicholas Korpanoff.
+
+"Whom I ought always to have been," replied Michael, his brow darkening.
+
+Then later he added, "I have broken my oath, Nadia. I had sworn
+not to see my mother!"
+
+"But you did not try to see her, Michael," replied Nadia. "Chance alone
+brought you into her presence."
+
+"I had sworn, whatever might happen, not to betray myself."
+
+"Michael, Michael! at sight of the lash raised upon Marfa,
+could you refrain? No! No oath could prevent a son from
+succoring his mother!"
+
+"I have broken my oath, Nadia," returned Michael. "May God
+and the Father pardon me!"
+
+"Michael," resumed the girl, "I have a question to ask you.
+Do not answer it if you think you ought not. Nothing from you
+would vex me!"
+
+"Speak, Nadia."
+
+"Why, now that the Czar's letter has been taken from you,
+are you so anxious to reach Irkutsk?"
+
+Michael tightly pressed his companion's hand, but he did not answer.
+
+"Did you know the contents of that letter before you left Moscow?"
+
+"No, I did not know."
+
+"Must I think, Michael, that the wish alone to place me in my father's
+hands draws you toward Irkutsk?"
+
+"No, Nadia," replied Michael, gravely. "I should deceive you if I allowed
+you to believe that it was so. I go where duty orders me to go. As to
+taking you to Irkutsk, is it not you, Nadia, who are now taking me there?
+Do I not see with your eyes; and is it not your hand that guides me?
+Have you not repaid a hundred-fold the help which I was able to give you
+at first? I do not know if fate will cease to go against us; but the day
+on which you thank me for having placed you in your father's hands,
+I in my turn will thank you for having led me to Irkutsk."
+
+"Poor Michael!" answered Nadia, with emotion. "Do not speak so.
+That does not answer me. Michael, why, now, are you in such haste
+to reach Irkutsk?"
+
+"Because I must be there before Ivan Ogareff," exclaimed Michael.
+
+"Even now?"
+
+"Even now, and I will be there, too!"
+
+In uttering these words, Michael did not speak solely through hatred
+to the traitor. Nadia understood that her companion had not told,
+or could not tell, her all.
+
+On the 15th of September, three days later, the two reached
+the village of Kouitounskoe. The young girl suffered dreadfully.
+Her aching feet could scarcely support her; but she fought,
+she struggled, against her weariness, and her only thought was this:
+"Since he cannot see me, I will go on till I drop."
+
+There were no obstacles on this part of the journey, no danger
+either since the departure of the Tartars, only much fatigue.
+For three days it continued thus. It was plain that the
+third invading column was advancing rapidly in the East;
+that could be seen by the ruins which they left after them--
+the cold cinders and the already decomposing corpses.
+
+There was nothing to be seen in the West; the Emir's
+advance-guard had not yet appeared. Michael began to consider
+the various reasons which might have caused this delay.
+Was a sufficient force of Russians directly menacing Tomsk
+or Krasnoiarsk? Did the third column, isolated from the others,
+run a risk of being cut off? If this was the case, it would
+be easy for the Grand Duke to defend Irkutsk, and any time
+gained against an invasion was a step towards repulsing it.
+Michael sometimes let his thoughts run on these hopes,
+but he soon saw their improbability, and felt that the preservation
+of the Grand Duke depended alone on him.
+
+Nadia dragged herself along. Whatever might be her
+moral energy, her physical strength would soon fail her.
+Michael knew it only too well. If he had not been blind,
+Nadia would have said to him, "Go, Michael, leave me in some hut!
+Reach Irkutsk! Accomplish your mission! See my father!
+Tell him where I am! Tell him that I wait for him, and you
+both will know where to find me! Start! I am not afraid!
+I will hide myself from the Tartars! I will take care of myself
+for him, for you! Go, Michael! I can go no farther!"
+
+Many times Nadia was obliged to stop. Michael then took her
+in his strong arms and, having no longer to think of her fatigue,
+walked more rapidly and with his indefatigable step.
+
+On the 18th of September, at ten in the evening, Kimilteiskoe was
+at last entered. From the top of a hill, Nadia saw in the horizon
+a long light line. It was the Dinka River. A few lightning flashes
+were reflected in the water; summer lightning, without thunder.
+Nadia led her companion through the ruined village.
+The cinders were quite cold. The last of the Tartars had passed
+through at least five or six days before.
+
+Beyond the village, Nadia sank down on a stone bench.
+"Shall we make a halt?" asked Michael.
+
+"It is night, Michael," answered Nadia. "Do you not want to rest
+a few hours?"
+
+"I would rather have crossed the Dinka," replied Michael, "I should
+like to put that between us and the Emir's advance-guard. But you
+can scarcely drag yourself along, my poor Nadia!"
+
+"Come, Michael," returned Nadia, seizing her companion's hand
+and drawing him forward.
+
+Two or three versts further the Dinka flowed across the Irkutsk road.
+The young girl wished to attempt this last effort asked by her companion.
+She found her way by the light from the flashes. They were then crossing
+a boundless desert, in the midst of which was lost the little river.
+Not a tree nor a hillock broke the flatness. Not a breath disturbed
+the atmosphere, whose calmness would allow the slightest sound to travel
+an immense distance.
+
+Suddenly, Michael and Nadia stopped, as if their feet had been
+fast to the ground. The barking of a dog came across the steppe.
+"Do you hear?" said Nadia.
+
+Then a mournful cry succeeded it--a despairing cry, like the last appeal
+of a human being about to die.
+
+"Nicholas! Nicholas!" cried the girl, with a foreboding of evil.
+Michael, who was listening, shook his head.
+
+"Come, Michael, come," said Nadia. And she who just now was
+dragging herself with difficulty along, suddenly recovered strength,
+under violent excitement.
+
+"We have left the road," said Michael, feeling that he was treading
+no longer on powdery soil but on short grass.
+
+"Yes, we must!" returned Nadia. "It was there, on the right,
+from which the cry came!"
+
+In a few minutes they were not more than half a verst from the river.
+A second bark was heard, but, although more feeble, it was
+certainly nearer. Nadia stopped.
+
+"Yes!" said Michael. "It is Serko barking! . . . He has
+followed his master!"
+
+"Nicholas!" called the girl. Her cry was unanswered.
+
+Michael listened. Nadia gazed over the plain illumined
+now and again with electric light, but she saw nothing.
+And yet a voice was again raised, this time murmuring in a
+plaintive tone, "Michael!"
+
+Then a dog, all bloody, bounded up to Nadia.
+
+It was Serko! Nicholas could not be far off! He alone
+could have murmured the name of Michael! Where was he?
+Nadia had no strength to call again. Michael, crawling on
+the ground, felt about with his hands.
+
+Suddenly Serko uttered a fresh bark and darted towards a gigantic bird
+which had swooped down. It was a vulture. When Serko ran towards it,
+it rose, but returning struck at the dog. The latter leapt up at it.
+A blow from the formidable beak alighted on his head, and this time
+Serko fell back lifeless on the ground.
+
+At the same moment a cry of horror escaped Nadia. "There . . . there!"
+she exclaimed.
+
+A head issued from the ground! She had stumbled against it
+in the darkness.
+
+Nadia fell on her knees beside it. Nicholas buried up to his neck,
+according to the atrocious Tartar custom, had been left in the steppe
+to die of thirst, and perhaps by the teeth of wolves or the beaks
+of birds of prey!
+
+Frightful torture for the victim imprisoned in the ground--
+the earth pressed down so that he cannot move, his arms
+bound to his body like those of a corpse in its coffin!
+The miserable wretch, living in the mold of clay from which he is
+powerless to break out, can only long for the death which is
+so slow in coming!
+
+There the Tartars had buried their prisoner three days before!
+For three days, Nicholas waited for the help which now came too late!
+The vultures had caught sight of the head on a level with the ground,
+and for some hours the dog had been defending his master against
+these ferocious birds!
+
+Michael dug at the ground with his knife to release his friend!
+The eyes of Nicholas, which till then had been closed, opened.
+
+He recognized Michael and Nadia. "Farewell, my friends!" he murmured.
+"I am glad to have seen you again! Pray for me!"
+
+Michael continued to dig, though the ground, having been tightly
+rammed down, was as hard as stone, and he managed at last to get
+out the body of the unhappy man. He listened if his heart was still
+beating. . . . It was still!
+
+He wished to bury him, that he might not be left exposed;
+and the hole into which Nicholas had been placed when living,
+was enlarged, so that he might be laid in it--dead! The faithful
+Serko was laid by his master.
+
+At that moment, a noise was heard on the road, about half
+a verst distant. Michael Strogoff listened. It was evidently
+a detachment of horse advancing towards the Dinka. "Nadia, Nadia!"
+he said in a low voice.
+
+Nadia, who was kneeling in prayer, arose. "Look, look!" said he.
+
+"The Tartars!" she whispered.
+
+It was indeed the Emir's advance-guard, passing rapidly along
+the road to Irkutsk.
+
+"They shall not prevent me from burying him!" said Michael. And he
+continued his work.
+
+Soon, the body of Nicholas, the hands crossed on the breast,
+was laid in the grave. Michael and Nadia, kneeling, prayed a last
+time for the poor fellow, inoffensive and good, who had paid
+for his devotion towards them with his life.
+
+"And now," said Michael, as he threw in the earth, "the wolves
+of the steppe will not devour him."
+
+Then he shook his fist at the troop of horsemen who were passing.
+"Forward, Nadia!" he said.
+
+Michael could not follow the road, now occupied by the Tartars. He must
+cross the steppe and turn to Irkutsk. He had not now to trouble himself
+about crossing the Dinka. Nadia could not move, but she could see
+for him. He took her in his arms and went on towards the southwest
+of the province.
+
+A hundred and forty miles still remained to be traversed.
+How was the distance to be performed? Should they not succumb
+to such fatigue? On what were they to live on the way?
+By what superhuman energy were they to pass the slopes of
+the Sayansk Mountains? Neither he nor Nadia could answer this!
+
+And yet, twelve days after, on the 2d of October, at six o'clock
+in the evening, a wide sheet of water lay at Michael Strogoff's feet.
+It was Lake Baikal.
+
+
+CHAPTER X BAIKAL AND ANGARA
+
+LAKE BAIKAL is situated seventeen hundred feet above the level of
+the sea. Its length is about six hundred miles, its breadth seventy.
+Its depth is not known. Madame de Bourboulon states that,
+according to the boatmen, it likes to be spoken of as "Madam Sea." If it
+is called "Sir Lake," it immediately lashes itself into fury.
+However, it is reported and believed by the Siberians that a Russian
+is never drowned in it.
+
+This immense basin of fresh water, fed by more than three
+hundred rivers, is surrounded by magnificent volcanic mountains.
+It has no other outlet than the Angara, which after passing
+Irkutsk throws itself into the Yenisei, a little above the town
+of Yeniseisk. As to the mountains which encase it, they form
+a branch of the Toungouzes, and are derived from the vast system
+of the Altai.
+
+In this territory, subject to peculiar climatical conditions,
+the autumn appears to be absorbed in the precocious winter.
+It was now the beginning of October. The sun set at five o'clock in
+the evening, and during the long nights the temperature fell to zero.
+The first snows, which would last till summer, already whitened
+the summits of the neighboring hills. During the Siberian winter
+this inland sea is frozen over to a thickness of several feet,
+and is crossed by the sleighs of caravans.
+
+Either because there are people who are so wanting in politeness
+as to call it "Sir Lake," or for some more meteorological reason,
+Lake Baikal is subject to violent tempests. Its waves, short like those
+of all inland seas, are much feared by the rafts, prahms, and steamboats,
+which furrow it during the summer.
+
+It was the southwest point of the lake which Michael had
+now reached, carrying Nadia, whose whole life, so to speak,
+was concentrated in her eyes. But what could these two expect,
+in this wild region, if it was not to die of exhaustion and famine?
+And yet, what remained of the long journey of four thousand miles
+for the Czar's courier to reach his end? Nothing but forty
+miles on the shore of the lake up to the mouth of the Angara,
+and sixty miles from the mouth of the Angara to Irkutsk;
+in all, a hundred miles, or three days' journey for a strong man,
+even on foot.
+
+Could Michael Strogoff still be that man?
+
+Heaven, no doubt, did not wish to put him to this trial.
+The fatality which had hitherto pursued his steps seemed for a time
+to spare him. This end of the Baikal, this part of the steppe,
+which he believed to be a desert, which it usually is, was not so now.
+About fifty people were collected at the angle formed by the end
+of the lake.
