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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67865 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67865)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Samovar Girl, by Frederick F.
-Moore
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Samovar Girl
-
-Author: Frederick F. Moore
-
-Release Date: April 18, 2022 [eBook #67865]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SAMOVAR GIRL ***
-
-
-
-
-
-═════════════════════
-
- THE SAMOVAR GIRL
- FREDERICK MOORE
-
-═════════════════════
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-
- THE SAMOVAR GIRL
-
- BY
-
- FREDERICK MOORE
-
- AUTHOR OF
- “SAILOR GIRL,” “SIBERIA TO-DAY,” “THE DEVIL’S ADMIRAL,”
- “ISLE O’ DREAMS,” ETC.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK :: 1921 :: LONDON
-
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
-
- Copyright, 1921, by Frederick Moore
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TO
- ROBERT H. DAVIS
-
-
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- PROLOGUE: THE VALLEY OF DESPAIR 1
- I. TWENTY YEARS AFTER 17
- II. THE INTELLIGENCE OFFICER 32
- III. THE FIRING SQUAD 44
- IV. THE PLACE OF THE VOW 60
- V. THE ATAMAN’S DECISION 69
- VI. THE PRISON ON THE HILL 79
- VII. OLD RIMSKY THINKS 94
- VIII. PETER LAYS HIS PLANS 105
- IX. ILYA USES HIS WITS 111
- X. “AN AMERICAN HAS COME!” 121
- XI. THE FLIGHT 131
- XII. HIDDEN AGAIN 140
- XIII. KATERIN PLANS TO MEET THE AMERICAN 151
- XIV. THE SAMOVAR GIRL 160
- XV. THE TRAP SHUTS 174
- XVI. KATERIN’S STRATAGEM 182
- XVII. SETTING THE SNARE 195
- XVIII. THE TRAIL GROWS HOT 206
- XIX. FACE TO FACE 217
- XX. THE BLOW 232
- XXI. THE CAT’S PAW HAS CLAWS 244
- XXII. THE OFFICER FROM THE ATAMAN 254
- XXIII. A LIFE FOR A LIFE 265
- XXIV. A NEW TUNE ON AN OLD FIDDLE 274
- XXV. THE FINAL RECKONING 285
- XXVI. FAREWELL 294
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- THE SAMOVAR GIRL
-
-
-
-
- PROLOGUE
-
- THE VALLEY OF DESPAIR
-
-
-_Clank! Clank! Clank!_
-
-It was the music of chains. A column of unfortunates from the big prison
-on the hill swung down the road and turned into the wide street between
-the log houses. They were on their way out into the _taiga_ to cut wood
-and hew timbers under a guard of Cossacks. The chains hanging from the
-wrists of the convicts to their ankles, crossed in front of them but
-hidden under the _khalats_—long gray capes worn by exiles—made the
-doleful music as the long line of marchers, gray as the cold fog of the
-morning, moved up the Czar’s road and was lost in the frozen mists that
-masked the edge of the wilderness.
-
-The sun was up, but it was only a patch of weak yellow light against the
-dull sky which roofed the Valley of Despair. Lowering wisps of fog still
-shrouded the hills about the exile settlement—fog that had lifted from
-the frozen and desolate reaches of the Ingoda, from the smoking huts of
-the tiny plain, from the snow-streaked slopes on which squatted like a
-hideous monster the great low, rambling prison of yellow-painted logs.
-
-The morning was bitter cold. The streets were almost deserted. The
-windows of the log buildings still glowed with the dim yellow light of
-guttering candles behind the frost-bound panes. White smoke from the
-chimneys of the houses and huts rose straight up into the air, for there
-was not even the ghost of a breeze. And the cold still air carried
-sounds with startling clearness—the tolling of a bell at lazy intervals,
-the barking of a dog, the distant cry of a wolf, and now the ringing
-clatter of axes being driven into frost-laden wood by the invisible
-exiles.
-
-Shadows appeared at the windows frequently. For the Czar’s mail was due
-this morning from Irkutsk, and the house-huddled people were waiting for
-the first tinkle of the sledge-bells. The mail! The mail from Moscow,
-from Petersburg, from Tambov, from the Valley of the Beloved Volga, so
-many heartbreaking versts away! The mail would bring life and death, joy
-and sorrow, sentence and pardon to Chita, in the Valley of Despair. The
-mail would bring the Czar’s word, the heaven-sent mercy, or the curt
-condemnation. The mail, by the relays of sledges, was the reach of the
-scepter from the throne of majesty to the Valley of Despair in Siberia.
-
-None listened more eagerly for the first jingle of the mail-sledges that
-morning than Peter, son of Peter, in the tiny hut of Gorekin the
-bootmaker, an exile but by the gracious compassion of the governor a
-member of the “free gang.” Peter, son of Peter, was only ten years old.
-He worked with his father in the boxlike hut on the Sofistkaya, helping
-to make boots for the officers of the Czar and the Cossacks.
-
-Peter’s blue eyes were set deeply in his head, for he had never had
-enough to eat—not even enough sticky black bread, or enough _eèkrah_
-which is the raw, red eggs of the big salmon. Peter was a tall boy for
-his age, but not very sturdy. His yellow hair was clipped close to his
-scalp, and his little round head was bent low while his hammer
-_tap-tapped_ at the wooden pegs in the boot soles by the candlelight.
-
-Peter’s father was a political. He had been sent to Siberia for
-thinking—thinking about government, and inducing others to think. Which
-was foolish, for the Czar and his ministers settled all affairs of
-government for the good of the people. Yet God was good, for Peter’s
-father had been admitted to the free gang because he could make boots,
-and so did not have to stay in the big prison on the hill. And Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff, Excellence, and Czar’s Governor, allowed Peter
-and his father to have a tiny hut to themselves—a place of one room, one
-window, a fire-pit with a stone chimney, and shelves against the log
-wall on which to sleep. They even had a battered brass samovar in which
-to boil water for their tea.
-
-Peter’s father was not old, though his back was bent by years in chains
-before Peter was born, and then by more years of stooping over a
-stitching-frame sewing boots. “Gorekin the old bootmaker,” everybody
-called him, partly because his face was covered with a long and heavy
-beard, and partly because his eyes had such an old look in them—eyes
-which looked past everybody far into the future and seemed to be waiting
-for some strange vision to appear.
-
-Peter was proud of his father, and loved him beyond expression. For his
-father knew everything—even knew how many versts it was to Moscow,
-information which many people gave money to know, and knowing, kept the
-secret for themselves. There are many things in an exile colony which it
-is forbidden to know, so whisper talk is bought and sold, some dealing
-in secrets of a certain kind, and some selling coming news about
-revolutions.
-
-Peter’s little round head was always being puzzled, and his blue eyes
-were always full of questions. He loved the Czar, just as everybody else
-loved the Czar—only when there were no soldiers listening, or no secret
-police of the Third Division, men would swear bitter oaths in whispers
-against majesty. It was not easy to tell who might be secret police, for
-your friend to-day, talking against the government of the Czar, might
-to-morrow prove to be one of the Third Division, and then doors of the
-big prison on the hill would open for you, and dawn would meet you with
-an execution squad.
-
-Peter could not remember his mother. She had followed his father into
-exile, and Peter had been born in The Street of the Dames. His mother
-had died that day. Peter’s father said now it was just as well, for life
-was really death in the Valley of Despair. And though Peter was only
-ten, he already knew something of the bitterness of life. Had he not
-seen a man with a back all raw from whipping, who had escaped from the
-prison? Yes, he had come crawling to the bootmaker’s hut, too weak to go
-on into the wilderness with the others who had escaped, and could only
-lie all night close to the fire-pit, waiting for the soldiers to come in
-the morning and take him away.
-
-But there were pleasant things in life for Peter. There were the ladies
-who came from The Street of the Dames. They spoke Czar’s Russian and
-were grand ladies. They came to have boots mended, but they stayed long
-and whispered much with Peter’s father, winking and nodding their heads
-about nothing at all. Sometimes they brought little cakes with spices in
-them, or a handful of dry tea, or a bit of sugar from China, or
-sweetened ginger-root. And sometimes they gave Peter as much as a ruble.
-Their husbands were up in the big prison on the hill, and the grand
-ladies had followed to the Valley of Despair and had built for
-themselves with their own hands a whole street of log houses.
-
-And for some reason which Peter could never fathom, after these ladies
-from The Street of the Dames came to have their shoes mended, Peter’s
-father always remembered that he had to go up to the prison with a pair
-of new boots for an officer, or to measure feet for a new pair, or to
-get some leather—always an errand. And the ladies would wait till he
-returned, when they cried quietly into their handkerchiefs, and after
-much whispering went away to their log houses.
-
-But the greatest puzzle of all to Peter was that his father had been
-exiled for reading books, yet his father now read the Bible, which was a
-book, and told all about God and the Czar. But, of course, the Bible was
-always hidden behind the pile of wood close to the fire-pit.
-
-And Peter’s father read the almanacs which came every year from Moscow,
-and everybody knows an almanac is nothing more nor less than a book.
-Everybody had a new almanac every year, and wonderful books they were
-too, for they told about the sun, moon, and stars, the holy days of Holy
-Russia, the goodness and greatness of the Czar, the names and name days
-of grand dukes and grand duchesses and all the wonderful things they had
-done for the poor people, and had pictures of saints, and depictions of
-miracles, pictures of watches which might be purchased in Moscow or
-Petrograd by people who were rich, and pictures of skeletons of dead
-men! Oh, the almanacs were wonderful!
-
-Peter had worn his last year’s one out from much reading of it by the
-fire of nights with his father. And now the new one from Moscow was two
-months late. That was why Peter watched so anxiously every morning for
-the mail-sledges from Irkutsk, which was on the Petersburg side of Lake
-Baikal.
-
-So this morning he was pegging away fast with his hammer, his father
-working near by and whispering to himself, a way he had when busy. The
-candle was still guttering between them, the fire in the pit was smoking
-comfortably, and the old brass samovar was singing merrily on a shelf.
-
-Peter leaned over from his bench every few minutes, to blow a hole in
-the frost on the windowpane, and look up the Sofistkaya in the direction
-of the post-house. But he could not see far yet, from the fog, though he
-did see the column of unfortunates going out into the wilderness with
-the Cossack soldiers.
-
-Peter rather feared the Cossacks. They were “free men”—big swaggering
-fellows with blue breeches and yellow stripes on their tunics and some
-of them with colored tops in their tall _shlapkas_—round caps of fuzzy
-wool. And though Peter feared the Cossacks, he was also proud of them,
-for they were a part of Holy Russia and the power of the Czar flashed
-from the points of their lances as they galloped over the plains. And
-the Czar was Ataman of all the Cossacks, just as he was Emperor of all
-Russians. And there were more Russians in the world than all other
-peoples put together, counting the barbarians of far lands across the
-seas.
-
-Peter longed for the day when he would be big enough to become a soldier
-of majesty, and wear on his cap the little oval button—“The Eye of the
-Czar.” Then he would know all things. His father always smiled sadly at
-such ideas.
-
-“Peter Petrovitch Gorekin, a soldier of the Czar!” Peter’s father would
-say. “A soldier against the people, a soldier to bind our chains the
-tighter! Oh, Peter Petrovitch! The day will come when your eye will see
-and understand!”
-
-Which was a surprising thing for Peter’s father to say, for Peter could
-see well enough with his eyes, except when the smoke from the fire-pit
-blew down the stone chimney and got into his eyes while he was reading
-from the almanac and learning new words.
-
-Peter’s father was most anxious for Peter to learn to read as well as
-the priest—yes, even as well as Michael Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff, the
-Colonel Governor. Peter could have made many kopecks in the evenings,
-helping to skin sheep for the butcher, but Peter’s father insisted upon
-lessons with the almanac by the fire.
-
-“The labor of a man’s hands can be forced to do the will of a master,”
-his father would say gravely, “but the labor of a man’s head is his own,
-and no man can control it.”
-
-Peter could not understand that, because it was impossible to drive pegs
-with one’s head—it could only be done with hands and the hammer. And his
-father worked with his hands, too, and never did a thing with his head,
-or so Peter supposed.
-
-It was not long after the column of unfortunates and Cossacks had
-disappeared into the _taiga_ that Peter saw two black spots rise on the
-little hill across the Ingoda River, and drop again out of sight.
-
-“Ee-yah!” cried Peter joyfully. “The mail comes!”