+
+Nadia immediately caught sight of this group, when Michael,
+carrying her in his arms, issued from the mountain pass.
+The girl feared for a moment that it was a Tartar detachment,
+sent to beat the shores of the Baikal, in which case flight would
+have been impossible to them both. But Nadia was soon reassured.
+
+"Russians!" she exclaimed. And with this last effort, her eyes
+closed and her head fell on Michael's breast.
+
+But they had been seen, and some of these Russians, running to them,
+led the blind man and the girl to a little point at which was
+moored a raft.
+
+The raft was just going to start. These Russians were fugitives
+of different conditions, whom the same interest had united
+at Lake Baikal. Driven back by the Tartar scouts, they hoped
+to obtain a refuge at Irkutsk, but not being able to get there
+by land, the invaders having occupied both banks of the Angara,
+they hoped to reach it by descending the river which flows
+through the town.
+
+Their plan made Michael's heart leap; a last chance was before him,
+but he had strength to conceal this, wishing to keep his incognito
+more strictly than ever.
+
+The fugitives' plan was very simple. A current in the lake runs
+along by the upper bank to the mouth of the Angara; this current
+they hoped to utilize, and with its assistance to reach the outlet
+of Lake Baikal. From this point to Irkutsk, the rapid waters of
+the river would bear them along at a rate of eight miles an hour.
+In a day and a half they might hope to be in sight of the town.
+
+No kind of boat was to be found; they had been obliged to make one;
+a raft, or rather a float of wood, similar to those which usually
+are drifted down Siberian rivers, was constructed. A forest of firs,
+growing on the bank, had supplied the necessary materials; the trunks,
+fastened together with osiers, made a platform on which a hundred
+people could have easily found room.
+
+On board this raft Michael and Nadia were taken. The girl had returned
+to herself; some food was given to her as well as to her companion.
+Then, lying on a bed of leaves, she soon fell into a deep sleep.
+
+To those who questioned him, Michael Strogoff said nothing
+of what had taken place at Tomsk. He gave himself out as an
+inhabitant of Krasnoiarsk, who had not been able to get to Irkutsk
+before the Emir's troops arrived on the left bank of the Dinka,
+and he added that, very probably, the bulk of the Tartar forces
+had taken up a position before the Siberian capital.
+
+There was not a moment to be lost; besides, the cold was becoming more
+and more severe. During the night the temperature fell below zero;
+ice was already forming on the surface of the Baikal. Although the raft
+managed to pass easily over the lake, it might not be so easy between
+the banks of the Angara, should pieces of ice be found to block
+up its course.
+
+At eight in the evening the moorings were cast off, and the raft
+drifted in the current along the shore. It was steered by means
+of long poles, under the management of several muscular moujiks.
+An old Baikal boatman took command of the raft.
+He was a man of sixty-five, browned by the sun, and lake breezes.
+A thick white beard flowed over his chest; a fur cap covered
+his head; his aspect was grave and austere. His large
+great-coat, fastened in at the waist, reached down to his heels.
+This taciturn old fellow was seated in the stern, and issued
+his commands by gestures. Besides, the chief work consisted
+in keeping the raft in the current, which ran along the shore,
+without drifting out into the open.
+
+It has been already said that Russians of all conditions had found
+a place on the raft. Indeed, to the poor moujiks, the women,
+old men, and children, were joined two or three pilgrims,
+surprised on their journey by the invasion; a few monks, and a priest.
+The pilgrims carried a staff, a gourd hung at the belt, and they
+chanted psalms in a plaintive voice: one came from the Ukraine,
+another from the Yellow sea, and a third from the Finland provinces.
+This last, who was an aged man, carried at his waist a little
+padlocked collecting-box, as if it had been hung at a church door.
+Of all that he collected during his long and fatiguing pilgrimage,
+nothing was for himself; he did not even possess the key of the box,
+which would only be opened on his return.
+
+The monks came from the North of the Empire. Three months before
+they had left the town of Archangel. They had visited the sacred
+islands near the coast of Carelia, the convent of Solovetsk,
+the convent of Troitsa, those of Saint Antony and Saint Theodosia,
+at Kiev, that of Kazan, as well as the church of the Old Believers,
+and they were now on their way to Irkutsk, wearing the robe,
+the cowl, and the clothes of serge.
+
+As to the papa, or priest, he was a plain village pastor, one of the six
+hundred thousand popular pastors which the Russian Empire contains.
+He was clothed as miserably as the moujiks, not being above
+them in social position; in fact, laboring like a peasant
+on his plot of ground; baptis-ing, marrying, burying. He had
+been able to protect his wife and children from the brutality
+of the Tartars by sending them away into the Northern provinces.
+He himself had stayed in his parish up to the last moment;
+then he was obliged to fly, and, the Irkutsk road being stopped,
+had come to Lake Baikal.
+
+These priests, grouped in the forward part of the raft,
+prayed at regular intervals, raising their voices in the
+silent night, and at the end of each sentence of their prayer,
+the "Slava Bogu," Glory to God! issued from their lips.
+
+No incident took place during the night. Nadia remained in a sort
+of stupor, and Michael watched beside her; sleep only overtook
+him at long intervals, and even then his brain did not rest.
+At break of day, the raft, delayed by a strong breeze,
+which counteracted the course of the current, was still forty versts
+from the mouth of the Angara. It seemed probable that the fugitives
+could not reach it before three or four o'clock in the evening.
+This did not trouble them; on the contrary, for they would then
+descend the river during the night, and the darkness would
+also favor their entrance into Irkutsk.
+
+The only anxiety exhibited at times by the old boatman was
+concerning the formation of ice on the surface of the water.
+The night had been excessively cold; pieces of ice could be seen
+drifting towards the West. Nothing was to be dreaded from these,
+since they could not drift into the Angara, having already
+passed the mouth; but pieces from the Eastern end of the lake
+might be drawn by the current between the banks of the river;
+this would cause difficulty, possibly delay, and perhaps even
+an insurmountable obstacle which would stop the raft.
+
+Michael therefore took immense interest in ascertaining what was the state
+of the lake, and whether any large number of ice blocks appeared.
+Nadia being now awake, he questioned her often, and she gave him
+an account of all that was going on.
+
+Whilst the blocks were thus drifting, curious phenomena were
+taking place on the surface of the Baikal. Magnificent jets,
+from springs of boiling water, shot up from some of those artesian
+wells which Nature has bored in the very bed of the lake.
+These jets rose to a great height and spread out in vapor,
+which was illuminated by the solar rays, and almost immediately
+condensed by the cold. This curious sight would have assuredly
+amazed a tourist traveling in peaceful times on this Siberian sea.
+
+At four in the evening, the mouth of the Angara was signaled
+by the old boatman, between the high granite rocks of the shore.
+On the right bank could be seen the little port of Livenitchnaia,
+its church, and its few houses built on the bank. But the serious
+thing was that the ice blocks from the East were already drifting
+between the banks of the Angara, and consequently were descending
+towards Irkutsk. However, their number was not yet great enough
+to obstruct the course of the raft, nor the cold great enough
+to increase their number.
+
+The raft arrived at the little port and there stopped. The old boatman
+wished to put into harbor for an hour, in order to make some repairs.
+The trunks threatened to separate, and it was important to fasten them
+more securely together to resist the rapid current of the Angara.
+
+The old boatman did not expect to receive any fresh fugitives
+at Livenitchnaia, and yet, the moment the raft touched,
+two passengers, issuing from a deserted house, ran as fast
+as they could towards the beach.
+
+Nadia seated on the raft, was abstractedly gazing at the shore.
+A cry was about to escape her. She seized Michael's hand,
+who at that moment raised his head.
+
+"What is the matter, Nadia?" he asked.
+
+"Our two traveling companions, Michael."
+
+"The Frenchman and the Englishman whom we met in the defiles
+of the Ural?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Michael started, for the strict incognito which he wished
+to keep ran a risk of being betrayed. Indeed, it was no longer
+as Nicholas Korpanoff that Jolivet and Blount would now see him,
+but as the true Michael Strogoff, Courier of the Czar. The two
+correspondents had already met him twice since their separation
+at the Ichim post-house--the first time at the Zabediero camp,
+when he laid open Ivan Ogareff's face with the knout; the second
+time at Tomsk, when he was condemned by the Emir. They therefore
+knew who he was and what depended on him.
+
+Michael Strogoff rapidly made up his mind. "Nadia," said he,
+"when they step on board, ask them to come to me!"
+
+It was, in fact, Blount and Jolivet, whom the course of events
+had brought to the port of Livenitchnaia, as it had brought
+Michael Strogoff. As we know, after having been present
+at the entry of the Tartars into Tomsk, they had departed
+before the savage execution which terminated the fete.
+They had therefore never suspected that their former traveling
+companion had not been put to death, but blinded by order
+of the Emir.
+
+Having procured horses they had left Tomsk the same evening,
+with the fixed determination of henceforward dating their letters
+from the Russian camp of Eastern Siberia. They proceeded
+by forced marches towards Irkutsk. They hoped to distance
+Feofar-Khan, and would certainly have done so, had it not been
+for the unexpected apparition of the third column, come from
+the South, up the valley of the Yenisei. They had been cut off,
+as had been Michael, before being able even to reach the Dinka,
+and had been obliged to go back to Lake Baikal.
+
+They had been in the place for three days in much perplexity,
+when the raft arrived. The fugitives' plan was explained to them.
+There was certainly a chance that they might be able to pass under
+cover of the night, and penetrate into Irkutsk. They resolved
+to make the attempt.
+
+Alcide directly communicated with the old boatman, and asked a passage
+for himself and his companion, offering to pay anything he demanded,
+whatever it might be.
+
+"No one pays here," replied the old man gravely; "every one risks
+his life, that is all!"
+
+The two correspondents came on board, and Nadia saw them take
+their places in the forepart of the raft. Harry Blount was still
+the reserved Englishman, who had scarcely addressed a word to her
+during the whole passage over the Ural Mountains. Alcide Jolivet
+seemed to be rather more grave than usual, and it may be acknowledged
+that his gravity was justified by the circumstances.
+
+Jolivet had, as has been said, taken his seat on the raft,
+when he felt a hand laid on his arm. Turning, he recognized Nadia,
+the sister of the man who was no longer Nicholas Korpanoff,
+but Michael Strogoff, Courier of the Czar. He was about to make
+an exclamation of surprise when he saw the young girl lay her
+finger on her lips.
+
+"Come," said Nadia. And with a careless air, Alcide rose
+and followed her, making a sign to Blount to accompany him.
+
+But if the surprise of the correspondents had been great at meeting
+Nadia on the raft it was boundless when they perceived Michael Strogoff,
+whom they had believed to be no longer living.
+
+Michael had not moved at their approach. Jolivet turned towards
+the girl. "He does not see you, gentlemen," said Nadia. "The Tartars
+have burnt out his eyes! My poor brother is blind!"
+
+A feeling of lively compassion exhibited itself on the faces of Blount
+and his companion. In a moment they were seated beside Michael,
+pressing his hand and waiting until he spoke to them.
+
+"Gentlemen," said Michael, in a low voice, "you ought not to know who
+I am, nor what I am come to do in Siberia. I ask you to keep my secret.
+Will you promise me to do so?"
+
+"On my honor," answered Jolivet.
+
+"On my word as a gentleman," added Blount.
+
+"Good, gentlemen."
+
+"Can we be of any use to you?" asked Harry Blount. "Could we
+not help you to accomplish your task?"
+
+"I prefer to act alone," replied Michael.
+
+"But those blackguards have destroyed your sight," said Alcide.
+
+"I have Nadia, and her eyes are enough for me!"
+
+In half an hour the raft left the little port of Livenitchnaia,
+and entered the river. It was five in the evening and getting dusk.
+The night promised to be dark and very cold also, for the temperature
+was already below zero.
+
+Alcide and Blount, though they had promised to keep Michael's secret,
+did not leave him. They talked in a low voice, and the
+blind man, adding what they told him to what he already knew,
+was able to form an exact idea of the state of things.
+It was certain that the Tartars had actually invested Irkutsk,
+and that the three columns had effected a junction.
+There was no doubt that the Emir and Ivan Ogareff were
+before the capital.
+
+But why did the Czar's courier exhibit such haste to get there,
+now that the Imperial letter could no longer be given by him to
+the Grand Duke, and when he did not even know the contents of it?
+Alcide Jolivet and Blount could not understand it any more than
+Nadia had done.
+
+No one spoke of the past, except when Jolivet thought it his duty
+to say to Michael, "We owe you some apology for not shaking hands
+with you when we separated at Ichim."
+
+"No, you had reason to think me a coward!"
+
+"At any rate," added the Frenchman, "you knouted the face of that
+villain finely, and he will carry the mark of it for a long time!"
+
+"No, not a long time!" replied Michael quietly.
+
+Half an hour after leaving Livenitchnaia, Blount and his companion
+were acquainted with the cruel trials through which Michael and his
+companion had successively passed. They could not but heartily admire
+his energy, which was only equaled by the young girl's devotion.
+Their opinion of Michael was exactly what the Czar had expressed
+at Moscow: "Indeed, this is a Man!"
+
+The raft swiftly threaded its way among the blocks of ice
+which were carried along in the current of the Angara. A moving
+panorama was displayed on both sides of the river, and, by an
+optical illusion, it appeared as if it was the raft which
+was motionless before a succession of picturesque scenes.
+Here were high granite cliffs, there wild gorges,
+down which rushed a torrent; sometimes appeared a clearing
+with a still smoking village, then thick pine forests blazing.
+But though the Tartars had left their traces on all sides,
+they themselves were not to be seen as yet, for they were more
+especially massed at the approaches to Irkutsk.
+
+All this time the pilgrims were repeating their prayers aloud,
+and the old boatman, shoving away the blocks of ice which pressed
+too near them, imperturbably steered the raft in the middle
+of the rapid current of the Angara.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI BETWEEN TWO BANKS
+
+BY eight in the evening, the country, as the state of the sky
+had foretold, was enveloped in complete darkness. The moon being new had
+not yet risen. From the middle of the river the banks were invisible.
+The cliffs were confounded with the heavy, low-hanging clouds.
+At intervals a puff of wind came from the east, but it soon died away
+in the narrow valley of the Angara.
+
+The darkness could not fail to favor in a considerable degree
+the plans of the fugitives. Indeed, although the Tartar outposts
+must have been drawn up on both banks, the raft had a good chance
+of passing unperceived. It was not likely either that the besiegers
+would have barred the river above Irkutsk, since they knew that the
+Russians could not expect any help from the south of the province.
+Besides this, before long Nature would herself establish a barrier,
+by cementing with frost the blocks of ice accumulated between
+the two banks.
+
+Perfect silence now reigned on board the raft. The voices
+of the pilgrims were no longer heard. They still prayed,
+but their prayer was but a murmur, which could not reach as far
+as either bank. The fugitives lay flat on the platform,
+so that the raft was scarcely above the level of the water.
+The old boatman crouched down forward among his men,
+solely occupied in keeping off the ice blocks, a maneuver
+which was performed without noise.
+
+The drifting of the ice was a favorable circumstance so long as it
+did not offer an insurmountable obstacle to the passage of the raft.
+If that object had been alone on the water, it would have run
+a risk of being seen, even in the darkness, but, as it was,
+it was confounded with these moving masses, of all shapes and sizes,
+and the tumult caused by the crashing of the blocks against each
+other concealed likewise any suspicious noises.
+
+There was a sharp frost. The fugitives suffered cruelly,
+having no other shelter than a few branches of birch.
+They cowered down together, endeavoring to keep each other warm,
+the temperature being now ten degrees below freezing point.
+The wind, though slight, having passed over the snow-clad
+mountains of the east, pierced them through and through.
+
+Michael and Nadia, lying in the afterpart of the raft,
+bore this increase of suffering without complaint.
+Jolivet and Blount, placed near them, stood these first assaults
+of the Siberian winter as well as they could. No one now spoke,
+even in a low voice. Their situation entirely absorbed them.
+At any moment an incident might occur, which they could
+not escape unscathed.
+
+For a man who hoped soon to accomplish his mission,
+Michael was singularly calm. Even in the gravest conjunctures,
+his energy had never abandoned him. He already saw the moment
+when he would be at last allowed to think of his mother, of Nadia,
+of himself! He now only dreaded one final unhappy chance;
+this was, that the raft might be completely barred by ice before
+reaching Irkutsk. He thought but of this, determined beforehand,
+if necessary, to attempt some bold stroke.
+
+Restored by a few hours' rest, Nadia had regained the physical energy
+which misery had sometimes overcome, although without ever having
+shaken her moral energy. She thought, too, that if Michael had to make
+any fresh effort to attain his end, she must be there to guide him.
+But in proportion as she drew nearer to Irkutsk, the image of her
+father rose more and more clearly before her mind. She saw him in
+the invested town, far from those he loved, but, as she never doubted,
+struggling against the invaders with all the spirit of his patriotism.
+In a few hours, if Heaven favored them, she would be in his arms, giving
+him her mother's last words, and nothing should ever separate them again.
+If the term of Wassili Fedor's exile should never come to an end,
+his daughter would remain exiled with him. Then, by a natural transition,
+she came back to him who would have enabled her to see her father
+once more, to that generous companion, that "brother," who, the Tartars
+driven back, would retake the road to Moscow, whom she would perhaps
+never meet again!
+
+As to Alcide Jolivet and Harry Blount, they had one and the same thought,
+which was, that the situation was extremely dramatic, and that,
+well worked up, it would furnish a most deeply interesting article.
+The Englishman thought of the readers of the Daily Telegraph,
+and the Frenchman of those of his Cousin Madeleine. At heart,
+both were not without feeling some emotion.
+
+"Well, so much the better!" thought Alcide Jolivet, "to move others,
+one must be moved one's self! I believe there is some celebrated
+verse on the subject, but hang me if I can recollect it!"
+And with his well-practiced eyes he endeavored to pierce the gloom
+of the river.
+
+Every now and then a burst of light dispelling the darkness
+for a time, exhibited the banks under some fantastic aspect--
+either a forest on fire, or a still burning village.
+The Angara was occasionally illuminated from one bank to the other.
+The blocks of ice formed so many mirrors, which, reflecting the
+flames on every point and in every color, were whirled along
+by the caprice of the current. The raft passed unperceived
+in the midst of these floating masses.
+
+The danger was not at these points.
+
+But a peril of another nature menaced the fugitives. One that they
+could not foresee, and, above all, one that they could not avoid.
+Chance discovered it to Alcide Jolivet in this way:--Lying at
+the right side of the raft, he let his hand hang over into the water.
+Suddenly he was surprised by the impression made on it by the current.
+It seemed to be of a slimy consistency, as if it had been made
+of mineral oil. Alcide, aiding his touch by his sense of smell,
+could not be mistaken. It was really a layer of liquid naphtha,
+floating on the surface of the river!
+
+Was the raft really floating on this substance, which is in the
+highest degree combustible? Where had this naphtha come from?
+Was it a natural phenomenon taking place on the surface of the Angara,
+or was it to serve as an engine of destruction, put in motion by
+the Tartars? Did they intend to carry conflagration into Irkutsk?
+
+Such were the questions which Alcide asked himself, but he thought
+it best to make this incident known only to Harry Blount, and they
+both agreed in not alarming their companions by revealing to them
+this new danger.
+
+It is known that the soil of Central Asia is like a sponge
+impregnated with liquid hydrogen. At the port of Bakou,
+on the Persian frontier, on the Caspian Sea, in Asia Minor,
+in China, on the Yuen-Kiang, in the Burman Empire, springs of
+mineral oil rise in thousands to the surface of the ground.
+It is an "oil country," similar to the one which bears this
+name in North America.
+
+During certain religious festivals, principally at the port
+of Bakou, the natives, who are fire-worshipers, throw liquid
+naphtha on the surface of the sea, which buoys it up,
+its density being inferior to that of water. Then at nightfall,
+when a layer of mineral oil is thus spread over the Caspian,
+they light it, and exhibit the matchless spectacle of an ocean
+of fire undulating and breaking into waves under the breeze.
+
+But what is only a sign of rejoicing at Bakou, might prove
+a fearful disaster on the waters of the Angara. Whether it
+was set on fire by malevolence or imprudence, in the twinkling
+of an eye a conflagration might spread beyond Irkutsk. On board
+the raft no imprudence was to be feared; but everything was to be
+dreaded from the conflagrations on both banks of the Angara,
+for should a lighted straw or even a spark blow into the water,
+it would inevitably set the whole current of naphtha in a blaze.
+
+The apprehensions of Jolivet and Blount may be better understood
+than described. Would it not be prudent, in face of this
+new danger, to land on one of the banks and wait there?
+"At any rate," said Alcide, "whatever the danger may be,
+I know some one who will not land!"
+
+He alluded to Michael Strogoff.
+
+In the meantime, on glided the raft among the masses of ice
+which were gradually getting closer and closer together.
+Up till then, no Tartar detachment had been seen,
+which showed that the raft was not abreast of the outposts.
+At about ten o'clock, however, Harry Blount caught sight
+of a number of black objects moving on the ice blocks.
+Springing from one to the other, they rapidly approached.
+
+"Tartars!" he thought. And creeping up to the old boatman,
+he pointed out to him the suspicious objects.
+
+The old man looked attentively. "They are only wolves!" said he.
+"I like them better than Tartars. But we must defend ourselves,
+and without noise!"
+
+The fugitives would indeed have to defend themselves against these
+ferocious beasts, whom hunger and cold had sent roaming through
+the province. They had smelt out the raft, and would soon attack it.
+The fugitives must struggle without using firearms, for they could
+not now be far from the Tartar posts. The women and children were
+collected in the middle of the raft, and the men, some armed with poles,
+others with their knives, stood prepared to repulse their assailants.
+They did not make a sound, but the howls of the wolves filled the air.
+
+Michael did not wish to remain inactive. He lay down at
+the side attacked by the savage pack. He drew his knife,
+and every time that a wolf passed within his reach, his hand
+found out the way to plunge his weapon into its throat.
+Neither were Jolivet and Blount idle, but fought bravely
+with the brutes. Their companions gallantly seconded them.
+The battle was carried on in silence, although many of the fugitives
+received severe bites.
+
+The struggle did not appear as if it would soon terminate.
+The pack was being continually reinforced from the right bank
+of the Angara. "This will never be finished!" said Alcide,
+brandishing his dagger, red with blood.
+
+In fact, half an hour after the commencement of the attack,
+the wolves were still coming in hundreds across the ice. The exhausted
+fugitives were getting weaker. The fight was going against them.
+At that moment, a group of ten huge wolves, raging with hunger,
+their eyes glowing in the darkness like red coals, sprang onto the raft.
+Jolivet and his companion threw themselves into the midst of
+the fierce beasts, and Michael was finding his way towards them,
+when a sudden change took place.
+
+In a few moments the wolves had deserted not only the raft,
+but also the ice on the river. All the black bodies dispersed,
+and it was soon certain that they had in all haste regained the shore.
+Wolves, like other beasts of prey, require darkness for their proceedings,
+and at that moment a bright light illuminated the entire river.
+
+It was the blaze of an immense fire. The whole of the small
+town of Poshkavsk was burning. The Tartars were indeed there,
+finishing their work. From this point, they occupied both
+banks beyond Irkutsk. The fugitives had by this time reached
+the dangerous part of their voyage, and they were still twenty
+miles from the capital.
+
+It was now half past eleven. The raft continued to glide on amongst
+the ice, with which it was quite mingled, but gleams of light sometimes
+fell upon it. The fugitives stretched on the platform did not permit
+themselves to make a movement by which they might be betrayed.
+
+The conflagration was going on with frightful rapidity.
+The houses, built of fir-wood, blazed like torches--a hundred
+and fifty flaming at once. With the crackling of the fire was
+mingled the yells of the Tartars. The old boatman, getting a
+foothold on a near piece of ice, managed to shove the raft towards
+the right bank, by doing which a distance of from three to four
+hundred feet divided it from the flames of Poshkavsk.
+
+Nevertheless, the fugitives, lighted every now and then by the glare,
+would have been undoubtedly perceived had not the incendiaries been
+too much occupied in their work of destruction.
+
+It may be imagined what were the apprehensions of Jolivet and Blount,
+when they thought of the combustible liquid on which the raft floated.
+Sparks flew in millions from the houses, which resembled so many
+glowing furnaces. They rose among the volumes of smoke to a height of
+five or six hundred feet. On the right bank, the trees and cliffs exposed
+to the fire looked as if they likewise were burning. A spark falling
+on the surface of the Angara would be sufficient to spread the flames
+along the current, and to carry disaster from one bank to the other.
+The result of this would be in a short time the destruction of the raft
+and of all those which it carried.
+
+But, happily, the breeze did not blow from that side.