-
-His father lifted his head and looked up from his stitching-frame to
-listen.
-
-“I hear nothing but the music of the samovar,” he said.
-
-“They have crossed the bend to the river,” insisted Peter. “I heard the
-bells and I saw the sledges! The horses are coming fast!”
-
-Both sat still and listened, with only the snapping of the fire and the
-song of the samovar in their ears. Though they waited in silence, the
-sound of the bells did not come to them down the chimney.
-
-“Watch the road,” said his father, and returned to his stitching. Peter
-put his eye to the hole in the frost and watched the street up beyond
-the post-house. But he saw only an occasional Buriat, or a Cossack
-striding along, with now and then a Tartar hunter coming in from the
-hills with raw fur thrown over his shoulders, and soldiers hurrying down
-from the prison above the settlement.
-
-Then, the bells! The first faint jingle came to Peter’s ears, and at the
-same time he saw the galloping horses of the leading sledge come up into
-the road from the river hollow, running free for the post-house.
-
-“Now!” cried Peter. “The post is here! With the new almanacs! Please!
-Give me the kopecks! And may I run to see if the new almanac has come
-for sure?”
-
-Peter’s father stopped work and filled his glass from the samovar, threw
-on the fire a fresh chunk of wood and dug some kopecks from his pocket.
-
-“Go, little son, but dress warmly—it is too cold outside for a Tartar.”
-
-Peter shoved his rag-bound feet into pink felt boots, whirled his long
-muffler about his neck and got into his gray coat. Pulling his cap over
-his head and ears, he took the kopecks from his father and flew out
-through the door in a cloud of white steam made by the warm air from
-inside the hut as it escaped into the frigid atmosphere outside.
-
-Already the sledges had arrived in front of the post-house. The street
-was filled with people and there was a great to-do and gabbling. Peter
-could see the Cossack guards who had come with the sledges dismounting
-from their horses. The half-frozen drivers of the sledges were rolling
-stiffly out of their blankets, to clump through the icicle-fringed door
-of the post-house for their hot bowls of _borsht_ and their drams of
-vodka.
-
-Peter ran up to the crowd surrounding the sledges and breathlessly
-pushed in between the legs of the soldiers and onlookers. Surely, he
-thought, this month the almanacs must have come! Twice before he had
-been disappointed by the monthly mail and now he was shaking with
-eagerness. He wanted to cry out at once to those about the sledges, “Has
-the new almanac come?”
-
-But there were no mail sacks on the first sledge. Instead it had five
-travelers—an old woman, an officer who was an aide of the Colonel
-Governor, two fur-buyers, and a little girl—a pretty little girl, who
-was about the same age as Peter. She had pulled back her beautiful cap
-of ermine, and Peter could see the pink of her cheeks, her laughing blue
-eyes and the scarlet silk lining of her coat of sables where she had
-turned the collar away from her chin. She was standing up in the sledge
-and looking over the heads of the crowd and chattering with her old
-nurse in delight at having arrived back at her home.
-
-Peter stared at the little girl. He knew who she was—Katerin Stephanovna
-Kirsakoff, daughter of the Colonel Governor. Peter had seen her many
-times driving through the settlement with her Cossack outriders guarding
-her. He knew she was kind to the poor people and to the unfortunates. On
-Butter Weeks she always threw silver kopecks from her carriage to the
-crowds at the fair. It was said that she knew even the Czar himself.
-
-Peter thought Katerin was as beautiful as a picture in a holy icon. He
-almost forgot about his beloved almanacs as he stood and gazed at the
-beauty of Katerin. Her furs were so rich and gorgeous, her skin was so
-clear and rosy, her eyes were so sparkling bright. She had plenty of
-good things to eat, he was sure—and the cold did not hurt her, the
-guards of Cossacks protected her from the gaunt tigers in the hills, the
-officers bowed to her, the soldiers worshiped her, and she lived in the
-great and grand house of her father, the Colonel Governor, Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff.
-
-“The Governor comes!” rose the warning cry from those on the outer
-fringes of the throng about the sledges. The soldiers at once began to
-drive the people back from the sledge in which Katerin was standing to
-clear the way for the droshky of the Colonel Governor.
-
-Peter was inside the ring of people about the sledge. He was pushed away
-roughly. His heart sank, for he felt that he was to be cheated out of
-the news for which he had run to the post-house—news about the almanacs.
-He could restrain his eagerness no longer, and fearing that he would be
-left in doubt about the almanacs if the soldiers hustled him up the
-street with the other people, he ran from a soldier in toward the
-sledge, and making an obeisance to Excellence, raised his arms and cried
-out to Katerin, “Did your Excellence bring the almanacs of the new
-year?”
-
-But Katerin did not hear him. She was standing up and clapping her hands
-as she saw her father’s droshky come whirling down the street toward
-her.
-
-The officer in the sledge got out of the robes wound round him, and to
-the ground. He commanded the soldiers to drive the people away farther
-so the Colonel Governor might not be delayed in getting to his daughter.
-
-Peter turned to run from this officer, but slipped and fell. And before
-he could regain his footing on the hard and slippery snow, the officer
-came hurrying from the sledge and tripped and fell over the boy—fell
-flat in the road before the post-house.
-
-“Fool!” cried the officer, glaring at Peter. “Get away with you! You
-dare address Excellence, and now you are in my road!”
-
-Peter stood up. The officer struck the boy in the face, and Peter fell
-again, almost stunned by the blow. He saw the officer’s boots stride
-away and recognized them as boots which he and his father had made.
-There was a forest of boots in all directions, and the sound of voices
-reached Peter’s ears in a confused medley.
-
-Peter was ashamed. The blood was flowing from his nose and making a mess
-on his chin and muffler. The tears which came into his eyes from the
-pain were freezing on his cheeks and his eyelids were freezing together,
-making a film through which he could see but dimly.
-
-The crowd had drawn away from the sledge now, leaving Peter lying in the
-dirty snow. Such a sight to make of himself, he thought, in view of
-Katerin! And how angry she would be to see that he had gotten in the way
-of the officer and had made him fall down like a clumsy bear.
-
-Peter heard the voice of his father calling to him.
-
-“Little son! Get up quickly and run! The Governor comes! Do not let the
-Excellence see you there!”
-
-But Peter could not move quickly for his arms and legs seemed strangely
-stiff and numb and helpless. His father ran out into the open space just
-as Governor Kirsakoff got out of his carriage to hasten to his little
-daughter in the sledge. He was a tall man, ruddy of face, with white
-teeth showing in a smile under black mustaches. He wore a high cap of
-sable with a badge of the Czar upon it. His longskirted coat of black
-was lined with fur which stuck out in fringes at the edges, and he wore
-a belt with silver doubleheaded eagles at the buckle. A scarlet strap
-depended from one shoulder and crossed his breast, and he wore a saber
-at his side—a saber with a gold hilt, bearing upon it the initials of
-his Emperor.
-
-Governor Kirsakoff held out his arms toward his daughter as he
-approached the sledge. The officer who struck Peter was beside the
-Governor, with watchful eyes for the safety of his chief and the little
-girl.
-
-Peter’s father lifted him to his feet, and Peter brushed the icy film
-from his eyes.
-
-“Get away, you and that boy!” the officer growled as the Governor strode
-swiftly to the sledge.
-
-“The boy meant no harm, Excellence,” said Peter’s father, pulling off
-his cap and making a deep bow, as he tried to push Peter on before him.
-
-“Who is this here?” demanded the Governor, catching sight of Peter and
-his father, and seeing that the boy’s face was bleeding. Governor
-Kirsakoff’s smile vanished, and he scowled angrily, sensing something in
-the nature of a calamity in the presence of his daughter.
-
-“Excellence, this boy yelled at Katerin Stephanovna,” explained the
-officer. “And he tripped my feet when I came down from the sledge.”
-
-Peter’s father swept his cap to the ground in an abject bow.
-
-“Pardon, Excellence—I will take the boy away.”
-
-“What now!” exclaimed Kirsakoff, with a close look at the bootmaker. “Is
-this Gorekin? Is this what I put you into the free gang for? to be under
-the feet of your Governor?”
-
-Peter’s father bowed once more.
-
-“True, Excellence, I am Peter Pavlovitch Gorekin, the bootmaker.”
-
-“Then you should be at your boots and not under my feet!” raged
-Kirsakoff. “Do I give you the liberty of the settlement to have you in
-the way with a bloody-nosed youngster when my little daughter comes
-home?” The Governor turned wrathfully to the commander of the Cossack
-guard about the sledges. “Take this Gorekin away to the prison!” he
-commanded.
-
-“Excellence, my son!” cried Peter’s father, stricken to his soul by the
-disaster in the Governor’s order. “Oh, Excellence, I beg—if I go to the
-prison, what is to become of my son?”
-
-“You should have prized your liberty and kept your son out of the way,”
-said the Governor. “You think nothing of ruining the happiness of my
-little daughter! So your son must learn his place.——Take them both to
-the prison!”
-
-And Kirsakoff turned away and hurried to the sledge.
-
-“What has happened to the poor people?” asked Katerin, her face troubled
-as she watched Peter and his father. She saw that the boy had been hurt
-and was crying, and that the soldiers now menaced them.
-
-“Do not look at them, little daughter,” said Kirsakoff. “They have
-disobeyed the rules. Was it cold coming from Irkutsk? And did you bring
-me many kisses?”
-
-The Governor lifted her out of the sledge and smothered her in his arms.
-At this moment a Cossack interposed himself between the bootmaker and
-the Governor, and two soldiers closed in on Peter and his father, their
-bayonets fixed upon their rifles.
-
-Gorekin held up his hand in a plea to speak once more to the Governor.
-The bootmaker had dropped his cap, his face showed the agony of his
-despair, and the tears streamed down his face. His mouth was open and
-his lips trembled with the chagrin and horror of what had befallen him.
-
-“Excellence! I submit!” he pleaded. “But by the mercy of God, condemn
-not my son to the prison too!”
-
-One of the Cossacks pushed him back violently so that he spun round and
-staggered blindly in an effort to keep his footing on the slippery snow.
-Then he turned with a cry and thrust the Cossack aside, to run after the
-Governor, hands stretched out in supplication.
-
-“Mercy for my son!” he called after Kirsakoff.
-
-A Cossack’s saber flashed, and Gorekin received its point in the
-back—once, twice—and with a scream, fell writhing on the snow-packed
-street before the post-house.
-
-Kirsakoff ran with little Katerin in his arms toward the near-by droshky
-which was awaiting them. The crowd closed in at once about the stricken
-bootmaker and his son.
-
-Little Peter fell to his knees beside his father, who had been rudely
-rolled upon his back by the Cossack with the saber. This Cossack
-searched hastily through the pockets of the greatcoat of Gorekin. Peter,
-screaming in terror, supposed that all this was being done to help his
-father.
-
-The Cossack found the curved leather-knife of Gorekin in a pocket of the
-dying man’s coat, and flung the knife upon the ground. “He held this
-knife in his hand!” cried the Cossack. “It is the knife with which he
-would have killed the Governor!”
-
-Peter could not realize yet the disaster which had come to him and his
-father. He knew only that the one human being who loved him, and whom he
-loved above everything in the world, was hurt and bleeding. The slowly
-reddening snow beside his father gave the boy a vague idea of a wound
-which might in time be cured.
-
-And it might not be real at all, this tragic morning, but a dream. Peter
-saw about him the black circle of boots like the trees of a forest; he
-saw the print of nails in the hard snow; he noted a small round stone
-close by his father’s head—the world appeared to be full of trifling
-things, yet suddenly all trifles were invested with terror. He prayed
-even as he screamed, that he might wake to find his father reading from
-the new almanac beside the fire in their little hut.
-
-“Little father! Little father!” he cried in his agony.
-
-The bootmaker coughed harshly.
-
-“He tried to kill the Governor,” said a voice. “There lies the knife—and
-I ran him through with my saber.”
-
-Peter recognized the voice as that of the Cossack who had struck down
-his father.
-
-“Little son—” gasped Gorekin, his dimming eyes on Peter, and his hand
-moving slowly toward the boy.
-
-“Thou whom I love!” cried Peter, “come quickly for the man who has
-medicine and can cure you! Come to the watch-fixer who has the charms
-and the herbs!”
-
-“God’s blessing on you—I go—to meet—the—dead!” whispered Gorekin.
-
-“You are not to die!” cried Peter, and flung himself down upon his
-father and kissed him. Then he sat back on his heels, moaning wildly as
-he saw his father’s face graying to the color of the trampled snow.
-
-“I shall kill Kirsakoff!” Peter shouted. “I shall kill—the Governor——!”
-
-“Pray!” said his father weakly. “Pray to God for—power and—” but he
-could say no more, and making an effort to cross himself with both hands
-he died, staring up into the leaden sky.
-
-“He is dead,” said a voice. “Take the boy to the prison. It is the order
-of the Governor.”
-
-And Peter, sobbing and kicking out against the soldiers who grasped him
-and dragged him away, left his father lying in the snow before the
-post-house.
-
-The soldiers dragged Peter up the Sofistkaya. His eyes clung to the mail
-bags being carried into the post-house, and though he was crying
-bitterly, he wondered if the almanacs had come from Moscow after all.
-
-Next he knew he found himself in the sandy snow of the Sofistkaya,
-passing his own little hut, and saw the white smoke rising from the
-crude stone chimney. He thought of the samovar inside singing on a
-shelf, of the warmth and comfort that he would never know again, of his
-beloved father who somehow, by some terrible fate which had descended
-upon him out of the skies, was gone forever from the bench and the
-stitching-frame.
-
-The two soldiers drove Peter on and in time they went over the wooden
-bridge across the frozen Ingoda, and up a hill. The tears on his face
-and frozen in his lids gave him great pain from cold. But he brushed his
-eyes clear of the ice particles and looked ahead. Before him were the
-yellow upright logs of the great prison stockade—and the great gate
-waiting to receive him into the Gethsemane of the Valley of Despair.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- I
-
- TWENTY YEARS AFTER
-
-
-KATERIN was awake before dawn. She lay still, listening in the dark for
-sounds of conflict in the city. For months she had been accustomed to
-the rattle of rifle-fire through day and night, and now she found it
-hard to realize that the looting and burning had ceased.
-
-The windows of Katerin’s room were hung with heavy blankets to conceal
-the candlelight by night, even though in the winter the glass of the
-panes was always nearly covered with heavy frost. She had no way of
-knowing how near it was to dawn, or if the day had come.
-
-Katerin Stephanovna Kirsakoff—that was her full name. And she was hiding
-in an old log house with her father, who had been retired from the army
-of the Czar with the rank of general. And her father was Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff, once Governor in the Valley of Despair, as it
-was known in the exile days before the revolution. And the log house was
-in Chita, where Kirsakoff had ruled his Cossacks, but Kirsakoff and his
-daughter were now hiding from the Cossacks.
-
-Katerin rose from her bed, and guided by the dim, shaded flame burning
-before the icon in the corner of the room, she held out her arms to the
-image of the Virgin Mother, and whispered, “Save us, Mother of God,
-again this day, from those who beset us, and bring to us help from our
-enemies in our time of danger!”
-
-She continued to whisper her prayers while she dressed in the dark. Then
-she went to one of the windows and pulled aside the blanket. She scraped
-a tiny hole in the frost so that she might look down into the courtyard,
-to the end of the street and out over the plains which stretched away
-from the city toward the border of Manchuria, many versts away. In that
-direction lay safety, but Katerin knew that she could not get out of the
-city, much less cross those frozen plains.
-
-The subdued light of morning coming in through the white frost on the
-panes revealed her as a woman of medium height, of figure slender and
-supple, and clad in a trailing velvet house-dress of wine-red. Thrown
-over her shoulders, and partly covering the faded velvet of the dress,
-was a sleeveless coat of sable. She had the oval, high-bred face of the
-untitled nobility of Russia. The Kirsakoffs were one of the old boyar
-families who had always served their emperors as officers and
-administrators in the empire which spanned half the world.
-
-Katerin had inherited all the best qualities of her race and her class.
-As the daughter of General Kirsakoff she had grown up like an Imperial
-princess. Educated by tutors from Paris and Petersburg, she had also
-learned to ride like a Cossack. And as her mother had died when Katerin
-was a small girl, she had the poise of a woman, who, though still young,
-had presided over her father’s table in the Governor’s palace—the
-Government house. So all her life she had been accustomed to a deference
-which was akin to that granted to royalty.
-
-Now Katerin and her father were fugitives. The fighting between the
-various factions in Chita was over; the Cossacks were in control of the
-city—and controlling the Cossacks was a Mongol chieftain who had set
-himself up as the ruling prince and ruled with firing squads.
-
-Months of terrorism in the city had made Katerin pale and wan. Her blue
-eyes were sad and deep set, and she had an expression of melancholy. The
-pallor of her cheeks was accentuated by her black hair, which was drawn
-down over her ears tightly. Her long neck, with its delicate lines,
-suggested pearls. She had pearls, but she did not dare wear them in
-these days. They were buried in the courtyard of the old log house.
-
-When she walked it was with a slow and languorous grace. The carriage of
-her beautiful head was reminiscent of the portraits of the members of
-the Imperial family which had once hung on the walls of the home from
-which she had fled. It was now only a charred ruin.
-
-Katerin remained at the window, peering out with anxious eyes. A trio of
-Cossack soldiers were huddled about the glowing remnants of their
-night-fire in the street. These were men in the army of the Ataman
-Zorogoff, the half-Mongol, half-Cossack _hetman_ who ruled the Valley of
-Despair. The Ataman, in spite of his pretensions to leadership, was only
-a brigand with an army of adventurers and conscripts at his back, bent
-upon enriching himself by levying upon the fortunes of all the rich
-people in his territory. And he collected the tribute which he exacted
-from them under threats of death—and by executions.
-
-Katerin watched the gray light of the new day grow over the frozen and
-desolate landscape. A thin mantle of snow covered the plains below the
-hills which walled in the valley on three sides. There were a few rude
-peasants’ huts out on the flats, with white smoke rising up from stone
-chimneys. A long column of staggering telegraph poles ran off beyond a
-spur of hill and marked the line of the railroad in this direction.
-
-She saw a small band of Cossacks come galloping in toward the city. They
-were racing to the warmth of the barracks after a night spent on patrol.
-These men belonged to the outer cordon—the chain of mounted soldiers
-which Zorogoff kept about the city to make sure no one entered without
-his knowledge, and to insure that none escaped. Before he had organized
-his power, some of the wealthy citizens had escaped by the railroad, but
-now the Ataman had his troops on guard at the railroad station. And his
-spies were busy in the city. It was impossible to leave if he did not
-grant permission. The Kirsakoffs did not dare to ask for it.
-
-The room in which Katerin stood looking out of the window was filled
-with a queer mingling of rich furnishings and crudely built peasant
-household goods. The floor was covered with a thick blue carpet, thrown
-down hastily after being smuggled by night from her old home before the
-building had been burned. Faithful servants had brought it, but there
-had been no attempt to put it down properly—it was merely tucked in at
-the sides of the room in order to make the fabric fit.
-
-The walls were covered with an ancient and faded paper. The ceiling had
-once been covered with colorful decorations, but now the plaster was
-cracked, and leaks in the roof had turned the paint of the figures into
-grotesque patterns.
-
-The bed was hidden by a Chinese screen of carved leather, also saved
-from the old home before the looters had plied the torch; a great
-samovar of chased and filigreed silver stood upon an old wooden bench
-brought from the kitchen on the floor below; a table of rough boards was
-covered by purple silk, and on it stood an ornate candelabra of marble
-and bronze with the arms sadly bent, so that the candles could not stand
-erect; blankets of fur covered chairs rudely cut with an ax and
-fashioned with a primitive hammer; and a monstrous black stove built
-into the wall reached to the ceiling.
-
-Katerin pulled the blanket away from the window and made it fast to the
-casing with a string. Just then a gentle tapping came at one of the
-doors of the room. She laughed cheerily and opened the door. Her father
-stood before her.
-
-General Kirsakoff was tall, but thin and bent with age. His face was
-gaunt, but the bones of his cheeks were partly concealed by a white
-beard which was indifferently trimmed to a point at the chin. His gray
-eyes were dim, yet held some of their old fire and the look of an
-eagle—stern eyes looking out from under gray brows and a forehead
-furrowed by worries and his years. His head was covered with sparse
-white hair, which had a tendency to stand straight up, and waved when he
-moved his head quickly.
-
-“Ah, the cold is like a wolf!” said Michael, his hands clasped together
-as he shivered. “Has not Wassili come up with the fire? My teeth ache
-from the cold!”
-
-Katerin gave him a look of solicitude, and then took his hands and
-rubbed them.
-
-“I thought you would sleep longer, so I did not call for Wassili. And
-here you are dressed—but you should have a blanket over your shoulders.”
-
-“It is only my feet and my hands—and my teeth—that are cold. Let us have
-the samovar singing, and something hot. My poor old bones cannot stand
-the cold so well as they did. And this old house is damp—we must have a
-good fire to-day, happen what will.”
-
-He looked at Katerin closely, searching her face for signs of anxiety,
-but her whole manner had changed at his entrance to the room, and now as
-she went to the door to the hallway to call down to Wassili, the
-servant, she hummed a tune. She knew her father well enough to
-understand that his spirit must be kept up. He had been giving way
-recently to long spells of despondency.
-
-Michael was wearing one of his old uniforms of a general. It had been
-Katerin’s idea that he resume the discarded garments of authority, for
-she knew that he gained some comfort from it and that it helped him to
-forget the dark days which had come upon them. But Michael was only a
-shadow of his former self. His knees bent under him, his attenuated form
-did not fill the tunic, his hands were white and withered. They shook,
-as did his head at times, with the palsy of his age and feebleness. Yet
-the old general was still a striking figure in the gray tunic with the
-white cross hanging from its collar, the wreath and sword of another
-order of the Czar on his breast. A leather strap crossed his shoulder
-and came down athwart the front of the tunic. The heavy gold straps on
-his shoulders marked his rank. His trousers were blue with a pair of
-narrow gold stripes at the sides, and the belt about him had a silver
-buckle in front with the double-headed eagle of the Romanoffs.
-
-“So this is another day, little daughter,” said Michael, as he sat down
-upon a bench and stroked his beard. “Another day of waiting—waiting till
-these devils have lost their power to the army of the Emperor.”
-
-“Another day of hope, my father,” said Katerin. “What! Does not the day
-at the windows give you courage. Perhaps the Americans will come up from
-Vladivostok and save us. It is then that Zorogoff will have to change
-his ways.”
-
-“Poof! The Americans will not come,” said Michael wearily. “Do not put
-your hopes in the foreigners. Nothing will happen from that direction
-which will be of any good to us.”
-
-“Something is bound to happen that is good for us,” insisted Katerin.
-“The forces of evil cannot always be in power. Have we not sent word to
-our friends who escaped? Will they not get our letters? Will they not do
-something to get us away from the city? All we must do is to have
-patience and be brave. God is with the brave.”
-
-“Yes, the young are brave,” said Michael. “And it is you who are brave,
-my daughter. I am too old to have much heart left. But there are two
-things against us—one of them is our accursed money. I wish we had never
-saved it, but for that you will need it.”
-
-“And what is the other thing that is against us?” asked Katerin with
-surprised eyes, as she turned to the door to look below for Wassili.
-
-“Your beauty, Katerin Stephanovna,” said her father. “How many times in
-the old days have I thanked the holy saints for your beauty! Yet I mourn
-now that you are so beautiful, for it may be your curse. I have had a
-dream of evil omen, yet I cannot remember it—though it left me downcast.
-If these devils of Zorogoff dare lay a hand upon you——”
-
-Katerin ran to him and kissed him hastily.
-
-“Oh, nonsense! I will not be so beautiful, and you will not be so
-depressed as soon as the samovar sings and you have had your tea. You
-make much of little things—and you must not keep dreams in your mind.
-Now! Here comes Wassili with the fire for the samovar!”
-
-Wassili came in, a whiskered _moujik_ in clumsy boots, bearing fire on a
-shovel. Some of the burning coals he put into the stove, and with the
-scattered remnants fired the samovar and went below again for water.
-
-“It is more dangerous to give the money than to keep it,” went on
-Michael musingly. He seemed bent on studying out the problems which
-confronted him, as if the dream which he had mentioned had driven him
-into making some decision.
-
-“If we could buy our way out of the city,” suggested Katerin, “I would
-be willing to give it up to see you in comfortable surroundings.” She
-was before a little mirror on a table, combing out her hair.