+It came from the east, and drove the flames towards the left.
+It was just possible that the fugitives would escape this danger.
+The blazing town was at last passed. Little by little the glare
+grew dimmer, the crackling became fainter, and the flames at
+last disappeared behind the high cliffs which arose at an abrupt
+turn of the river.
+
+By this time it was nearly midnight. The deep gloom again threw its
+protecting shadows over the raft. The Tartars were there, going to and
+fro near the river. They could not be seen, but they could be heard.
+The fires of the outposts burned brightly.
+
+In the meantime it had become necessary to steer more
+carefully among the blocks of ice. The old boatman stood up,
+and the moujiks resumed their poles. They had plenty of work,
+the management of the raft becoming more and more difficult
+as the river was further obstructed.
+
+Michael had crept forward; Jolivet followed; both listened
+to what the old boatman and his men were saying.
+
+"Look out on the right!"
+
+"There are blocks drifting on to us on the left!"
+
+"Fend! fend off with your boat-hook!"
+
+"Before an hour is past we shall be stopped!"
+
+"If it is God's will!" answered the old man. "Against His will there
+is nothing to be done."
+
+"You hear them," said Alcide.
+
+"Yes," replied Michael, "but God is with us!"
+
+The situation became more and more serious. Should the raft
+be stopped, not only would the fugitives not reach Irkutsk,
+but they would be obliged to leave their floating platform,
+for it would be very soon smashed to pieces in the ice.
+The osier ropes would break, the fir trunks torn asunder would
+drift under the hard crust, and the unhappy people would have
+no refuge but the ice blocks themselves. Then, when day came,
+they would be seen by the Tartars, and massacred without mercy!
+
+Michael returned to the spot where Nadia was waiting for him.
+He approached the girl, took her hand, and put to her
+the invariable question: "Nadia, are you ready?" to which she
+replied as usual, "I am ready!"
+
+For a few versts more the raft continued to drift amongst
+the floating ice. Should the river narrow, it would soon form
+an impassable barrier. Already they seemed to drift slower.
+Every moment they encountered severe shocks or were compelled
+to make detours; now, to avoid running foul of a block, there to
+enter a channel, of which it was necessary to take advantage.
+At length the stoppages became still more alarming.
+There were only a few more hours of night. Could the fugitives
+not reach Irkutsk by five o'clock in the morning, they must
+lose all hope of ever getting there at all.
+
+At half-past one, notwithstanding all efforts, the raft
+came up against a thick barrier and stuck fast. The ice,
+which was drifting down behind it, pressed it still closer,
+and kept it motionless, as though it had been stranded.
+
+At this spot the Angara narrowed, it being half its usual breadth.
+This was the cause of the accumulation of ice, which became gradually
+soldered together, under the double influence of the increased pressure
+and of the cold. Five hundred feet beyond, the river widened again,
+and the blocks, gradually detaching themselves from the floe,
+continued to drift towards Irkutsk. It was probable that had
+the banks not narrowed, the barrier would not have formed.
+But the misfortune was irreparable, and the fugitives must give up
+all hope of attaining their object.
+
+Had they possessed the tools usually employed by whalers to cut
+channels through the ice-fields--had they been able to get
+through to where the river widened--they might have been saved.
+But they had nothing which could make the least incision
+in the ice, hard as granite in the excessive frost.
+What were they to do?
+
+At that moment several shots on the right bank startled
+the unhappy fugitives. A shower of balls fell on the raft.
+The devoted passengers had been seen. Immediately afterwards
+shots were heard fired from the left bank. The fugitives,
+taken between two fires, became the mark of the Tartar sharpshooters.
+Several were wounded, although in the darkness it was only
+by chance that they were hit.
+
+"Come, Nadia," whispered Michael in the girl's ear.
+
+Without making a single remark, "ready for anything,"
+Nadia took Michael's hand.
+
+"We must cross the barrier," he said in a low tone.
+"Guide me, but let no one see us leave the raft."
+
+Nadia obeyed. Michael and she glided rapidly over the floe
+in the obscurity, only broken now and again by the flashes from
+the muskets. Nadia crept along in front of Michael. The shot
+fell around them like a tempest of hail, and pattered on the ice.
+Their hands were soon covered with blood from the sharp and rugged
+ice over which they clambered, but still on they went.
+
+In ten minutes, the other side of the barrier was reached.
+There the waters of the Angara again flowed freely.
+Several pieces of ice, detached gradually from the floe,
+were swept along in the current down towards the town.
+Nadia guessed what Michael wished to attempt. One of the blocks
+was only held on by a narrow strip.
+
+"Come," said Nadia. And the two crouched on the piece of ice,
+which their weight detached from the floe.
+
+It began to drift. The river widened, the way was open.
+Michael and Nadia heard the shots, the cries of distress,
+the yells of the Tartars. Then, little by little, the sounds
+of agony and of ferocious joy grew faint in the distance.
+
+"Our poor companions!" murmured Nadia.
+
+For half an hour the current hurried along the block of ice which
+bore Michael and Nadia. They feared every moment that it would
+give way beneath them. Swept along in the middle of the current,
+it was unnecessary to give it an oblique direction until they drew
+near the quays of Irkutsk. Michael, his teeth tight set, his ear on
+the strain, did not utter a word. Never had he been so near his object.
+He felt that he was about to attain it!
+
+Towards two in the morning a double row of lights glittered
+on the dark horizon in which were confounded the two banks
+of the Angara. On the right hand were the lights of Irkutsk;
+on the left, the fires of the Tartar camp.
+
+Michael Strogoff was not more than half a verst from the town.
+"At last!" he murmured.
+
+But suddenly Nadia uttered a cry.
+
+At the cry Michael stood up on the ice, which was wavering.
+His hand was extended up the Angara. His face, on which a bluish
+light cast a peculiar hue, became almost fearful to look at,
+and then, as if his eyes had been opened to the bright blaze
+spreading across the river, "Ah!" he exclaimed, "then Heaven
+itself is against us!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XII IRKUTSK
+
+IRKUTSK, the capital of Eastern Siberia, is a populous town,
+containing, in ordinary times, thirty thousand inhabitants.
+On the right side of the Angara rises a hill, on which are built
+numerous churches, a lofty cathedral, and dwellings disposed
+in picturesque disorder.
+
+Seen at a distance, from the top of the mountain which rises
+at about twenty versts off along the Siberian highroad,
+this town, with its cupolas, its bell-towers, its steeples
+slender as minarets, its domes like pot-bellied Chinese jars,
+presents something of an oriental aspect. But this similarity
+vanishes as the traveler enters.
+
+The town, half Byzantine, half Chinese, becomes European as soon
+as he sees its macadamized roads, bordered with pavements,
+traversed by canals, planted with gigantic birches, its houses
+of brick and wood, some of which have several stories,
+the numerous equipages which drive along, not only tarantasses
+but broughams and coaches; lastly, its numerous inhabitants far
+advanced in civilization, to whom the latest Paris fashions
+are not unknown.
+
+Being the refuge for all the Siberians of the province, Irkutsk was
+at this time very full. Stores of every kind had been collected
+in abundance. Irkutsk is the emporium of the innumerable kinds
+of merchandise which are exchanged between China, Central Asia,
+and Europe. The authorities had therefore no fear with regard
+to admitting the peasants of the valley of the Angara, and leaving
+a desert between the invaders and the town.
+
+Irkutsk is the residence of the governor-general of
+Eastern Siberia. Below him acts a civil governor, in whose hands
+is the administration of the province; a head of police, who has
+much to do in a town where exiles abound; and, lastly, a mayor,
+chief of the merchants, and a person of some importance,
+from his immense fortune and the influence which he exercises
+over the people.
+
+The garrison of Irkutsk was at that time composed of an infantry
+regiment of Cossacks, consisting of two thousand men, and a body
+of police wearing helmets and blue uniforms laced with silver.
+Besides, as has been said, in consequence of the events which
+had occurred, the brother of the Czar had been shut up in the town
+since the beginning of the invasion.
+
+A journey of political importance had taken the Grand Duke
+to these distant provinces of Central Asia. After passing
+through the principal Siberian cities, the Grand Duke,
+who traveled en militaire rather than en prince, without any parade,
+accompanied by his officers, and escorted by a regiment
+of Cossacks, arrived in the Trans-Baikalcine provinces.
+Nikolaevsk, the last Russian town situated on the shore
+of the Sea of Okhotsk, had been honored by a visit from him.
+Arrived on the confines of the immense Muscovite Empire,
+the Grand Duke was returning towards Irkutsk, from which place
+he intended to retake the road to Moscow, when, sudden as a
+thunder clap, came the news of the invasion.
+
+He hastened to the capital, but only reached it just before
+communication with Russia had been interrupted. There was time
+to receive only a few telegrams from St. Petersburg and Moscow,
+and with difficulty to answer them before the wire was cut.
+Irkutsk was isolated from the rest of the world.
+
+The Grand Duke had now only to prepare for resistance,
+and this he did with that determination and coolness of which,
+under other circumstances, he had given incontestable proofs.
+The news of the taking of Ichim, Omsk, and Tomsk,
+successively reached Irkutsk. It was necessary at any price
+to save the capital of Siberia. Reinforcements could not
+be expected for some time. The few troops scattered about
+in the provinces of Siberia could not arrive in sufficiently
+large numbers to arrest the progress of the Tartar columns.
+Since therefore it was impossible for Irkutsk to escape attack,
+the most important thing to be done was to put the town in a state
+to sustain a siege of some duration.
+
+The preparations were begun on the day Tomsk fell into the hands
+of the Tartars. At the same time with this last news,
+the Grand Duke heard that the Emir of Bokhara and the allied Khans
+were directing the invasion in person, but what he did not know was,
+that the lieutenant of these barbarous chiefs was Ivan Ogareff,
+a Russian officer whom he had himself reduced to the ranks,
+but with whose person he was not acquainted.
+
+First of all, as we have seen, the inhabitants of the province of Irkutsk
+were compelled to abandon the towns and villages. Those who did
+not take refuge in the capital had to retire beyond Lake Baikal,
+a district to which the invasion would probably not extend its ravages.
+The harvests of corn and fodder were collected and stored up in the town,
+and Irkutsk, the last bulwark of the Muscovite power in the Far East,
+was put in a condition to resist the enemy for a lengthened period.
+
+Irkutsk, founded in 1611, is situated at the confluence of
+the Irkut and the Angara, on the right bank of the latter river.
+Two wooden draw-bridges, built on piles, connected the town with
+its suburbs on the left bank. On this side, defence was easy.
+The suburbs were abandoned, the bridges destroyed.
+The Angara being here very wide, it would not be possible
+to pass it under the fire of the besieged.
+
+But the river might be crossed both above and below the town,
+and consequently, Irkutsk ran a risk of being attacked on its
+east side, on which there was no wall to protect it.
+
+The whole population were immediately set to work on the fortifications.
+They labored day and night. The Grand Duke observed with satisfaction
+the zeal exhibited by the people in the work, whom ere long he would
+find equally courageous in the defense. Soldiers, merchants, exiles,
+peasants, all devoted themselves to the common safety. A week before
+the Tartars appeared on the Angara, earth-works had been raised.
+A fosse, flooded by the waters of the Angara, was dug between the scarp
+and counterscarp. The town could not now be taken by a coup de main.
+It must be invested and besieged.
+
+The third Tartar column--the one which came up the valley of the Yenisei
+on the 24th of September--appeared in sight of Irkutsk. It immediately
+occupied the deserted suburbs, every building in which had been
+destroyed so as not to impede the fire of the Grand Duke's guns,
+unfortunately but few in number and of small caliber.
+The Tartar troops as they arrived organized a camp on the bank
+of the Angara, whilst waiting the arrival of the two other columns,
+commanded by the Emir and his allies.
+
+The junction of these different bodies was effected on the 25th
+of September, in the Angara camp, and the whole of the invading army,
+except the garrisons left in the principal conquered towns,
+was concentrated under the command of Feofar-Khan.
+
+The passage of the Angara in front of Irkutsk having been regarded
+by Ogareff as impracticable, a strong body of troops crossed,
+several versts up the river, by means of bridges formed with boats.
+The Grand Duke did not attempt to oppose the enemy in their passage.
+He could only impede, not prevent it, having no field-artillery
+at his disposal, and he therefore remained in Irkutsk.