-
-“Once Zorogoff had the money, he would destroy us so there would be no
-witness against him—no claim against him in future,” said Michael. “That
-is what happened to Rioumines—he gave up his money willingly—and then he
-was killed. So there is no safety for us in beggaring ourselves. By the
-Holy Saints! I would rather burn all the rubles than give them to
-Zorogoff—but even then he would not believe that they had been
-destroyed, and would kill us for refusing to surrender them. And I would
-sooner die a beggar than have your fortune fall into the hands of this
-Mongol!”
-
-“Come! Sit by the fire and warm yourself,” said Katerin, pushing a bench
-toward the front of the stove, which was now crackling merrily with the
-wood. “We are safe enough here till the Americans come.”
-
-“Oh, the Americans will never come,” said Michael, as he settled himself
-before the fire and held out his hands to the heat. “We must use our
-wits and get away from Chita—to Harbin or Vladivostok. Others have done
-it. We might send Wassili to Harbin for help.”
-
-“That would do no good. Our friends cannot come back here to help us. If
-they did, they could not fight Zorogoff’s army. We must keep up good
-hope for whatever the future holds for us, and——”
-
-There came a hammering at the outer gate of the courtyard. Katerin
-checked her words and stood immovable, her eyes on her father in sudden
-fear of what the summons below might mean. The noise outside stopped as
-abruptly as it had begun, and then was resumed—insistent, compelling,
-ruthless. It sounded like the thumping of rifle butts against the planks
-of the gate. Whoever it was that demanded admittance was not to be
-denied. There was in the noise a peremptoriness which indicated that if
-there happened to be any appreciable delay in opening the gate, it would
-be smashed down without further ado.
-
-“What is that?” asked Michael. “By the Holy Saints! The soldiers of the
-Ataman have come upon us!”
-
-He sprang up and went to the window, where he put his eye to the hole in
-the frost, and looked out. Katerin pressed close to him.
-
-“Soldiers at the gate!” whispered Michael, and as he stood staring at
-his daughter, they heard Wassili shouting in the hall below.
-
-“Master! Master!”
-
-Katerin crossed herself and bowed her head in the direction of the icon
-as she ran to the door and called down to Wassili, asking what it was
-that he wanted.
-
-“The soldiers are outside—pounding to get in!”
-
-“Then let them in,” commanded Katerin. “We cannot fight them.” She ran
-back across the room to the window and looked down to the court—she
-could see the tops of the tall Cossack caps over the upper edge of the
-paling. There were at least a dozen of them, and above them here and
-there was the glittering point of a bayonet.
-
-“We are in God’s hands!” cried Katerin.
-
-“We shall know what fate holds for us now,” said her father, drawing up
-toward the stove. “We have been in doubt long enough. It was the smoke
-from our chimney which drew them, without doubt.”
-
-“They will want the money,” said Katerin. “It may as well go to
-them—enough to stop their greed.”
-
-Michael went to her and put his hands upon her shoulders. He looked into
-her face, tears in his own eyes. “We will not give them the money,” he
-whispered. “Let them kill me if they will. I doubt that they will dare
-to do it—but my time is short at best. This is my dream! But you must
-think of yourself and know that if they take all we have, you will be
-helpless—a beggar in a land that is beggared, to die of hunger or by
-your own hand. Make no bargain with them between me and the money! I
-command you! Do not give a ruble of it to keep me alive a minute!”
-
-“If you die, I shall not live,” said Katerin, and taking his face
-between her hands, kissed him tenderly on the forehead and threw her
-arms about his neck, dry-eyed in her anguish.
-
-“I should like to reach the sky, but my arms are too short,” said
-Michael, expressing his helplessness by the old Russian proverb. “I
-think of having an army at my back—I, an old man, weak and already
-looking into my own grave. It is of you I think, Katerin Stephanovna! I
-would sell my soul to save you—yet the money must be kept if you are to
-live!”
-
-“I can hear the soldiers in the yard,” said Katerin. “What can we do? We
-have a few rubles in the Chinese casket—five thousand in fives and tens.
-They make a fat bundle. We can give them up—and say they are all we
-have.”
-
-“Do not be too ready to surrender the money,” said Michael. “But that is
-what we shall do. If they demand more——”
-
-“Hush! They are coming up the stairs. Come! Quick! Sit here by the
-table! And take your saber! Be bold with them, as befits your rank and
-your old place, but remember that we cannot resist!”
-
-As she talked, Katerin grabbed from a chest her father’s saber and
-snapped it into the old general’s belt. Then she pulled him to the table
-and sat him on a bench so that he faced toward the fire. This was no
-more than done when a man could be heard mounting the top of the stairs,
-and presently the visitor looked in cautiously at the open door.
-
-The intruder was a Cossack officer. He wore a tall cap of white, shaggy
-wool, thrust back on his head. A lock of his black hair hung down
-athwart his forehead. His eyes were black and small, his mouth heavily
-lipped, his cheeks inclined to swartness from exposure, though the cold
-of the morning had given his skin a ruddy glow. He wore a long greatcoat
-with the cream-colored skin of the sheep outside and the wool inside
-visible at the edge in front and at the bottom of the skirt. On his
-shoulders were tin stars—he was a captain in Zorogoff’s army. From the
-skirt of his coat on one side hung the toe of a heavy saber-scabbard.
-
-The captain stepped into the room after a sharp glance at Katerin and
-her father. Then he looked about the room suspiciously, and having made
-sure that no others were present, he bowed politely, at the same time
-clicking the spurred heels of his black boots.
-
-“You are Kirsakoff,” said the officer abruptly. “I am Captain Shimilin,
-and I have come from the Ataman Zorogoff.”
-
-Michael, his hand on the hilt of his saber, sitting erect, turned his
-head and surveyed the Cossack coldly. Finally, he said, “Captain, you
-are speaking to General Kirsakoff.”
-
-Shimilin shrugged his shoulders, and a smile lurked on his lips. “You
-were once a general—but the Czar is dead. I do not have to be told who
-you are, Kirsakoff.”
-
-“Oh, you have heard of the Czar!” said Katerin.
-
-Shimilin stared at her, and then took off his cap. He seemed willing to
-ignore her irony, but his look conveyed an appreciation of her beauty,
-and he allowed his eyes to linger upon her. But there was no disrespect
-in his manner.
-
-Katerin met his steady gaze without any indication that the Cossack
-captain’s scrutiny meant anything more than the usual deference and
-adulation due her person and position as in the old days. She made a
-pretty picture, standing beside her father—the superb carriage of her
-head, the slashes of red velvet of her sleeves, the gray of the sable
-coat and the swirl of the red trailing skirt about her feet. She
-suggested a queenly consort at an audience by royalty.
-
-Shimilin stood as if waiting for something to happen. In a short time
-two men came in with rifles. Their faces were rotund, their noses short
-and flat, and they were dark enough to be full-blood Mongols—Buriats,
-these were, descendants of the men who had followed Genghis Khan as his
-conquering hordes swept over Asia. They were poorly dressed in ragged,
-old coats, with boots reinforced with skins and furs wrapped about their
-tops. But they wore the high caps of Cossacks, which made them appear to
-be taller than they really were. This pair appraised the contents of the
-room, and having judged the value of its visible loot, turned their
-beadlike eyes upon Katerin—eyes full of menace, eyes like the eyes of
-wolves upon a quarry.
-
-“Have you come with a message from the Ataman?” asked Katerin, when she
-saw that the Cossack did not seem to know how to proceed with his
-business. She wanted to hold the situation in her own hands as well as
-she could, and so far she felt that Shimilin had not shown himself to be
-particularly dangerous. She did not intend to betray to him that she and
-her father were in any way perturbed by an informal call on the part of
-soldiers from the Ataman Zorogoff. To show fear would be fatal and only
-her wits could save her.
-
-The Cossack did not reply at once, but strode across the room, threw off
-his greatcoat, and sat down on a bench opposite Michael. Shimilin seemed
-in no hurry, but acted as if he wished to impress father and daughter
-with his own importance as expressed in his uniform. He wore a gray
-tunic with gold shoulder straps, a brace of pistols in his belt, a fine
-saber with a hilt of silver, and blue riding breeches.
-
-“Yes, I bring a message from the Ataman,” he began, elbows on knees, and
-leaning forward and staring at the floor. “You know, of course, that the
-Ataman’s army has been protecting the city from looters.”
-
-“Beggars are always safe from robbers,” said Michael.
-
-Shimilin lifted his head and looked at the general in surprise.
-
-“Beggars! I like a joke, Kirsakoff.”
-
-“It is no joke being a beggar,” put in Katerin.
-
-“You have millions of rubles,” said Shimilin.
-
-“It is easy to count the money in the pockets of other people,” said
-Katerin. “We were robbed of all we had long before the Ataman Zorogoff
-began to rule.”
-
-Shimilin’s face took on a sly look. “Is it that you do not like the
-Ataman Zorogoff? Are you opposed to his rule?”
-
-“I suppose Zorogoff would give up his power if we said we preferred
-another ruler,” retorted Katerin. “If you came here to trick us into
-saying anything against Zorogoff, it will not be said. And it takes
-little of your breath to talk of millions of rubles. Does the Ataman
-expect us to hand over to him a fortune which does not exist?”
-
-“You talk like all the others,” said Shimilin wearily. “Partridges are
-killed with silver bullets—and so are robbers. An army cannot live on
-air. The Ataman needs money.”
-
-“Protection from bandits! What difference does it make whether bandits
-and looters take our money, or Zorogoff?” asked Michael sharply. “If we
-had the money—what would it matter to us who got it if we lost it?”
-
-“The Ataman asks a loan,” said Shimilin. “His government will repay you.
-Am I to tell the Ataman that you regard him as a robber?”
-
-“We have but a few rubles,” said Katerin hastily, to prevent her father
-from saying something which would draw the wrath of the captain, for the
-old man was showing his anger and was ready to defy Shimilin. “It is all
-the money we have left.”
-
-“How much?” asked Shimilin.
-
-“Probably ten thousand rubles,” said Katerin. “I have not counted it
-lately, but it is all we have to buy our food. What shall we eat if you
-take it?”
-
-Shimilin smiled. “That is not my problem. You can find more money, or
-borrow. But we know you have plenty. Ten thousand rubles will not
-satisfy the Ataman. I will take it, but only with the understanding that
-it is mine—to intercede with the Ataman for you. You might find it
-difficult to argue with his soldiers—in his military prison.”
-
-Katerin shrugged her shoulders. “True. If the Ataman should want to send
-us to prison, we could not prevent him. At least, he would have to feed
-us there.”
-
-“And is that the way Zorogoff will protect us from robbers?” demanded
-Michael. “If we have no more money, we must go to prison, eh! And that
-is what Zorogoff calls ruling, I presume. Hah!”
-
-Katerin went behind the screen which shielded her bed and returned with
-a large lacquered cabinet. She opened it and took out several packets of
-rubles of the old Imperial issue.
-
-“This is our fortune,” she said, with a gesture at the casket, and
-turned away.
-
-“Do you expect the Ataman to believe that?” asked Shimilin, as he stood
-up and looked into the casket.
-
-“I cannot do the Ataman’s thinking,” she retorted. “I do not give it—you
-must take it.”
-
-Shimilin got into his greatcoat, and leisurely stuffed his pockets with
-the packets. When he had taken the last, he bowed to the glowering
-Michael in a show of politeness.
-
-“I will do what I can with the Ataman in your behalf,” he said. “But I
-doubt if I will be able to alter his intentions toward you—and I am sure
-that we shall meet again.”
-
-And Shimilin made a gesture to his two soldiers, walked through the
-door, and the trio clumped down the stairs.
-
-“This means war with the Ataman,” said Michael, as they heard the gate
-creak on its ancient hinges as their visitors went into the street.
-“Before prison, we shall take the poison together, my daughter.”
-
-“We shall not die by our own hands till the last minute,” said Katerin.
-“We must pray that the Americans will come.”
-
-“If they come at all it will be too late,” said Michael. “We, who have
-conquered Asia, will be destroyed by Asia—we shall be lost in a yellow
-flood. The Mongol rules now.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- THE INTELLIGENCE OFFICER
-
-
-AN American army transport came lurching out of the Japanese sea, and,
-following the lead of a gray and gaunt destroyer which had come out to
-meet the troopship, she swung slowly into the Gulf of Peter the Great.
-
-The cliffs of the shore line of Siberia looked bleak and wind-whipped,
-desolate and snow-slashed. The first blasts of winter had swept the
-land. Brown and dull it looked, sullenly waiting the onset of northern
-winds with smothering cold from the Pole.
-
-The transport seemed reluctant to approach the shore of such an
-inhospitable land. Her gray war-painted sides were festooned with
-sea-grime from the Pacific. Her pace was slow, as if she mistrusted the
-hills overhanging Vladivostok. She was all for caution, though the
-tumbling destroyer drove ahead of her like a terrier leading the way for
-a suspicious mastiff.
-
-Among the officers crowding the upper deck of the transport was a young
-man wearing single silver bars on the shoulders of his khaki tunic. On
-his collar were little circles of bronze enclosing eagles fashioned from
-the same metal. To those who understood such things, they proclaimed him
-to be a First Lieutenant of the Intelligence Division of the General
-Staff of the United States Army.
-
-Lieutenant Gordon was a sturdy chap, of good height. His cleanly shaven
-face was inclined to ruddiness. His chin was generously molded, his jaw
-had a squat squareness to it which gave the lower half of his face a
-suggestion of grimness, but the good-natured twinkle of his blue eyes
-belied this grimness. Still, he was reserved—perhaps too serious for one
-of his age, too moodily self-contained.
-
-He had kept to himself a good deal on the passage of the transport from
-San Francisco. While others of his age had been romping the decks and
-singing and making gay, he had clung to his cabin. He said that he was
-studying Russian.
-
-When the transport began to draw near to the coast of Siberia, Gordon
-had stood nearly all day alone in a sheltered nook at the head of the
-upper deck where the shrouds came down to the rail and prevented more
-than one person’s getting into the corner. He seemed always to gravitate
-to spots in the ship which would insure his being alone or cut off in
-some way from the crowds. Then he would stand motionless, gazing out
-over the bows to the horizon ahead, busy with his own thoughts.
-
-Yet for all his aloofness, Lieutenant Gordon was an affable chap. And he
-was keenly interested in all things Russian—showed a most laudable
-ambition to learn all he possibly could about the country in which he
-was to serve. There was a captain at Gordon’s table who had a cabin full
-of books about Russia, and Gordon listened most attentively to the
-informal lectures by the well-read captain.
-
-And there was a major who had been military attaché in Petrograd. He
-spoke Russian well, and gave lessons in the language to the other
-officers. Gordon attended some of the lessons, but his progress in
-learning the language was distressingly slow. Still, Gordon did
-extremely well at times. One day the major had asked the class to repeat
-a Russian sentence. Gordon was the only one to repeat the words with
-anything approaching correctness.
-
-“Splendid!” exclaimed the major enthusiastically.
-
-“You are getting a good accent. That’s really excellent, Mr. Gordon. And
-somehow you resemble Russians—if it were not for your uniform, you might
-easily be taken for a Russian.”
-
-The class laughed. Gordon reddened. When he was asked to repeat another
-sentence in Russian, he rather bungled it. And that day he quit the
-Russian class, saying that he could learn faster alone with his grammar.
-And he kept more to himself after that.
-
-So no one thought it strange that Lieutenant Gordon preferred to stand
-by himself at the head of the upper deck as the transport was nosing
-into the harbor of Vladivostok. He scanned the islands sliding past, and
-he watched the boat which came out flying the white and blue flag of the
-Czar’s navy—the old Cross of St. Andrew. He watched the shattered hulks
-of the navy of the Second Nicholas, lying in on the beach like the bones
-of dead sea birds. And he saw the warships of Britain, of France, of
-Japan, of the United States, all spick and span at anchor below the
-city.
-
-Many strange flags flew from the tops of buildings on the terraced
-streets over the bay. The green spires of churches glistened in the
-afternoon sun. Soon the gashes running down to the water were seen to be
-streets with people moving in them—carriages, motor cars, and hurrying
-throngs of civilians and soldiers.
-
-On the hills above the city was a queer fringe of flat white piles, some
-of them sheeted with canvas. These were vast stores of things gathered
-to the port from all the world for the war against Germany—acres of
-goods and metals, all idle and wasting because the throne of the
-Romanoffs had toppled and the Czar himself was dead in a well.
-
-The transport moved up to a dock at the end of the bay, past the city.
-Gordon stood in his nook, watching Vladivostok pass in review before
-him, and listening to the comments of the other officers who crowded the
-upper deck for their first sight of this far port of a shattered
-dynasty.
-
-As the troopship warped in, Russians in belted blouses and great boots
-stood on the dock and stared up at the ship and its soldiers in khaki
-from a distant land. These Russians loafed and gossiped and ate
-sunflower seeds. Cossack soldiers in high woolly caps swaggered about
-with sabers jingling at their sides. German prisoners of war labored
-with heavy cases. These men were still clad in the dirty finery of gaudy
-uniforms, sorry-looking specimens of what had been once smart soldiers.
-Shaggy horses in rude wagons, driven by peasant girls with shawls over
-their heads and wearing men’s heavy boots, did the work of strong men
-with sacks and bales, loading the carts. The Russians could find nothing
-else to do but gossip.
-
-Gordon watched the people on the dock with interest. When the hawsers
-were fast to the pier, he left the deck and went to his cabin. There,
-alone, he loaded his automatic pistol. He filled extra magazines with
-the blunt-nosed bullets, and distributed the magazines through his
-pockets in such way that they would not be noticeable through the fabric
-of his garments.
-
-He looked at himself in the mirror on the bulkhead. His face had
-increased its grimness, and the blue of his eyes had taken on a steely
-sheen. He seemed to be angry about something. But he forced a smile at
-himself—a tight-lipped smile of satisfaction.
-
-“Speed is good for nothing but catching fleas,” he whispered to his
-image in the glass.
-
-Soon an orderly came to tell him that an automobile waited on the dock
-to take all officers who had to report direct to Headquarters to the
-building in the city where the Commanding General and his staff were
-housed. Gordon followed the orderly, and stepping from the end of the
-gangplank, saluted the land.
-
-The car bumped away up the street with a group of officers. Gordon was
-silent, while the others chattered. The water-front streets were muddy
-and unpaved. Squalid buildings with crude signs in Russian announced
-that within many of the buildings might be had tea and food and liquors.
-Pigs were loose in the streets, scratching themselves amiably on
-house-corners. Old Russian songs were being bawled from lusty throats of
-roisterers inside the _kabaks_. Russians wandered about aimlessly,
-staring at all the strange things which had come to Siberia—the American
-army mules, the motor cycles whizzing about among the pigs and wagons,
-and the honking car with the party of American officers.
-
-Everybody seemed on holiday but the Chinese. They trotted about with
-burdens on their backs, working like ants, apparently unaware that
-freedom had come to Russia and that no one need work. Military motors
-were shooting about in all directions, dilapidated trolley cars packed
-with humanity creaked over bad rails, droshkies careened crazily among
-the burden-bearing Chinese coolies.
-
-The car carrying Gordon rolled into the Svetlanskaya, the main street of
-Vladivostok, and began to climb one of the many hills. There was a great
-stream of confused traffic, and mixed in it were strange men in
-uniforms—black Annamites in French blue, yellow Japanese in buff,
-bronzed Czechs in brown, Cossacks in natural gray; Canadians in brown
-short coats, and Americans in snuff-colored khaki. On them all were the
-musty odors and the ancient dust of Asia.
-
-The city was a place of swarming tangles of people—beggars and princes,
-vagabonds and viceroys, generals and stragglers, friends and enemies,
-conquerors and conquered, all whirling about in mad antics and hurrying
-as if they expected the end of the world to come with sundown. Refugees
-from the interior carrying their few poor possessions in old blankets
-mingled with nobles of the old régime who still tried to keep up a
-semblance of importance; poor women in rags with frightened red eyes and
-crying children clustered about them stood on the curbs and stared at
-foreign-looking ladies lolling in carriages and clad in suspicious
-grandeur. The human parasites had gathered from all the ports of the
-Orient to this land where people were starving in the streets.
-Adventurers seeking command and harpies hoping to get their fingers into
-stolen jewels, pushed aside blind beggars to get into the cafés.
-
-The crisp cold air of winter was seething with joy. There were flags
-everywhere. The restaurants were crowded with people who lacked
-lodgings, gabbling, whispering, gaming. But there was something sinister
-lurking in the background of the mad show, glimpsed now and then in a
-squad of soldiers with bayonets fixed to their rifles and marching from
-some mysterious place to some other mysterious place with an attitude of
-deadly earnestness. The temper of the people was fickle. They were ready
-to rally to any leader who presented some dramatic ideal, or to submit
-to any ruler who was strong enough to subdue them by force of arms. But
-just now they were occupied with having a grand celebration and believed
-that life from now on would be nothing but a carnival.
-
-The car carrying Gordon and the other officers arrived at the big
-building overlooking the bay where flew the flag of the United
-States—American Staff Headquarters. Gordon found the Chief of
-Intelligence in a large room filled with map-makers, translators,
-clerks, officers, busy orderlies. But Gordon did not approach the desk
-of his chief at once. The grave-faced colonel with spectacles was busy
-just then, and Gordon lingered among the office workers. There was a
-great buzzing of conversation and a mighty clacking of typewriters.
-
-Gordon was keenly interested in everything. The walls were covered with
-maps of the Russian empire stuck full of tacks with colored heads—the
-fever spots of a sick nation, showing where the disease was most rampant
-and dangerous. And Gordon listened to the talk of the Russians, who
-discussed the Americans frankly, knowing that they were not understood
-by the strangers.
-
-In time Gordon presented himself at the colonel’s desk, saluted, gave
-his name, and turned over certain papers. The colonel looked him over
-casually, not especially interested that another Intelligence officer
-had been added to his staff by Washington.
-
-“You’ll want to look about the city, Mr. Gordon, after your month in a
-transport. You’ll be quartered in this building. Report to me again in
-the morning,” said the colonel.
-
-So Lieutenant Gordon spent the afternoon in the teeming cafés along the
-Svetlanskaya. He mingled with the various factions scattered through the
-city—monarchists, anarchists, nihilists out of a job, German secret
-agents, and the adherents of new men and new parties intriguing for
-power with the next throw of the national dice. It was all a great orgy
-of talking and whispering and singing. Gordon could make neither head
-nor tail of it. But he watched the throngs closely. Every man got a
-scrutiny from the American lieutenant. An observer might think that
-Gordon was looking for some particular person in all that motley throng.
-
-At the officers’ mess that evening Gordon overheard a conversation in
-which the necessity of sending an Intelligence officer to Irkutsk was
-discussed. And Gordon was on the alert at once. He said nothing, but he
-watched the Chief of Intelligence up at the head of the table and
-followed him from the mess-room to his desk upstairs.
-
-“Sir,” began Gordon, “I understand that an officer will be sent up
-toward Lake Baikal—Irkutsk—to look into the situation there.”
-
-The colonel looked at Gordon wonderingly. It struck the chief that this
-new arrival was dipping into things rather hastily. There was enough to
-learn around Vladivostok for a stranger, thought the colonel.
-
-“Yes, it has been mentioned,” said the colonel. “We need an observing
-officer up there. That country is controlled now by Zorogoff, the Ataman
-of the Cossacks, and we don’t know any too much about Zorogoff. What do
-you know about him?”
-
-“Nothing, sir. But I would like to—see the country.”
-
-“You ought to have a little more time to get acquainted with the
-situation here before you go into the interior. The Baikal region is a
-long way from here.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” said Gordon. “I don’t want to appear too confident of my own
-abilities, but it strikes me, sir, that the back country explains what
-is going on here, rather than what you see here explains the country.”
-
-The colonel smiled. “You like to travel, young man.”
-
-“Yes, sir. Frankly, I’d like to see all I can.”
-
-“Have you been assigned to any duty here yet?”
-
-“No, sir. Perhaps when I got back from the Baikal region I’d be more
-valuable—have a better understanding of the situation as a whole.”
-
-“I’ll think it over,” said the colonel, and reached for his ringing
-telephone.
-
-And the colonel evidently did think it over, for within an hour
-Lieutenant Gordon was handed his orders to leave at once for Irkutsk in
-a train carrying Czech soldiers and supplies toward Omsk and that place
-known so vaguely as “the front.” And an American soldier who was a
-native of Russia was detailed to accompany Lieutenant Gordon as an
-orderly and interpreter.