+
+The Tartars now occupied the right bank of the river;
+then, advancing towards the town, they burnt, in passing,
+the summer-house of the governor-general, and at last having
+entirely invested Irkutsk, took up their positions for the siege.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, who was a clever engineer, was perfectly competent
+to direct a regular siege; but he did not possess the materials
+for operating rapidly. He was disappointed too in the chief
+object of all his efforts--the surprise of Irkutsk. Things had
+not turned out as he hoped. First, the march of the Tartar
+army was delayed by the battle of Tomsk; and secondly,
+the preparations for the defense were made far more rapidly than
+he had supposed possible; these two things had balked his plans.
+He was now under the necessity of instituting a regular siege
+of the town.
+
+However, by his suggestion, the Emir twice attempted the capture
+of the place, at the cost of a large sacrifice of men.
+He threw soldiers on the earth-works which presented any weak point;
+but these two assaults were repulsed with the greatest courage.
+The Grand Duke and his officers did not spare themselves on
+this occasion. They appeared in person; they led the civil population
+to the ramparts. Citizens and peasants both did their duty.
+
+At the second attack, the Tartars managed to force one of the gates.
+A fight took place at the head of Bolchaia Street, two versts long,
+on the banks of the Angara. But the Cossacks, the police, the citizens,
+united in so fierce a resistance that the Tartars were driven out.
+
+Ivan Ogareff then thought of obtaining by stratagem what he could
+not gain by force. We have said that his plan was to penetrate into
+the town, make his way to the Grand Duke, gain his confidence, and,
+when the time came, give up the gates to the besiegers; and, that done,
+wreak his vengeance on the brother of the Czar. The Tsigane Sangarre,
+who had accompanied him to the Angara, urged him to put this
+plan in execution.
+
+Indeed, it was necessary to act without delay.
+The Russian troops from the government of Yakutsk were
+advancing towards Irkutsk. They had concentrated along
+the upper course of the Lena. In six days they would arrive.
+Therefore, before six days had passed, Irkutsk must be betrayed.
+Ogareff hesitated no longer.
+
+One evening, the 2d of October, a council of war was held in the
+grand saloon of the palace of the governor-general. This palace,
+standing at the end of Bolchaia Street, overlooked the river.
+From its windows could be seen the camp of the Tartars,
+and had the invaders possessed guns of wider range, they would
+have rendered the palace uninhabitable.
+
+The Grand Duke, General Voranzoff, the governor of the town,
+and the chief of the merchants, with several officers,
+had collected to determine upon various proposals.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the Grand Duke, "you know our situation exactly.
+I have the firm hope that we shall be able to hold out until
+the arrival of the Yakutsk troops. We shall then be able to drive
+off these barbarian hordes, and it will not be my fault if they
+do not pay dearly for this invasion of the Muscovite territory."
+
+"Your Highness knows that all the population of Irkutsk may be relied on,"
+said General Voranzoff.
+
+"Yes, general," replied the Grand Duke, "and I do justice
+to their patriotism. Thanks to God, they have not yet
+been subjected to the horrors of epidemic and famine,
+and I have reason to hope that they will escape them;
+but I cannot admire their courage on the ramparts enough.
+You hear my words, Sir Merchant, and I beg you to repeat
+such to them."
+
+"I thank your Highness in the name of the town," answered the
+merchant chief. "May I ask you what is the most distant date
+when we may expect the relieving army?"
+
+"Six days at most, sir," replied the Grand Duke. "A brave and clever
+messenger managed this morning to get into the town, and he told me
+that fifty thousand Russians under General Kisselef, are advancing
+by forced marches. Two days ago, they were on the banks of the Lena,
+at Kirensk, and now, neither frost nor snow will keep them back.
+Fifty thousand good men, taking the Tartars on the flank, will soon
+set us free."
+
+"I will add," said the chief of the merchants, "that we shall
+be ready to execute your orders, any day that your Highness
+may command a sortie."
+
+"Good, sir," replied the Grand Duke. "Wait till the heads
+of the relieving columns appear on the heights, and we will
+speedily crush these invaders."
+
+Then turning to General Voranzoff, "To-morrow," said he, "we will
+visit the works on the right bank. Ice is drifting down the Angara,
+which will not be long in freezing, and in that case the Tartars
+might perhaps cross."
+
+"Will your Highness allow me to make an observation?"
+said the chief of the merchants.
+
+"Do so, sir."
+
+"I have more than once seen the temperature fall to thirty
+and forty degrees below zero, and the Angara has still
+carried down drifting ice without entirely freezing.
+This is no doubt owing to the swiftness of its current.
+If therefore the Tartars have no other means of crossing the river,
+I can assure your Highness that they will not enter Irkutsk
+in that way."
+
+The governor-general confirmed this assertion.
+
+"It is a fortunate circumstance," responded the Grand Duke.
+"Nevertheless, we must hold ourselves ready for any emergency."
+
+He then, turning towards the head of the police, asked, "Have you
+nothing to say to me, sir?"
+
+"I have your Highness," answered the head of police, "a petition
+which is addressed to you through me."
+
+"Addressed by whom?"
+
+"By the Siberian exiles, whom, as your Highness knows, are in the town
+to the number of five hundred."
+
+The political exiles, distributed over the province, had been
+collected in Irkutsk, from the beginning of the invasion.
+They had obeyed the order to rally in the town, and leave
+the villages where they exercised their different professions,
+some doctors, some professors, either at the Gymnasium, or at
+the Japanese School, or at the School of Navigation. The Grand Duke,
+trusting like the Czar in their patriotism, had armed them,
+and they had thoroughly proved their bravery.
+
+"What do the exiles ask?" said the Grand Duke.
+
+"They ask the consent of your Highness," answered the head of police,
+"to their forming a special corps and being placed in the front
+of the first sortie."
+
+"Yes," replied the Grand Duke with an emotion which he did not seek
+to hide, "these exiles are Russians, and it is their right to fight
+for their country!"
+
+"I believe I may assure your Highness," said the governor-general,
+"you will have no better soldiers."
+
+"But they must have a chief," said the Grand Duke, "who will he be?"
+
+"They wish to recommend to your Highness," said the head of police,
+"one of their number, who has distinguished himself on several occasions."
+
+"Is he a Russian?"
+
+"Yes, a Russian from the Baltic provinces."
+
+"His name?"
+
+"Is Wassili Fedor."
+
+This exile was Nadia's father. Wassili Fedor, as we have already said,
+followed his profession of a medical man in Irkutsk. He was
+clever and charitable, and also possessed the greatest courage
+and most sincere patriotism. All the time which he did not
+devote to the sick he employed in organizing the defense.
+It was he who had united his companions in exile in the common cause.
+The exiles, till then mingled with the population, had behaved
+in such a way as to draw on themselves the attention of the
+Grand Duke. In several sorties, they had paid with their blood their
+debt to holy Russia--holy as they believe, and adored by her children!
+Wassili Fedor had behaved heroically; his name had been mentioned
+several times, but he never asked either thanks or favors,
+and when the exiles of Irkutsk thought of forming themselves into
+a special corps, he was ignorant of their intention of choosing
+him for their captain.
+
+When the head of police mentioned this name, the Grand Duke answered
+that it was not unknown to him.
+
+"Indeed," remarked General Voranzoff, "Wassili Fedor is a man
+of worth and courage. His influence over his companions has
+always been very great."
+
+"How long has he been at Irkutsk?" asked the Duke.
+
+"For two years."
+
+"And his conduct?"
+
+"His conduct," answered the head of police, "is that of a man
+obedient to the special laws which govern him."
+
+"General," said the Grand Duke, "General, be good enough to present
+him to me immediately."
+
+The orders of the Grand Duke were obeyed, and before half
+an hour had passed, Fedor was introduced into his presence.
+He was a man over forty, tall, of a stern and sad countenance.
+One felt that his whole life was summed up in a single word--
+strife--he had striven and suffered. His features bore a marked
+resemblance to those of his daughter, Nadia Fedor.
+
+This Tartar invasion had severely wounded him in his tenderest affections,
+and ruined the hope of the father, exiled eight thousand versts from
+his native town. A letter had apprised him of the death of his wife,
+and at the same time of the departure of his daughter, who had obtained
+from the government an authorization to join him at Irkutsk. Nadia must
+have left Riga on the 10th of July. The invasion had begun on
+the 15th of July; if at that time Nadia had passed the frontier,
+what could have become of her in the midst of the invaders?
+The anxiety of the unhappy father may be supposed when, from that time,
+he had no further news of his daughter.
+
+Wassili Fedor entered the presence of the Grand Duke, bowed, and waited
+to be questioned.
+
+"Wassili Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "your companions
+in exile have asked to be allowed to form a select corps.
+They are not ignorant that in this corps they must make up
+their minds to be killed to the last man?"
+
+"They are not ignorant of it," replied Fedor.
+
+"They wish to have you for their captain."
+
+"I, your Highness?"
+
+"Do you consent to be placed at their head?"
+
+"Yes, if it is for the good of Russia."
+
+"Captain Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "you are no longer an exile."
+
+"Thanks, your Highness, but can I command those who are so still?"
+
+"They are so no longer!" The brother of the Czar had granted a pardon
+to all Fedor's companions in exile, now his companions in arms!
+
+Wassili Fedor wrung, with emotion, the hand which the Grand Duke held
+out to him, and retired.
+
+The latter, turned to his officers, "The Czar will not refuse to ratify
+that pardon," said he, smiling; "we need heroes to defend the capital
+of Siberia, and I have just made some."
+
+This pardon, so generously accorded to the exiles of Irkutsk,
+was indeed an act of real justice and sound policy.
+
+It was now night. Through the windows of the palace burned the fires
+of the Tartar camp, flickering beyond the Angara. Down the river
+drifted numerous blocks of ice, some of which stuck on the piles
+of the old bridges; others were swept along by the current with
+great rapidity. It was evident, as the merchant had observed,
+that it would be very difficult for the Angara to freeze all over.
+The defenders of Irkutsk had not to dread being attacked on that side.
+Ten o'clock had just struck. The Grand Duke was about to dismiss
+his officers and retire to his apartments, when a tumult was heard
+outside the palace.
+
+Almost immediately the door was thrown open, an aide-de-camp appeared,
+and advanced rapidly towards the Grand Duke.
+
+"Your Highness," said he, "a courier from the Czar!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII THE CZAR'S COURIER
+
+ALL the members of the council simultaneously started forward.
+A courier from the Czar arrived in Irkutsk! Had these officers
+for a moment considered the improbability of this fact,
+they would certainly not have credited what they heard.
+
+The Grand Duke advanced quickly to his aide-de-camp. "This courier!"
+he exclaimed.
+
+A man entered. He appeared exhausted with fatigue.
+He wore the dress of a Siberian peasant, worn into tatters,
+and exhibiting several shot-holes. A Muscovite cap was on his head.
+His face was disfigured by a recently-healed scar.
+The man had evidently had a long and painful journey;
+his shoes being in a state which showed that he had been obliged
+to make part of it on foot.
+
+"His Highness the Grand Duke?" he asked.
+
+The Grand Duke went up to him. "You are a courier from
+the Czar?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, your Highness."
+
+"You come?"
+
+"From Moscow."
+
+"You left Moscow?"
+
+"On the 15th of July."
+
+"Your name?"
+
+"Michael Strogoff."
+
+It was Ivan Ogareff. He had taken the designation of the man whom
+he believed that he had rendered powerless. Neither the Grand Duke nor
+anyone knew him in Irkutsk, and he had not even to disguise his features.
+As he was in a position to prove his pretended identity, no one could
+have any reason for doubting him. He came, therefore, sustained by his
+iron will, to hasten by treason and assassination the great object
+of the invasion.
+
+After Ogareff had replied, the Grand Duke signed to all his officers
+to withdraw. He and the false Michael Strogoff remained alone
+in the saloon.
+
+The Grand Duke looked at Ivan Ogareff for some moments with
+extreme attention. Then he said, "On the 15th of July you
+were at Moscow?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness; and on the night of the 14th I saw His Majesty
+the Czar at the New Palace."
+
+"Have you a letter from the Czar?"
+
+"Here it is."
+
+And Ivan Ogareff handed to the Grand Duke the Imperial letter,
+crumpled to almost microscopic size.
+
+"Was the letter given you in this state?"
+
+"No, your Highness, but I was obliged to tear the envelope,
+the better to hide it from the Emir's soldiers."
+
+"Were you taken prisoner by the Tartars?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness, I was their prisoner for several days,"
+answered Ogareff. "That is the reason that, having left Moscow on
+the 15th of July, as the date of that letter shows, I only reached
+Irkutsk on the 2d of October, after traveling seventy-nine days."
+
+The Grand Duke took the letter. He unfolded it and recognized
+the Czar's signature, preceded by the decisive formula,
+written by his brother's hand. There was no possible doubt
+of the authenticity of this letter, nor of the identity of
+the courier. Though Ogareff's countenance had at first inspired
+the Grand Duke with some distrust, he let nothing of it appear,
+and it soon vanished.
+
+The Grand Duke remained for a few minutes without speaking.
+He read the letter slowly, so as to take in its meaning fully.
+"Michael Strogoff, do you know the contents of this letter?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, your Highness. I might have been obliged to destroy it,
+to prevent its falling into the hands of the Tartars, and should
+such have been the case, I wished to be able to bring the contents
+of it to your Highness."
+
+"You know that this letter enjoins us all to die, rather than give
+up the town?"
+
+"I know it."
+
+"You know also that it informs me of the movements of the troops
+which have combined to stop the invasion?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness, but the movements have failed."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that Ichim, Omsk, Tomsk, to speak only of the more
+important towns of the two Siberias, have been successively
+occupied by the soldiers of Feofar-Khan."
+
+"But there has been fighting? Have not our Cossacks met the Tartars?"
+
+"Several times, your Highness."
+
+"And they were repulsed?"
+
+"They were not in sufficient force to oppose the enemy."
+
+"Where did the encounters take place?"
+
+"At Kolyvan, at Tomsk." Until now, Ogareff had only spoken the truth,
+but, in the hope of troubling the defenders of Irkutsk by exaggerating
+the defeats, he added, "And a third time before Krasnoiarsk."
+
+"And what of this last engagement?" asked the Grand Duke,
+through whose compressed lips the words could scarcely pass.
+
+"It was more than an engagement, your Highness," answered Ogareff;
+"it was a battle."
+
+"A battle?"
+
+"Twenty thousand Russians, from the frontier provinces and the government
+of Tobolsk, engaged with a hundred and fifty thousand Tartars, and,
+notwithstanding their courage, were overwhelmed."
+
+"You lie!" exclaimed the Grand Duke, endeavoring in vain
+to curb his passion.
+
+"I speak the truth, your Highness," replied Ivan Ogareff coldly.
+"I was present at the battle of Krasnoiarsk, and it was there I
+was made prisoner!"
+
+The Grand Duke grew calmer, and by a significant gesture he gave
+Ogareff to understand that he did not doubt his veracity.
+"What day did this battle of Krasnoiarsk take place?" he asked.
+
+"On the 2d of September."
+
+"And now all the Tartar troops are concentrated here?"
+
+"All."
+
+"And you estimate them?"
+
+"At about four hundred thousand men."
+
+Another exaggeration of Ogareff's in the estimate of the Tartar army,
+with the same object as before.
+
+"And I must not expect any help from the West provinces?"
+asked the Grand Duke.
+
+"None, your Highness, at any rate before the end of the winter."
+
+"Well, hear this, Michael Strogoff. Though I must expect no help
+either from the East or from the West, even were these barbarians
+six hundred thousand strong, I will never give up Irkutsk!"
+
+Ogareff's evil eye slightly contracted. The traitor thought to himself
+that the brother of the Czar did not reckon the result of treason.
+
+The Grand Duke, who was of a nervous temperament, had great
+difficulty in keeping calm whilst hearing this disastrous news.
+He walked to and fro in the room, under the gaze of Ogareff,
+who eyed him as a victim reserved for vengeance. He stopped
+at the windows, he looked forth at the fires in the Tartar camp,
+he listened to the noise of the ice-blocks drifting down the Angara.
+
+A quarter of an hour passed without his putting any more questions.
+Then taking up the letter, he re-read a passage and said, "You know
+that in this letter I am warned of a traitor, of whom I must beware?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness."
+
+"He will try to enter Irkutsk in disguise; gain my confidence,
+and betray the town to the Tartars."
+
+"I know all that, your Highness, and I know also that Ivan Ogareff
+has sworn to revenge himself personally on the Czar's brother."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It is said that the officer in question was condemned by the Grand Duke
+to a humiliating degradation."
+
+"Yes, I remember. But it is a proof that the villain, who could
+afterwards serve against his country and head an invasion
+of barbarians, deserved it."
+
+"His Majesty the Czar," said Ogareff, "was particularly anxious
+that you should be warned of the criminal projects of Ivan Ogareff
+against your person."
+
+"Yes; of that the letter informs me."
+
+"And His Majesty himself spoke to me of it, telling me I was above
+all things to beware of the traitor."
+
+"Did you meet with him?"
+
+"Yes, your Highness, after the battle of Krasnoiarsk. If he had only
+guessed that I was the bearer of a letter addressed to your Highness,
+in which his plans were revealed, I should not have got off so easily."
+
+"No; you would have been lost!" replied the Grand Duke. "And how did
+you manage to escape?"
+
+"By throwing myself into the Irtych."
+
+"And how did you enter Irkutsk?"
+
+"Under cover of a sortie, which was made this evening to repulse
+a Tartar detachment. I mingled with the defenders of the town,
+made myself known, and was immediately conducted before your Highness."
+
+"Good, Michael Strogoff," answered the Grand Duke. "You have shown
+courage and zeal in your difficult mission. I will not forget you.
+Have you any favor to ask?"
+
+"None; unless it is to be allowed to fight at the side of
+your Highness," replied Ogareff.
+
+"So be it, Strogoff. I attach you from to-day to my person,
+and you shall be lodged in the palace."
+
+"And if according to his intention, Ivan Ogareff should present
+himself to your Highness under a false name?"
+
+"We will unmask him, thanks to you, who know him, and I will make
+him die under the knout. Go!"
+
+Ogareff gave a military salute, not forgetting that he was a captain
+of the couriers of the Czar, and retired.
+
+Ogareff had so far played his unworthy part with success.
+The Grand Duke's entire confidence had been accorded him.
+He could now betray it whenever it suited him.
+He would inhabit the very palace. He would be in the secret
+of all the operations for the defense of the town.
+He thus held the situation in his hand, as it were.
+No one in Irkutsk knew him, no one could snatch off his mask.
+He resolved therefore to set to work without delay.
+
+Indeed, time pressed. The town must be captured before
+the arrival of the Russians from the North and East, and that
+was only a question of a few days. The Tartars once masters
+of Irkutsk, it would not be easy to take it again from them.
+At any rate, even if they were obliged to abandon it later,
+they would not do so before they had utterly destroyed it,
+and before the head of the Grand Duke had rolled at the
+feet of Feofar-Khan.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, having every facility for seeing, observing, and acting,
+occupied himself the next day with visiting the ramparts.
+He was everywhere received with cordial congratulations
+from officers, soldiers, and citizens. To them this courier
+from the Czar was a link which connected them with the empire.
+
+Ogareff recounted, with an assurance which never failed,
+numerous fictitious events of his journey. Then, with the cunning
+for which he was noted, without dwelling too much on it at first,
+he spoke of the gravity of the situation, exaggerating the success
+of the Tartars and the numbers of the barbarian forces,
+as he had when speaking to the Grand Duke. According to him,
+the expected succors would be insufficient, if ever they
+arrived at all, and it was to be feared that a battle fought
+under the walls of Irkutsk would be as fatal as the battles
+of Kolyvan, Tomsk, and Krasnoiarsk.
+
+Ogareff was not too free in these insinuations.
+He wished to allow them to sink gradually into the minds
+of the defenders of Irkutsk. He pretended only to answer
+with reluctance when much pressed with questions.
+He always added that they must fight to the last man, and blow
+up the town rather than yield!
+
+These false statements would have done more harm had it been possible;
+but the garrison and the population of Irkutsk were too patriotic
+to let themselves be moved. Of all the soldiers and citizens shut
+up in this town, isolated at the extremity of the Asiatic world,
+not one dreamed of even speaking of a capitulation. The contempt
+of the Russians for these barbarians was boundless.
+
+No one suspected the odious part played by Ivan Ogareff;
+no one guessed that the pretended courier of the Czar was a traitor.
+It occurred very naturally that on his arrival in Irkutsk,
+a frequent intercourse was established between Ogareff and one
+of the bravest defenders of the town, Wassili Fedor. We know
+what anxiety this unhappy father suffered. If his daughter,
+Nadia Fedor, had left Russia on the date fixed by the last
+letter he had received from Riga, what had become of her?
+Was she still trying to cross the invaded provinces,
+or had she long since been taken prisoner? The only
+alleviation to Wassili Fedor's anxiety was when he could
+obtain an opportunity of engaging in battle with the Tartars--
+opportunities which came too seldom for his taste.
+The very evening the pretended courier arrived, Wassili Fedor
+went to the governor-general's palace and, acquainting Ogareff
+with the circumstances under which his daughter must have left
+European Russia, told him all his uneasiness about her.
+Ogareff did not know Nadia, although he had met her at Ichim
+on the day she was there with Michael Strogoff; but then,
+he had not paid more attention to her than to the two reporters,
+who at the same time were in the post-house; he therefore could
+give Wassili Fedor no news of his daughter.
+
+"But at what time," asked Ogareff, "must your daughter have left
+the Russian territory?"
+
+"About the same time that you did," replied Fedor.
+
+"I left Moscow on the 15th of July."
+
+"Nadia must also have quitted Moscow at that time.
+Her letter told me so expressly."
+
+"She was in Moscow on the 15th of July?"
+
+"Yes, certainly, by that date."
+
+"Then it was impossible for her--But no, I am mistaken--
+I was confusing dates. Unfortunately, it is too probable
+that your daughter must have passed the frontier, and you can
+only have one hope, that she stopped on learning the news
+of the Tartar invasion!"
+
+The father's head fell! He knew Nadia, and he knew too well
+that nothing would have prevented her from setting out.
+Ivan Ogareff had just committed gratuitously an act of real cruelty.
+With a word he might have reassured Fedor. Although Nadia had passed
+the frontier under circumstances with which we are acquainted,
+Fedor, by comparing the date on which his daughter would have
+been at Nijni-Novgorod, and the date of the proclamation which
+forbade anyone to leave it, would no doubt have concluded thus:
+that Nadia had not been exposed to the dangers of the invasion,
+and that she was still, in spite of herself, in the European
+territory of the Empire.
+
+Ogareff obedient to his nature, a man who was never touched
+by the sufferings of others, might have said that word.
+He did not say it. Fedor retired with his heart broken.
+In that interview his last hope was crushed.
+
+During the two following days, the 3rd and 4th of October,
+the Grand Duke often spoke to the pretended Michael Strogoff,
+and made him repeat all that he had heard in the Imperial Cabinet
+of the New Palace. Ogareff, prepared for all these questions,
+replied without the least hesitation. He intentionally did not
+conceal that the Czar's government had been utterly surprised
+by the invasion, that the insurrection had been prepared
+in the greatest possible secrecy, that the Tartars were already
+masters of the line of the Obi when the news reached Moscow,
+and lastly, that none of the necessary preparations were completed
+in the Russian provinces for sending into Siberia the troops
+requisite for repulsing the invaders.
+
+Ivan Ogareff, being entirely free in his movements, began to
+study Irkutsk, the state of its fortifications, their weak points,
+so as to profit subsequently by his observations, in the event
+of being prevented from consummating his act of treason.
+He examined particularly the Bolchaia Gate, the one he wished
+to deliver up.
+
+Twice in the evening he came upon the glacis of this gate.
+He walked up and down, without fear of being discovered by the besiegers,
+whose nearest posts were at least a mile from the ramparts.
+He fancied that he was recognized by no one, till he caught
+sight of a shadow gliding along outside the earthworks.
+Sangarre had come at the risk of her life for the purpose of putting
+herself in communication with Ivan Ogareff.
+
+For two days the besieged had enjoyed a tranquillity to which the Tartars
+had not accustomed them since the commencement of the investment.
+This was by Ogareff's orders. Feofar-Khan's lieutenant wished
+that all attempts to take the town by force should be suspended.
+He hoped the watchfulness of the besieged would relax. At any rate,
+several thousand Tartars were kept in readiness at the outposts,
+to attack the gate, deserted, as Ogareff anticipated that it would be,
+by its defenders, whenever he should summon the besiegers to the assault.
+
+This he could not now delay in doing. All must be over
+by the time that the Russian troops should come in sight
+of Irkutsk. Ogareff's arrangements were made, and on this evening
+a note fell from the top of the earthworks into Sangarre's hands.