-
-Gordon did not delay. He went at once to the Trans-Siberian station to
-find his train, leaving the Russian orderly to bring on baggage and
-bedding-roll. Gordon found the station filled to overflowing with
-refugees from the interior—sick and well, women and children, lame and
-blind, hungry and unclean. They lay on the floors, cooking and eating,
-begging and filching food wherever they could find it. They were like a
-dirty froth thrown up on a beach after a tidal wave, a pitiful human
-wreckage fighting for existence after having survived a typhoon which
-had destroyed a nation. The sights, the smells, the misery were
-appalling. It almost made Gordon ill. He longed to find some one person
-who could be blamed for it. A wrath began to grow in his soul.
-
-He stumbled down the railroad yards in the growing dark, seeking the
-train among a labyrinth of box cars. Though he was already in his furs
-and his sheepskin-lined coat against the wolf of winter which was
-howling across the landscape, the wind from the bay chilled him to his
-bones.
-
-Candles gleaming through the windows of an old fourth-class car drew
-him. He found soldiers within—Czechs cooking their supper of stew over
-crude heating stoves amid clouds of yellow sulphurous smoke from the
-awful Manchurian coal.
-
-The interior of the car was so jammed with men that there seemed to be
-no more room. The shelves were full of soldiers, and the floor was
-littered with coal and wood and boxes and bundles. It was like a pen on
-wheels, that car. It was filthy, battered, and broken. But it belonged
-to the train leaving for the front, and Gordon was content.
-
-Presently the orderly came, laden with baggage. He explained to the
-Czechs that the American officer was to travel in that car by order of
-the Czech commandant. The soldiers smiled and provided two shelves. And
-in a few minutes the train began to grind slowly away from Vladivostok,
-to carry Lieutenant Gordon and his orderly some two thousand versts
-away.
-
-They reached Nikolsk-Ussurisk the next morning. An American captain came
-to the train. His orderly had been sent back to Vladivostok, ill. The
-captain was without an interpreter.
-
-“Look here,” said Gordon. “You can’t go on here without an
-interpreter—and I’ll not need mine till I get to Irkutsk. You’ll have a
-new interpreter sent up to you by that time. I’m all right on this
-train—for a week or two. Send mine along to me when I telegraph where I
-am.”
-
-“Well, that’s an idea!” said the captain. “A most pious idea! Perhaps I
-can send your man along after you in a couple of days. He can catch this
-train all right, on a passenger train.”
-
-“Hold my man, sir, till you hear from me,” said Gordon. “I’ll wire when
-I need him. There is a Czech in this car who speaks fairly good English.
-I’ll get on all right.”
-
-“Now that’s mighty decent of you,” said the captain. “What’s your
-name—so there won’t be any hitch about sending your man on?”
-
-“Gordon, sir—Peter Gordon.” And the train rumbled on, leaving behind the
-native of Russia who had been detailed as interpreter for Lieutenant
-Peter Gordon.
-
-The railroad followed old caravan trails into Manchuria and Mongolia,
-over plains and up through mountains in which yellow _bonzes_ hid
-themselves from the world on sky-kissing peaks in secret monasteries.
-Then, winding down through the passes, the train traversed the millet
-plains where the conquerors of ancient Tartary and China recruited their
-hordes of warriors—and on into the wilderness of Siberia where wolves
-still ruled.
-
-The land was now held in the grip of a desperate cold. The wheels whined
-as they ground along on frosty rails. Bridges lay in ruins across
-rivers, replaced by shaky structures of logs that swayed and groaned
-under the weight of the train.
-
-And at every station Peter found mobs of refugees fighting to get aboard
-anything that moved. Some were trying to get to Vladivostok, some wanted
-to go in the opposite direction to Perm, or Ufa, or Samara. They wanted
-to get anywhere but where they were. Long strings of box cars in the
-sidings were packed with men, women, and children, ragged, filthy,
-hungry, dying, dead. Those alive threshed grain by hand from the rotting
-piles in the fields, or fished in the rivers with wooden spears. And
-there were trains coming back from the front filled with human
-derelicts—in cattle cars festooned with crimson icicles!
-
-Yet the people seemed patient in their misery. They waited patiently
-while first one faction rose to power only to fall again. And usurpers
-gambled for power with bands of brigands which their leaders called
-armies. The people had destroyed one government. Now they waited for
-some one to create another for them.
-
-Lieutenant Peter Gordon watched day by day in silence. At times, his
-eyes flamed with anger. But he smiled sometimes, too, when he mixed with
-peasants in the station restaurants and ate cabbage soup with a wooden
-spoon. For the peasants had many queer and amusing things to say about
-the _Americansky_ after they had assured themselves that the stranger
-could speak but a few words of Russian, and understood less. But Peter
-understood enough to know that these peasants were not at all friendly
-to officers, no matter what country they came from. They wanted no
-aristocrats in Siberia, American or otherwise. They were going to kill
-all the aristocrats, and be free men. They were not going to leave all
-the land to aristocrats, and pay taxes so that their rulers could make
-slaves of them. Not any more.
-
-One evening Peter strolled up toward the engine while the train was
-stopped in a station.
-
-“When will we get to Chita?” he asked the engineer.
-
-“Perhaps to-morrow.”
-
-“Are you sure we won’t go through Chita sometime to-night?”
-
-“No, not to-night. Not till long after daylight.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Peter, and walked away. The Russian engineer stared
-after the American officer in bewildered surprise, for the American
-officer was speaking in perfect Russian. There was something queer about
-it, the engineer knew—but, of course, Americans are educated and speak
-all languages. Still, that was the first one the engineer had ever heard
-who could speak the Czar’s Russian—as good as the conductor.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- III
-
- THE FIRING SQUAD
-
-
-AFTER Captain Shimilin’s demand for a million rubles for the Ataman
-Zorogoff, Katerin and her father knew that they were no longer safe.
-They had a fortune hidden in the old log house. It consisted of packets
-of Imperial rubles which had been smuggled from Kirsakoff’s bank before
-the looters had begun their raids in the city. The soldiers would come
-now and strip the house of all its contents to find the money. And if
-they did find the money, Michael and Katerin would be accused of
-opposing Zorogoff’s government and dealt with as many of the friends of
-the Kirsakoffs had already been dealt with—a secret firing squad in a
-prison yard at dawn.
-
-As Michael had said, to surrender the fortune would not mean safety.
-Others had done that, only to be destroyed so that no embarrassing
-claims might be made against Zorogoff in the future. Zorogoff was but a
-brigand chief, maintaining an army at the expense of the wealthy people
-in his district and using the peasants and former workmen to build up
-his new autocracy—destroy the aristocrats with the workers and then
-enslave the workers who had done the business for him. Thus he played
-the poor against the rich and controlled both. And it was his purpose to
-leave none living who understood his aims.
-
-In Michael’s room there was a stove of tile built into the wall. It
-reached to the ceiling, and stuck out into the room like the half of a
-supporting pillar—a great black column faced with blackened zinc sheets
-of half-cylinders. At the bottom was a small iron door to admit the
-wood, with a circular damper through which the flames might be seen when
-there was fire in the stove. But the Kirsakoffs did not use this stove.
-They used their scant supply of fuel in the stove in Katerin’s room, not
-only to conserve their heat in the most comfortable room, but to reduce
-the amount of smoke visible from the chimneys outside during the day.
-
-The stove in Michael’s room had been selected as the hiding place for
-the Imperial notes which had been smuggled from the bank weeks before.
-It was Katerin’s idea that the packets could be stacked against the
-tiles on the outside of the stove, and the sheets of zinc replaced. And
-unless a fire was maintained in the stove for a time long enough to heat
-the tiles to the danger point, the paper money would not be injured. If
-the Cossacks came to search for the money, she planned to light a
-smoldering fire in the stove. And by night, a couple of candles in
-behind some pieces of charred wood, would throw out light through the
-damper so that it would appear that the stove was burning.
-
-The packets of rubles were now concealed in a lot of discarded peasants’
-clothing. The various garments had been distributed through the house,
-but Katerin had gathered them in her father’s room, and was ripping them
-open, while Michael was preparing the stove for the money by removing
-the zinc facing against the tiles.
-
-It was the evening of the day on which Shimilin had visited them.
-Katerin was ripping open old gray coats which smelled of stables and
-were covered with patches, breeches contrived out of cloth and the old
-skins of animals, uncouth jerkins which had originally been padded with
-cotton against the cold of many long-gone Siberian winters.
-
-The windows were blanketed to keep the candlelight from being seen in
-the street below, and father and daughter talked in low tones as they
-worked, while Wassili and the old woman below in the kitchen kept a
-sharp watch against intruders.
-
-Michael stood on a bench and worked out the screws which held the zinc
-plates in place against the wall. It was now so cold in the room that
-his breath showed white in the light of the candles, for they had let
-the fire in his room die early, and the door to Katerin’s room was kept
-closed so that the heat might not escape from it.
-
-“Be careful lest the metal sheets fall and make a clatter,” warned
-Katerin as she stripped open an old coat, and released a shower of
-packets of rubles of large denomination, from which the face of the dead
-Czar smiled up at her wistfully from the engraving. The rubles made a
-colorful pile at her feet—blues, crimsons, and yellows, some worth a
-hundred rubles, some worth a thousand.
-
-“Now!” said Michael, as he lifted off the top plate. “We are ready for
-the hiding—and my back is nearly broken, too. May Zorogoff break his
-neck if he ever finds where it is hidden!”
-
-Katerin got to her feet and looked up at the rude clay tiles and the
-stone blocks mortared in behind them. The fire did not touch the
-tiles—they merely retained the heat and radiated it slowly into the
-room. And between the stone blocks and the tiles there was an air space,
-wider in some places than in others, so that the thickness of the
-packets of money would have to be gauged for the crevices they were to
-fill.
-
-Katerin began filling the spaces under the zinc plates above the stove
-door. Then the plate above was put into place, and the aperture behind
-it packed with money. They worked more than an hour before they had
-disposed of the bulk of the packets. They could hear the calling of the
-sentries in the streets. At times Michael and Katerin stopped and
-listened to the cracking of the frost in the timbers of the house, and
-once they put out the candles when they thought they heard the gate to
-the courtyard being opened cautiously. But the noise proved to be but a
-whim of the wind with the boards hanging loosely from the roof of the
-old wagon-shed.
-
-When all the zinc plates were back in place, Katerin took a piece of
-candle, and putting charred sticks of wood back into the stove, she so
-arranged the candle that when she lighted the wick and closed the iron
-door, a flickering light appeared through the holes in the door.
-
-“We have a fire in the stove,” she said to her father. “Who is to look
-for paper rubles in a burning stove? When the soldiers come to search,
-you have a fire going in an instant. And the wood can burn and not harm
-the rubles.”
-
-“We could not do better,” said Michael. “Your wits will save us yet. And
-that money is all that stands between you and beggary—even I, alive,
-without the fortune, could not save you from hunger and cold. There is
-your treasure! It must be saved to you, my daughter, at all cost.”
-
-“I care only for you, my father,” said Katerin. “And now you are tired
-and worn—to bed, for we must keep our strength and have our sleep, even
-though disaster crouches in the future.”
-
-She kissed him, and went to her own room to get behind the blankets
-which curtained the window and to blow a tiny hole in the frost coating
-the pane. Outside, the night was brilliant, with a haloed moon throwing
-a silvery sheen over the glistening plains, with a tree here and there
-doubly black from its shadow on the powdery snow. Out in the end of the
-street the fire of the sentries was burning redly. It threw into heavy
-relief the black forms squatting about the glowing coals.
-
-“Merciful God!” she whispered in prayer. “Are we to be saved? Help must
-come to us, or we perish!”
-
-She closed the blankets and went back to her father’s room. She made
-sure that he was properly covered, kissed him tenderly, and took away
-the candle, for she had known him to lie all night smoking cigarettes
-till the dawn by candle light.
-
-In her own room once more, she prayed before the icon, and prepared for
-bed. Worn out with the worry of the day and anxiety for what the new day
-might bring, she finally fell asleep.
-
-But the next day came and went without any word or sign from the Ataman
-that he was dissatisfied with the report of Captain Shimilin. Several
-days passed, and still there was nothing to indicate that Zorogoff would
-annoy them again. Michael began to have hopes that something would
-happen which might distract the attention of the usurper from them. But
-every hour they lived in expectation of another visit from Captain
-Shimilin—and no news came that the American troops were moving up the
-railroad to give protection to the people.
-
-Michael seemed to grow weaker as time passed. He fretted under the
-restraint of what was practically imprisonment. He worried constantly
-about the future for Katerin’s sake. He devised many a scheme by which
-they were to escape from the city, only to abandon each one when Wassili
-returned from buying food in the market and reported that Zorogoff’s
-soldiers were guarding every outlet from Chita.
-
-Among other plans, Michael had thought of getting a droshky or a sledge
-and attempting to dash through fog or darkness, down the line of the
-railroad to the Manchurian border. He thought it might be possible to
-get into some Manchurian city, or to board a train bound toward
-Vladivostok at some point along the railroad which was outside the zone
-controlled by Zorogoff.
-
-But while it might be possible to get through the cordons of Cossacks
-around the city, either by eluding them or bribing them, Michael knew
-that he might be betrayed before leaving the house at all. To carry out
-such a plan, it would be necessary to take a droshky driver into
-confidence, and though he might accept a large sum in payment, he might
-also betray Michael. For Zorogoff’s spies were everywhere.
-
-Then it was that Captain Shimilin returned to the house where the
-Kirsakoffs were concealed. His soldiers came pounding at the gate of the
-courtyard one day just before noon, and the Cossack captain once more
-faced Michael and Katerin in the room with the blue carpet, the silver
-samovar, and the battered candelabra.
-
-Shimilin was frankly arrogant now, and he looked at Katerin with an air
-of bold assurance that, no matter what she might say, it would be of no
-avail to her. His pair of Mongol soldiers came with him, their eyes
-hungrier than ever for the things in the room. Katerin involuntarily
-pulled her sable coat closer about her when she saw the greedy gaze of
-the precious pair upon it. She had decided to be outwardly gracious as
-long as she could. But she was ready to stand out against the demands of
-the Ataman, as expressed by Shimilin, as long as she could, and then
-abide by the consequences.
-
-Shimilin entered without a word, threw off his coat, and lighted a
-cigarette. It was plain that his course of action was settled, and that
-he knew perfectly what he would do from first to last. And his air
-indicated that he would stand no trifling.
-
-Michael sat by the table. He had been playing at solitaire when Shimilin
-arrived, and the cards were still spread out on the board. Katerin had
-agreed with her father that she should handle the situation, for the old
-man might be trapped by Shimilin into saying something which would be
-used by the Cossack as an excuse for arresting the old general. Zorogoff
-had his own methods for giving a tinge of legitimacy to his unwarranted
-actions and justifying himself in the eyes of his soldiers. And Shimilin
-knew what Zorogoff demanded now.
-
-“And what have you come for this time?” asked Katerin, as Shimilin
-continued to sit silently and smoke his cigarette.
-
-“The Ataman will take no more excuses,” said Shimilin. “I talked with
-him about you and your father, but he would heed neither me nor your
-protests that you have no money for him.”
-
-“You mean that the Ataman expects us to provide a fortune for him? And
-that having taken all we possess, you come back wanting more money?”
-demanded Katerin.
-
-“That is what I have come for. I am sorry that I have to put you to the
-trouble, but——”
-
-“Perhaps if I should talk to Zorogoff,” suggested Katerin.
-
-“You can only talk to the Ataman with money,” said Shimilin. He spoke
-without belligerency, almost apologetically, yet there was no doubt that
-he was completely in earnest.
-
-“My answer to that—I am dumb,” said Katerin. She sat down near her
-father, and folded her hands in an attitude of helpless resignation.
-
-“You know of some of the things that have happened here since the Ataman
-began to rule,” replied Shimilin. “I can tell you that the dumb have
-been made to speak for Zorogoff. This is a matter that you would do well
-to consider with great care.”
-
-Michael picked up one of the cards before him, and resumed his game, as
-if what was being said held no interest for him.
-
-Katerin leaned forward from the bench and looked into the black eyes of
-the Cossack.
-
-“This is a matter that I have considered,” she said slowly. “I have
-given thought to it much longer than you suppose—and I have considered
-that you, who are a Cossack, might even kill Russians by order of a
-Mongol chief. I am wondering if you have thought of that, Captain
-Shimilin, and——”
-
-Shimilin sprang to his feet, his face flushed and his eyes menacing.
-
-“Take care what you say about the Ataman!”
-
-Katerin smiled.
-
-“Oh, yes,” she said. “I also understand what you seek. It is to have it
-to say that we insult the Ataman. If calling him a Mongol is an insult,
-that is his affair—we only speak the truth, and if the truth be against
-him as he sees it and he resents it, we have nothing to do with that. I
-am not making little of him for his blood or his race. There have been
-many great men among his people, and he is of royal line. But it is to
-you, Captain Shimilin, that I am speaking. My father and I have always
-been friends of the Cossacks. Now you put a Mongol into power here. Do
-you expect him to give you what we Russians have always given you? The
-rank of free men? Even our Czar was Ataman of all the Cossacks. Have you
-not learned to rule in your own way?”
-
-As Katerin went on, her confidence grew. She saw that there was shame as
-well as anger in Shimilin.
-
-“We Cossacks held up the throne on the ends of our lances,” said
-Shimilin doggedly. “We have our own master now, and we ask no advice
-from you or your father.”
-
-“Your own master?” Asked Katerin with gentle irony. “If you are your own
-masters—why not a Cossack?”
-
-“This is our country, and we shall rule it as we wish.”
-
-“As you wish now? And how long before the Mongol will be ready to
-dispense with Cossack lances and turn your country, as you call it now,
-over to those who are closer to him in blood?”
-
-“You forget,” raged Shimilin, “that the Ataman protects you—and that you
-must give him help with money, as there is none in your family who can
-aid him with a sword!”
-
-“Tribute or death!” cried Katerin. “Is that protection? And if a Russian
-cannot pay, the Mongol gets a Cossack to kill us! Do you think that if I
-could wear a sword I would take service under Zorogoff at those
-terms—and help to destroy my own race?”
-
-“Your father ruled here with the help of Cossacks,” retorted Shimilin.
-“We paid for the bread of majesty with our lives and our service—and
-killing Russians is no new business for us—eh, Michael Kirsakoff? How of
-that, old one? Did we not get well schooled in killing Russians in your
-time?”
-
-“True!” cried Michael, turning to look at Shimilin. “But you were in the
-service of Russians. Think well of that. And those you killed broke the
-law, or had killed in their own turn, with their hand lifted against
-their fellow Russians or against the throne. The law is the law and
-justice is justice. Men are not all just, as we were not always just.
-But what law have we broken here in this house against your Ataman, that
-you should threaten us because we have no fortune?”
-
-Shimilin gave no reply.
-
-“Do you see no difference between the Czar and a Mongol princeling?”
-asked Katerin.
-
-Shimilin turned to his soldiers. “Wait outside for me,” he commanded
-with a gesture of dismissal. “I will call you when you are needed.”
-
-The two men with rifles went outside and closed the door behind them.
-
-Shimilin sat down again in an effort to compose himself. “I did not wish
-my men to hear the Ataman insulted,” he began. “I have come here by
-order of Zorogoff to take your money—all of it. It is only to be a loan
-and you will lose nothing in the end. This is my advice—give your money
-to me. I will promise you safety.”
-
-He was frankly conciliatory. It appeared that he wished to cover his
-chagrin over what Katerin and her father had said and to put himself in
-a better light with them by a tacit agreement with them that he had no
-stomach for the business.
-
-“And if we had money and we gave it,” said Katerin, “how do we know that
-we would not be destroyed to hide the debt, as has happened to others?”
-
-“Then it is that you do not trust Zorogoff,” said Shimilin.
-
-Katerin laughed lightly. “Those who have trusted him are dead. He has
-taken fortunes before—and then the firing squad. What need has he to
-destroy us? We should be safe because we are poor.”
-
-Shimilin glanced at the door. He leaned forward and whispered, “Then
-trust me. Turn over your money to me—and I promise safety. On my word as
-a Cossack! Come!”
-
-Michael turned quickly and looked at Shimilin in surprise, but Katerin
-gave her father a glance of caution. She suspected that Shimilin was
-trying to trap them.
-
-“You must trust us, Captain Shimilin. We have no fortune for Zorogoff or
-any other man.”
-
-Shimilin scowled in disappointment, and seemed to have more to say, but
-evidently thought better of it.
-
-“You will have a glass of tea with us,” said Michael. “My house is poor,
-but no man goes from it without——”
-
-“No!” shouted Shimilin. “I will not have it from you. You do not trust
-me!” and he stepped to the door and flung it open. The two soldiers came
-back into the room.
-
-“Kirsakoff, you must go with these men,” said Shimilin.
-
-“What!” cried Michael. “I am to go? Where am I to go?”
-
-“Before the Ataman. It is his orders,” said Shimilin quietly, and folded
-his arms.
-
-“Does this mean that my father has been arrested?” gasped Katerin,
-staring in horror at the Cossack.
-
-“Call it what you like,” grunted Shimilin.
-
-“But arrested for what? For being poor? You mean that my father is to be
-taken away by soldiers and no charge is made against him?” pressed
-Katerin, now aware that disaster had come.
-
-“Get ready to go, and say no more, Kirsakoff,” said Shimilin. “I shall
-stay here with your daughter.”
-
-“But I shall go with my father,” insisted Katerin, doing her best to
-conceal the agony which possessed her. She knew that if her father were
-taken she might never see him again. “Please! I shall go with my father!
-Surely, there can be nothing against my going.”
-
-“Have no fear,” said Shimilin. “Zorogoff wishes to talk with your
-father, that is all. No harm will come to him. And I shall see that no
-harm comes to you here while we wait. It will be better for you, and
-easier for your father if you do not make any trouble about it. You will
-only have to submit in the end.”
-
-“I shall go,” said Michael, rising unsteadily to his feet. “I have no
-wish to oppose the Ataman if he desires to talk with me. Come, my
-daughter—fetch me my coat and my cap. The sooner this is over, the
-sooner we shall know what the Ataman expects of me.”
-
-Katerin hesitated, scanning the face of Shimilin as if hunting out some
-secret motive behind the taking of her father from her. Then with sudden
-resolution she went and brought her father’s cap and coat from his room,
-and put them on him with loving care. When she had pulled the fur cap
-down about the old general’s ears, she threw her arms about his neck and
-kissed him, her heart torn with anguish at the parting, but determined
-not to give way to her fears and doubts before him.
-
-“God go with you and may you return to me soon,” she said. “And do not
-worry for me, my father.” She smiled at him.
-
-“And God be with you, Katerin Stephanovna, the brave one,” said Michael.
-Then turning to Shimilin, he said, “I am ready to obey your commands and
-I submit myself to your soldiers.”
-
-“Take Michael Kirsakoff to the Ataman,” said Shimilin to his men, and
-they fell in on each side of Michael. Between the two, Michael marched
-across the room, doing his best to keep his weak old legs from betraying
-the unsteadiness of his age. At the door he crossed himself twice, and
-turning back, said to Katerin, “Hope is mightier than fear—remember that
-you are the daughter of a soldier and that we do not fear death, but
-only the loss of honor. Think not of me, but of yourself, and God’s
-blessing and mercy upon you.”
-
-He turned and was gone, leaving Katerin standing with folded arms
-staring at the open door through which he had passed. Her face was
-white, her lips drawn tightly together. She remained thus, listening to
-the footfalls of her father and of the soldiers going down the stairs.
-When she could hear them no more, Wassili came up and peered in at the
-door, his eyes full of terror, and by his look silently questioning the
-truth of the scene he had just witnessed below.
-
-“See that the doors are properly closed, Wassili,” said Katerin, and the
-_moujik_ went below again. She walked to a bench and sat down facing the
-stove, partly turned away from Shimilin who stood in the center of the
-room. She ignored his presence, but sat watching the flames dancing
-inside the stove behind the iron door, her hands gripped together in her
-lap.
-
-Shimilin walked to the window and smoothed away the frost to look into
-the courtyard and the street. Soon he turned from the window and looked
-at Katerin.
-
-“You may as well tell me where the money may be found,” he said. “There
-is nothing to be gained by keeping it—and much to lose. I gave you your
-chance, but you preferred to trust Zorogoff. You would not give it to
-me—Zorogoff will take it. Where is the money to be found?”