+
+On the next day, that is to say during the hours of darkness
+from the 5th to the 6th of October, at two o'clock in the morning,
+Ivan Ogareff had resolved to deliver up Irkutsk.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV THE NIGHT OF THE FIFTH OF OCTOBER
+
+IVAN OGAREFF'S plan had been contrived with the greatest care,
+and except for some unforeseen accident he believed that it must succeed.
+It was of importance that the Bolchaia Gate should be unguarded
+or only feebly held when he gave it up. The attention of the
+besieged was therefore to be drawn to another part of the town.
+A diversion was agreed upon with the Emir.
+
+This diversion was to be effected both up and down the river,
+on the Irkutsk bank. The attack on these two points was to be
+conducted in earnest, and at the same time a feigned attempt
+at crossing the Angara from the left bank was to be made.
+The Bolchaia Gate, would be probably deserted, so much the more
+because on this side the Tartar outposts having drawn back,
+would appear to have broken up.
+
+It was the 5th of October. In four and twenty hours,
+the capital of Eastern Siberia would be in the hands of the Emir,
+and the Grand Duke in the power of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+During the day, an unusual stir was going on in the Angara camp.
+From the windows of the palace important preparations
+on the opposite shore could be distinctly seen.
+Numerous Tartar detachments were converging towards the camp,
+and from hour to hour reinforced the Emir's troops.
+These movements, intended to deceive the besieged, were conducted
+in the most open manner possible before their eyes.
+
+Ogareff had warned the Grand Duke that an attack was to be feared.
+He knew, he said, that an assault was to be made, both above and below
+the town, and he counselled the Duke to reinforce the two directly
+threatened points. Accordingly, after a council of war had been held
+in the palace, orders were issued to concentrate the defense on the bank
+of the Angara and at the two ends of the town, where the earthworks
+protected the river.
+
+This was exactly what Ogareff wished. He did not expect that
+the Bolchaia Gate would be left entirely without defenders,
+but that there would only be a small number. Besides, Ogareff meant
+to give such importance to the diversion, that the Grand Duke
+would be obliged to oppose it with all his available forces.
+The traitor planned also to produce so frightful a catastrophe
+that terror must inevitably overwhelm the hearts of the besieged.
+
+All day the garrison and population of Irkutsk were on the alert.
+The measures to repel an attack on the points hitherto unassailed had
+been taken. The Grand Duke and General Voranzoff visited the posts,
+strengthened by their orders. Wassili Fedor's corps occupied the North
+of the town, but with orders to throw themselves where the danger
+was greatest. The right bank of the Angara had been protected
+with the few guns possessed by the defenders. With these measures,
+taken in time, thanks to the advice so opportunely given by Ivan Ogareff,
+there was good reason to hope that the expected attack would be repulsed.
+In that case the Tartars, momentarily discouraged, would no doubt
+not make another attempt against the town for several days.
+Now the troops expected by the Grand Duke might arrive at any hour.
+The safety or the loss of Irkutsk hung only by a thread.
+
+On this day, the sun which had risen at twenty minutes to six,
+set at forty minutes past five, having traced its diurnal
+arc for eleven hours above the horizon. The twilight would
+struggle with the night for another two hours. Then it would be
+intensely dark, for the sky was cloudy, and there would be no moon.
+This gloom would favor the plans of Ivan Ogareff.
+
+For a few days already a sharp frost had given warning of
+the approaching rigor of the Siberian winter, and this evening
+it was especially severe. The Russians posted by the bank of
+the Angara, obliged to conceal their position, lighted no fires.
+They suffered cruelly from the low temperature. A few feet
+below them, the ice in large masses drifted down the current.
+All day these masses had been seen passing rapidly between
+the two banks.
+
+This had been considered by the Grand Duke and his officers as fortunate.
+Should the channel of the Angara continue to be thus obstructed,
+the passage must be impracticable. The Tartars could use neither
+rafts nor boats. As to their crossing the river on the ice,
+that was not possible. The newly-frozen plain could not bear
+the weight of an assaulting column.
+
+This circumstance, as it appeared favorable to the defenders
+of Irkutsk, Ogareff might have regretted. He did not do so, however.
+The traitor knew well that the Tartars would not try to pass the Angara,
+and that, on its side at least, their attempt was only a feint.
+
+About ten in the evening, the state of the river sensibly improved, to the
+great surprise of the besieged and still more to their disadvantage.
+The passage till then impracticable, became all at once possible.
+The bed of the Angara was clear. The blocks of ice, which had for some
+days drifted past in large numbers, disappeared down the current,
+and five or six only now occupied the space between the banks.
+The Russian officers reported this change in the river to
+the Grand Duke. They suggested that it was probably caused
+by the circumstance that in some narrower part of the Angara,
+the blocks had accumulated so as to form a barrier.
+
+We know this was the case. The passage of the Angara was thus
+open to the besiegers. There was great reason for the Russians
+to be on their guard.
+
+Up to midnight nothing had occurred. On the Eastern side,
+beyond the Bolchaia Gate, all was quiet. Not a glimmer was seen
+in the dense forest, which appeared confounded on the horizon
+with the masses of clouds hanging low down in the sky.
+Lights flitting to and fro in the Angara camp, showed that a
+considerable movement was taking place. From a verst above and below
+the point where the scarp met the river's bank, came a dull murmur,
+proving that the Tartars were on foot, expecting some signal.
+An hour passed. Nothing new.
+
+The bell of the Irkutsk cathedral was about to strike two o'clock
+in the morning, and not a movement amongst the besiegers had yet
+shown that they were about to commence the assault. The Grand Duke
+and his officers began to suspect that they had been mistaken.
+Had it really been the Tartars' plan to surprise the town?
+The preceding nights had not been nearly so quiet--musketry rattling
+from the outposts, shells whistling through the air; and this
+time, nothing. The officers waited, ready to give their orders,
+according to circumstances.
+
+We have said that Ogareff occupied a room in the palace.
+It was a large chamber on the ground floor, its windows opening
+on a side terrace. By taking a few steps along this terrace,
+a view of the river could be obtained.
+
+Profound darkness reigned in the room. Ogareff stood by a window,
+awaiting the hour to act. The signal, of course, could come
+from him, alone. This signal once given, when the greater part
+of the defenders of Irkutsk would be summoned to the points
+openly attacked, his plan was to leave the palace and hurry
+to the Bolchaia Gate. If it was unguarded, he would open it;
+or at least he would direct the overwhelming mass of its assailants
+against the few defenders.
+
+He now crouched in the shadow, like a wild beast ready to spring
+on its prey. A few minutes before two o'clock, the Grand Duke
+desired that Michael Strogoff--which was the only name they
+could give to Ivan Ogareff--should be brought to him.
+An aide-de-camp came to the room, the door of which was closed.
+He called.
+
+Ogareff, motionless near the window, and invisible in the shade did
+not answer. The Grand Duke was therefore informed that the Czar's
+courier was not at that moment in the palace.
+
+Two o'clock struck. Now was the time to cause the diversion
+agreed upon with the Tartars, waiting for the assault.
+Ivan Ogareff opened the window and stationed himself at the North
+angle of the side terrace.
+
+Below him flowed the roaring waters of the Angara. Ogareff took
+a match from his pocket, struck it and lighted a small bunch of tow,
+impregnated with priming powder, which he threw into the river.
+
+It was by the orders of Ivan Ogareff that the torrents of mineral oil
+had been thrown on the surface of the Angara! There are numerous
+naphtha springs above Irkutsk, on the right bank, between the suburb
+of Poshkavsk and the town. Ogareff had resolved to employ this terrible
+means to carry fire into Irkutsk. He therefore took possession
+of the immense reservoirs which contained the combustible liquid.
+It was only necessary to demolish a piece of wall in order to allow
+it to flow out in a vast stream.
+
+This had been done that night, a few hours previously, and this
+was the reason that the raft which carried the true Courier of
+the Czar, Nadia, and the fugitives, floated on a current of mineral oil.
+Through the breaches in these reservoirs of enormous dimensions rushed
+the naphtha in torrents, and, following the inclination of the ground,
+it spread over the surface of the river, where its density allowed
+it to float. This was the way Ivan Ogareff carried on warfare!
+Allied with Tartars, he acted like a Tartar, and against
+his own countrymen!
+
+The tow had been thrown on the waters of the Angara. In an instant,
+with electrical rapidity, as if the current had been of alcohol,
+the whole river was in a blaze above and below the town.
+Columns of blue flames ran between the two banks. Volumes of vapor
+curled up above. The few pieces of ice which still drifted were seized
+by the burning liquid, and melted like wax on the top of a furnace,
+the evaporated water escaping in shrill hisses.
+
+At the same moment, firing broke out on the North and South of the town.
+The enemy's batteries discharged their guns at random.
+Several thousand Tartars rushed to the assault of the earth-works.
+The houses on the bank, built of wood, took fire in every direction.
+A bright light dissipated the darkness of the night.
+
+"At last!" said Ivan Ogareff.
+
+He had good reason for congratulating himself. The diversion which
+he had planned was terrible. The defenders of Irkutsk found themselves
+between the attack of the Tartars and the fearful effects of fire.
+The bells rang, and all the able-bodied of the population ran,
+some towards the points attacked, and others towards the houses
+in the grasp of the flames, which it seemed too probable would ere
+long envelop the whole town.
+
+The Gate of Bolchaia was nearly free. Only a very small
+guard had been left there. And by the traitor's suggestion,
+and in order that the event might be explained apart from him,
+as if by political hate, this small guard had been chosen
+from the little band of exiles.
+
+Ogareff re-entered his room, now brilliantly lighted by
+the flames from the Angara; then he made ready to go out.
+But scarcely had he opened the door, when a woman rushed into
+the room, her clothes drenched, her hair in disorder.
+
+"Sangarre!" exclaimed Ogareff, in the first moment of surprise,
+and not supposing that it could be any other woman than the gypsy.
+
+It was not Sangarre; it was Nadia!
+
+At the moment when, floating on the ice, the girl had uttered
+a cry on seeing the fire spreading along the current,
+Michael had seized her in his arms, and plunged with her into
+the river itself to seek a refuge in its depths from the flames.
+The block which bore them was not thirty fathoms from the first
+quay of Irkutsk.
+
+Swimming beneath the water, Michael managed to get a footing with
+Nadia on the quay. Michael Strogoff had reached his journey's end!
+He was in Irkutsk!
+
+"To the governor's palace!" said he to Nadia.
+
+In less than ten minutes, they arrived at the entrance to the palace.
+Long tongues of flame from the Angara licked its walls, but were powerless
+to set it on fire. Beyond the houses on the bank were in a blaze.
+
+The palace being open to all, Michael and Nadia entered
+without difficulty. In the confusion, no one remarked them,
+although their garments were dripping. A crowd of officers
+coming for orders, and of soldiers running to execute them,
+filled the great hall on the ground floor. There, in a sudden
+eddy of the confused multitude, Michael and the young girl
+were separated from each other.
+
+Nadia ran distracted through the passages, calling her companion,
+and asking to be taken to the Grand Duke. A door into a room flooded
+with light opened before her. She entered, and found herself
+suddenly face to face with the man whom she had met at Ichim,
+whom she had seen at Tomsk; face to face with the one whose
+villainous hand would an instant later betray the town!
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" she cried.
+
+On hearing his name pronounced, the wretch started. His real name known,
+all his plans would be balked. There was but one thing to be done:
+to kill the person who had just uttered it. Ogareff darted at Nadia;
+but the girl, a knife in her hand, retreated against the wall,
+determined to defend herself.
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" again cried Nadia, knowing well that so detested
+a name would soon bring her help.
+
+"Ah! Be silent!" hissed out the traitor between his clenched teeth.
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" exclaimed a third time the brave young girl,
+in a voice to which hate had added ten-fold strength.
+
+Mad with fury, Ogareff, drawing a dagger from his belt, again rushed
+at Nadia and compelled her to retreat into a corner of the room.
+Her last hope appeared gone, when the villain, suddenly lifted
+by an irresistible force, was dashed to the ground.
+
+"Michael!" cried Nadia.
+
+It was Michael Strogoff. Michael had heard Nadia's call.
+Guided by her voice, he had just in time reached Ivan Ogareff's room,
+and entered by the open door.
+
+"Fear nothing, Nadia," said he, placing himself between her and Ogareff.
+
+"Ah!" cried the girl, "take care, brother! The traitor is armed!
+He can see!"
+
+Ogareff rose, and, thinking he had an immeasurable advantage
+over the blind man leaped upon him. But with one hand,
+the blind man grasped the arm of his enemy, seized his weapon,
+and hurled him again to the ground.
+
+Pale with rage and shame, Ogareff remembered that he wore a sword.
+He drew it and returned a second time to the charge.
+A blind man! Ogareff had only to deal with a blind man!
+He was more than a match for him!
+
+Nadia, terrified at the danger which threatened her companion
+ran to the door calling for help!
+
+"Close the door, Nadia!" said Michael. "Call no one, and leave me alone!
+The Czar's courier has nothing to fear to-day from this villain!
+Let him come on, if he dares! I am ready for him."
+
+In the mean time, Ogareff, gathering himself together like a tiger
+about to spring, uttered not a word. The noise of his footsteps, his
+very breathing, he endeavored to conceal from the ear of the blind man.
+His object was to strike before his opponent was aware of his approach,
+to strike him with a deadly blow.
+
+Nadia, terrified and at the same time confident, watched this terrible
+scene with involuntary admiration. Michael's calm bearing seemed
+to have inspired her. Michael's sole weapon was his Siberian knife.
+He did not see his adversary armed with a sword, it is true; but Heaven's
+support seemed to be afforded him. How, almost without stirring,
+did he always face the point of the sword?
+
+Ivan Ogareff watched his strange adversary with visible anxiety.
+His superhuman calm had an effect upon him. In vain, appealing to
+his reason, did he tell himself that in so unequal a combat all the
+advantages were on his side. The immobility of the blind man froze him.
+He had settled on the place where he would strike his victim.
+He had fixed upon it! What, then, hindered him from putting an end
+to his blind antagonist?
+
+At last, with a spring he drove his sword full at Michael's breast.
+An imperceptible movement of the blind man's knife turned aside the blow.
+Michael had not been touched, and coolly he awaited a second attack.
+
+Cold drops stood on Ogareff's brow. He drew back a step, then again
+leaped forward. But as had the first, this second attempt failed.
+The knife had simply parried the blow from the traitor's useless sword.
+
+Mad with rage and terror before this living statue,
+he gazed into the wide-open eyes of the blind man.
+Those eyes which seemed to pierce to the bottom of his soul,
+and yet which did not, could not, see--exercised a sort
+of dreadful fascination over him.
+
+All at once, Ogareff uttered a cry. A sudden light flashed
+across his brain. "He sees!" he exclaimed, "he sees!"
+And like a wild beast trying to retreat into its den,
+step by step, terrified, he drew back to the end of the room.
+
+Then the statue became animated, the blind man walked straight up
+to Ivan Ogareff, and placing himself right before him, "Yes, I see!"
+said he. "I see the mark of the knout which I gave you,
+traitor and coward! I see the place where I am about to strike you!
+Defend your life! It is a duel I deign to offer you!
+My knife against your sword!"
+
+"He sees!" said Nadia. "Gracious Heaven, is it possible!"
+
+Ogareff felt that he was lost. But mustering all his courage, he sprang
+forward on his impassible adversary. The two blades crossed, but at
+a touch from Michael's knife, wielded in the hand of the Siberian hunter,
+the sword flew in splinters, and the wretch, stabbed to the heart,
+fell lifeless on the ground.
+
+At the same moment, the door was thrown open. The Grand Duke,
+accompanied by some of his officers, appeared on the threshold.
+The Grand Duke advanced. In the body lying on the ground,
+he recognized the man whom he believed to be the Czar's courier.
+
+Then, in a threatening voice, "Who killed that man?" he asked.
+
+"I," replied Michael.
+
+One of the officers put a pistol to his temple, ready to fire.
+
+"Your name?" asked the Grand Duke, before giving the order
+for his brains to be blown out.
+
+"Your Highness," answered Michael, "ask me rather the name of the man
+who lies at your feet!"
+
+"That man, I know him! He is a servant of my brother!
+He is the Czar's courier!"
+
+"That man, your Highness, is not a courier of the Czar! He is
+Ivan Ogareff!"
+
+"Ivan Ogareff!" exclaimed the Grand Duke.
+
+"Yes, Ivan the Traitor!"
+
+"But who are you, then?"
+
+"Michael Strogoff!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XV CONCLUSION
+
+MICHAEL STROGOFF was not, had never been, blind. A purely
+human phenomenon, at the same time moral and physical,
+had neutralized the action of the incandescent blade which Feofar's
+executioner had passed before his eyes.
+
+It may be remembered, that at the moment of the execution,
+Marfa Strogoff was present, stretching out her hands towards her son.
+Michael gazed at her as a son would gaze at his mother,
+when it is for the last time. The tears, which his pride in vain
+endeavored to subdue, welling up from his heart, gathered under
+his eyelids, and volatiliz-ing on the cornea, had saved his sight.
+The vapor formed by his tears interposing between the glowing saber
+and his eyeballs, had been sufficient to annihilate the action
+of the heat. A similar effect is produced, when a workman smelter,
+after dipping his hand in vapor, can with impunity hold it over
+a stream of melted iron.
+
+Michael had immediately understood the danger in which he would
+be placed should he make known his secret to anyone.
+He at once saw, on the other hand, that he might make use of
+his supposed blindness for the accomplishment of his designs.
+Because it was believed that he was blind, he would be allowed
+to go free. He must therefore be blind, blind to all,
+even to Nadia, blind everywhere, and not a gesture at any moment
+must let the truth be suspected. His resolution was taken.
+He must risk his life even to afford to all he might meet
+the proof of his want of sight. We know how perfectly he acted
+the part he had determined on.
+
+His mother alone knew the truth, and he had whispered it to her
+in Tomsk itself, when bending over her in the dark he covered
+her with kisses.
+
+When Ogareff had in his cruel irony held the Imperial letter before
+the eyes which he believed were destroyed, Michael had been able to read,
+and had read the letter which disclosed the odious plans of the traitor.
+This was the reason of the wonderful resolution he exhibited during
+the second part of his journey. This was the reason of his unalterable
+longing to reach Irkutsk, so as to perform his mission by word of mouth.
+He knew that the town would be betrayed! He knew that the life
+of the Grand Duke was threatened! The safety of the Czar's brother
+and of Siberia was in his hands.
+
+This story was told in a few words to the Grand Duke, and Michael
+repeated also--and with what emotion!--the part Nadia had taken
+in these events.
+
+"Who is this girl?" asked the Grand Duke.
+
+"The daughter of the exile, Wassili Fedor," replied Michael.
+
+"The daughter of Captain Fedor," said the Grand Duke, "has ceased to be
+the daughter of an exile. There are no longer exiles in Irkutsk."
+
+Nadia, less strong in joy than she had been in grief, fell on
+her knees before the Grand Duke, who raised her with one hand,
+while he extended the other to Michael.
+
+An hour after, Nadia was in her father's arms.
+Michael Strogoff, Nadia, and Wassili Fedor were united.
+This was the height of happiness to them all.
+
+The Tartars had been repulsed in their double attack on the town.
+Wassili Fedor, with his little band, had driven back the first
+assailants who presented themselves at the Bolchaia Gate,
+expecting to find it open and which, by an instinctive feeling,
+often arising from sound judgment, he had determined to remain
+at and defend.
+
+At the same time as the Tartars were driven back the besieged
+had mastered the fire. The liquid naphtha having rapidly burnt
+to the surface of the water, the flames did not go beyond the houses
+on the shore, and left the other quarters of the town uninjured.
+Before daybreak the troops of Feofar-Khan had retreated into their camp,
+leaving a large number of dead on and below the ramparts.
+
+Among the dead was the gypsy Sangarre, who had vainly endeavored
+to join Ivan Ogareff.
+
+For two days the besiegers attempted no fresh assault.
+They were discouraged by the death of Ogareff. This man was
+the mainspring of the invasion, and he alone, by his plots long
+since contrived, had had sufficient influence over the khans
+and their hordes to bring them to the conquest of Asiatic Russia.
+
+However, the defenders of Irkutsk kept on their guard, and the investment
+still continued; but on the 7th of October, at daybreak, cannon boomed
+out from the heights around Irkutsk. It was the succoring army under
+the command of General Kisselef, and it was thus that he made known
+his welcome arrival to the Grand Duke.
+
+The Tartars did not wait to be attacked. Not daring to run the risk
+of a battle under the walls of Irkutsk, they immediately broke up
+the Angara camp. Irkutsk was at last relieved.
+
+With the first Russian soldiers, two of Michael's friends entered
+the city. They were the inseparable Blount and Jolivet. On gaining the
+right bank of the Angara by means of the icy barrier, they had escaped,
+as had the other fugitives, before the flames had reached their raft.
+This had been noted by Alcide Jolivet in his book in this way:
+"Ran a narrow chance of being finished up like a lemon in a
+bowl of punch!"
+
+Their joy was great on finding Nadia and Michael safe and sound;
+above all, when they learnt that their brave companion was not blind.
+Harry Blount inscribed this observation: "Red-hot iron is insufficient
+in some cases to destroy the sensibility of the optic nerve."
+
+Then the two correspondents, settled for a time in Irkutsk,
+busied themselves in putting the notes and impressions of their journey
+in order. Thence were sent to London and Paris two interesting
+articles relative to the Tartar invasion, and which--a rare thing--
+did not contradict each other even on the least important points.
+
+The remainder of the campaign was unfortunate to the Emir and his allies.
+This invasion, futile as all which attack the Russian Colossus must be,
+was very fatal to them. They soon found themselves cut off by
+the Czar's troops, who retook in succession all the conquered towns.
+Besides this, the winter was terrible, and, decimated by the cold,
+only a small part of these hordes returned to the steppes of Tartary.
+
+The Irkutsk road, by way of the Ural Mountains, was now open.
+The Grand Duke was anxious to return to Moscow, but he delayed
+his journey to be present at a touching ceremony, which took
+place a few days after the entry of the Russian troops.
+
+Michael Strogoff sought Nadia, and in her father's presence said to her,
+"Nadia, my sister still, when you left Riga to come to Irkutsk,
+did you leave it with any other regret than that for your mother?"
+
+"No," replied Nadia, "none of any sort whatever."
+
+"Then, nothing of your heart remains there?"
+
+"Nothing, brother."
+
+"Then, Nadia," said Michael, "I think that God, in allowing
+us to meet, and to go through so many severe trials together,
+must have meant us to be united forever."
+
+"Ah!" said Nadia, falling into Michael's arms. Then turning
+towards Wassili Fedor, "My father," said she, blushing.
+
+"Nadia," said Captain Fedor, "it will be my joy to call you
+both my children!"
+
+The marriage ceremony took place in Irkutsk cathedral.
+
+Jolivet and Blount very naturally assisted at this marriage,
+of which they wished to give an account to their readers.
+
+"And doesn't it make you wish to imitate them?" asked Alcide
+of his friend.
+
+"Pooh!" said Blount. "Now if I had a cousin like you--"
+
+"My cousin isn't to be married!" answered Alcide, laughing.
+
+"So much the better," returned Blount, "for they speak of difficulties
+arising between London and Pekin. Have you no wish to go and see
+what is going on there?"
+
+"By Jove, my dear Blount!" exclaimed Alcide Jolivet, "I was just going
+to make the same proposal to you."
+
+And that was how the two inseparables set off for China.
+
+A few days after the ceremony, Michael and Nadia Strogoff,
+accompanied by Wassili Fedor, took the route to Europe. The road
+so full of suffering when going, was a road of joy in returning.
+They traveled swiftly, in one of those sleighs which glide
+like an express train across the frozen steppes of Siberia.
+
+However, when they reached the banks of the Dinka, just before Birskoe,
+they stopped for a while. Michael found the place where he had buried
+poor Nicholas. A cross was erected there, and Nadia prayed a last time
+on the grave of the humble and heroic friend, whom neither of them
+would ever forget.
+
+At Omsk, old Marfa awaited them in the little house of
+the Strogoffs. She clasped passionately in her arms the girl whom
+in her heart she had already a hundred times called "daughter."
+The brave old Siberian, on that day, had the right to recognize
+her son and say she was proud of him.
+
+After a few days passed at Omsk, Michael and Nadia entered
+Europe, and, Wassili Fedor settling down in St. Petersburg,
+neither his son nor his daughter had any occasion to leave him,
+except to go and see their old mother.
+
+The young courier was received by the Czar, who attached him specially
+to his own person, and gave him the Cross of St. George. In the course
+of time, Michael Strogoff reached a high station in the Empire. But it
+is not the history of his success, but the history of his trials,
+which deserves to be related.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Michael Strogoff, by Jules Verne
+
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