-
-“Where?” she asked, speaking as if in a dream, and not looking at him.
-“Where is the money to be found? That is a question.”
-
-“I do not enjoy this business,” said Shimilin, cajolery in his voice.
-“If you would trust me——”
-
-“I trust only in God,” she said. “We trusted the Cossacks and they have
-turned against us. We are in your hands.”
-
-Shimilin walked across the room, passing behind Katerin, and drew a
-glass of water from the samovar and poured into it some tea from the pot
-on the top of the samovar. He stood examining the things on the table,
-drinking the hot tea noisily.
-
-There came the sharp crack of a board being broken in the courtyard
-below. Katerin turned her head in an attitude of listening, startled by
-the noise, and conscious that its meaning might hold some import of
-terrible significance. She had supposed that her father had gone from
-the house with the soldiers. She stood up to go to the window.
-
-Shimilin stepped quickly in her way. “You are not to look out,” he said
-calmly. “All that you are to do is to tell me where the money may be
-found. Why do you make all this trouble about it? I tell you it is bad.
-You could be happy and gay if you would trust me.”
-
-“Perhaps you will have another glass of tea,” suggested Katerin. She
-returned to the bench and sat down to mask her worry over the noise she
-had heard in the court.
-
-“Do you wish to see your father again?” asked Shimilin.
-
-Katerin looked at him, unable to conceal the swift terror which struck
-at her heart with the Cossack’s words. He returned her look with steady
-eyes.
-
-“I wish to see my father again, if it be God’s will,” she said.
-
-“Zorogoff is God,” said Shimilin.
-
-She gave no reply.
-
-“I warn you—you must submit to Zorogoff’s will.”
-
-Still she gave no answer. The frost from the upper part of the window
-had melted away in the heat of the room, and the ridge of ice across the
-bottom of the panes was dripping water to the floor, like the ticking of
-a clock.
-
-Katerin turned to the fire again. Her face was drawn as if she were
-crying but her eyes were free from tears and she made no sound.
-
-There came the sound of dull thuds from the courtyard. Something was
-striking frozen ground with regular blows, and soon could be heard the
-sharp rasping of metal on stone.
-
-Katerin moved as if she would get up to look out of the window, but
-seeing Shimilin standing in front of her as if he intended to block the
-way, she sank back on the bench. Her terror grew as she began to
-understand the meaning of the sounds outside.
-
-“What is that?” she whispered to Shimilin. “Tell me! What is happening?”
-
-“Come and see for yourself,” said Shimilin, and moved aside so that she
-might pass to the window.
-
-She got up and started to cross so that she might look out. But she had
-not gone half the distance, when she stopped at hearing Wassili
-screaming below stairs.
-
-“Mistress! Mistress! The soldiers are——”
-
-But Wassili’s cries were checked. There were sounds of a scuffle,
-followed by harsh warnings from soldiers that the _moujik_ must be
-still.
-
-Katerin ran to the window. As she looked below, she gave a gurgling cry
-as if she had been struck in the mouth, and put her hands up to her face
-to shut out the sight of what she saw. For below in the courtyard her
-father was working with a shovel and throwing up broken, frozen, brown
-earth. A soldier was breaking the ground with a pick. And about the
-workers stood a large group of soldiers with their rifles, watching
-Kirsakoff dig a grave!
-
-Katerin backed away from the window, sobbing, and threw herself upon a
-bench.
-
-“You submit to Zorogoff or you die—both of you!” said Shimilin. “There
-is yet time to save your father.”
-
-Katerin stood up and faced Shimilin.
-
-“You have betrayed us!” she cried. “There is no truth in you, you are
-not worthy of trust! Death is better than life where there is no honor,
-no truth, no faith in any man!” She turned her back upon the Cossack,
-and held out her arms to the icon of the Virgin Mother. “Mercy on the
-soul that goes to greet you—mercy, mercy, oh Mother of God!”
-
-A whistle broke shrilly on the cold air outside. Shimilin leaped at
-Katerin, and grasping her by the shoulders, swung her round and thrust
-her at the window.
-
-“Look!” he commanded. “If you can be so stubborn! Look, and see if you
-still wish to disobey the orders of the Ataman!”
-
-Katerin saw her father standing with his back to the old wall of the
-court and six soldiers before him with their rifles upraised and aimed
-at the old general.
-
-She fell back against Shimilin, half fainting, but recovering herself,
-staggered away from the window and fell upon her knees, her head bent
-toward the icon, moaning prayers.
-
-“Your father can be saved,” warned Shimilin. “Would you send him to
-execution? Tell me where the money is hidden—or when I lift my hand to
-the window, the soldiers will fire!”
-
-“We are ready for death. I commend my soul and the soul of my father to
-God! Better death than life under the cruelty of a Mongol and the
-treachery of our Cossacks!”
-
-“You will not trust me,” said Shimilin. “I could save you both. Fools! I
-am ready to risk my own life to save you, yet you will not believe!” He
-raised his hand to the window.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- THE PLACE OF THE VOW
-
-
-A NEW conductor boarded the train in the night. He was a big fellow,
-with a body round as a bear’s and covered with many coats. He wore a big
-sheepskin cap, and carried a smoking lantern which was made of tin and
-was square, with a red circular glass in one side, a blue one in the
-other, and white ones on opposite sides. He held the lantern aloft and
-studied the sleepers on the shelves, making rainbows in the dim light of
-the car as he turned his prismatic lantern.
-
-Snicking the ice from his whiskers, he waited till the train moved out
-again, when he promptly lay down in the passage between the
-sleeping-shelves and began snoring into the red light of the lantern on
-the floor beside him.
-
-Lieutenant Peter Gordon, who was on a lower shelf, was awake with the
-first glimmer of gray light through the frosted windows. And as he
-looked out upon the floor of the car, he was startled by the sanguinary
-face of the new conductor in the red glow of the lantern as it rattled
-with the jolting of the car. Peter studied the queer figure prone on the
-floor, and observed the booted feet stretched out toward the cold stove
-in the corner.
-
-Before long the conductor sat up, rubbed his eyes and yawned a chasm of
-a yawn. He dug into his clothing with a burrowing motion of his arm and
-brought forth through many strata of coats a watch fit for a giant. He
-put it to his ear, tilting his great cap to one side, and listened to
-the ticking. Then he squinted at it in the red light, and having assured
-himself that the new day had arrived on time, he buried the watch
-somewhere in Pliocene recesses and hove himself to his feet and
-attempted to look out of the window.
-
-There was a remnant of candle stuck to the dirty window-sill by its own
-frozen cataract of tallow. The conductor fumbled for a match, struck it,
-and lighted the candle. The heat from its flame began to melt a widening
-oval in the frost. The jumping flame revealed more of the interior of
-the car—rifles hanging to the walls and rattling against the boarding
-with every lurch of the train, shoes hung on nails, garments swinging
-from the upper shelves, bare feet sticking out from blankets, outlandish
-bundles tied with bits of rope and twisted cloths, cartridge belts
-toothed with the brass tops of cartridges. And above the complaints of
-the laboring train could be heard the snores and sleep-mutterings of the
-Czech soldiers—men of an improvised army which had fought its way across
-Siberia and was now on the back trail to fight again that their comrades
-might be saved from annihilation by treacherous enemies.
-
-The conductor studied the frozen wilderness through the window. Having
-satisfied himself with the landscape, he stared at the cold stove. He
-took the big ax which braced the door of the car shut and attacked a
-chunk of wood on the floor with crashing blows. With the splinters split
-off he started a fire and dumped in slabs of Manchurian coal, which
-crackled like a line of musketry and threw out into the car ribbons of
-yellow stifling smoke.
-
-All the sleepers began to cough as the smoke penetrated the car. Soon
-there was a chattering and a rattling of mess gear, and some one at the
-other end of the car started the other stove—and a counter smoke-screen
-against the conductor’s. Another day had begun in the filthy
-rabbit-hutch of a car. And the gallant Czechs, content to endure their
-Valley Forge of Siberia, chanted the songs of their homeland.
-
-Peter threw off his blankets and sat up. The conductor smiled at him and
-reached Peter’s boots up to him from the floor.
-
-“The fire will make it warm soon,” he said, not knowing that Peter was
-an American officer and not supposed to understand or speak Russian.
-
-“How soon will we get to Chita, my friend?” asked Peter.
-
-“To Chita? Oh, soon.”
-
-“And how soon?”
-
-“Perhaps half an hour. But you are going to Omsk?”
-
-“Only to Irkutsk,” said Peter. He broke the ice in his canvas bucket and
-washed his face, while the conductor looked on awe-struck at any person
-who could be so mad as to wash in ice water. He scanned Peter’s tunic,
-which hung from the shelf.
-
-“Are you Czech?” he asked finally.
-
-“No, I am an American—an officer.”
-
-The conductor opened his mouth wide and crossed himself with both hands.
-
-“But you speak Russian,” he said. “It is not right that you should speak
-Russian like a Russian and be an American!”
-
-“I am really Russian,” said Peter. “But it is that I have been in
-America a long time. I came from Petersburg, and now I have come back to
-help Russia to be free. Do you know Chita well?”
-
-“I? Yes, a little. My wife’s cousin died there in the time of the
-pestilence. He was a fur-hunter, but he was a stingy. I am not sorry
-that he died. He ate much when he came to see us, and never had an extra
-kopeck for the children.”
-
-“Who is the governor of Chita now?”
-
-The conductor gave a snort of disgust. “How could there be a governor in
-this time of freedom? That is the old way. But we are free men now, as
-good as anybody. Am I not as good as an officer?”
-
-“Better,” said Peter. “But there was a governor in the old days. Every
-place had a governor for the Czar. You know that as well as I, my
-friend.”
-
-“True, I know it. But what does it matter now? This is not the old
-time.”
-
-“There was a prison in Chita—or was there?”
-
-“True, there was a prison. A big one on a hill. You shall see it in time
-as we come to the city. But it is empty now, and the devil may live in
-it for all I care.”
-
-“I have heard that there was a Colonel Governor in Chita with one eye.
-He lost the other in a fight with a tiger, but he killed the tiger.”
-
-“Poosh!” said the conductor. “That is somebody’s vodka-story. I have
-been on the railroad from the time it began, and I never heard of any
-Colonel Governor who killed a tiger, or who had one eye. The last
-governor at Chita was named Kolessow, and he had a bad leg, not a bad
-eye. He ran away when the revolution came. Before that was Kirsakoff,
-and I can tell you Kirsakoff had both his eyes. I never saw him—and a
-good thing, too, or——”
-
-“There never was a governor here named Kirsakoff,” said Peter.
-
-“No!” cried the conductor. “You have been in foreign lands, but you know
-more than I about this, do you? I say that there was a governor—Michael
-Alexandrovitch, and a general!”
-
-“Perhaps I am wrong after all. Forgive me. But I had forgotten, because
-Kirsakoff went to Odessa.”
-
-“Perhaps he did. I don’t know,” said the conductor. “Are you looking for
-him?”
-
-“Oh, no,” said Peter. “I am looking for my brother. All I know is that
-my brother was in a place where a Colonel Governor with one eye
-lived—the fellow who had a fight with a tiger. But it was not Kirsakoff,
-surely.”
-
-“No,” said the conductor. “It could not be he. So you have lost your
-brother? It is always the same story. Since we got freedom everybody is
-lost. I have not had my pay for six months, and I have seven children
-living and my wife is sick. My children cannot eat freedom, but it is
-the capitalists who are keeping us poor. In the old days I had a cow.
-And now the Americans have come. It is said that they want to steal our
-railroad and take our work away from us.”
-
-“That is a lie,” said Peter. “The Americans are your friends.”
-
-“What kind of friend comes to steal your work? I don’t know anything
-about politics, but my children have nothing to eat but cabbage. I know
-that, and they know it. I think it was better with the Czar. These
-fellows who come and talk politics—they are smart men—and good men. They
-gave us a lot of rubles. But with freedom it costs a hundred rubles for
-a loaf of bread, and I get no pay. And those fellows who talked politics
-ate my cow, and nobody wants the rubles they gave me. What kind of
-business is that? Not to take rubles after my cow has been eaten!”
-
-Peter shook his head, helpless for an answer, and finished his dressing.
-He went out on the platform between cars. The cold air assailed him
-witheringly, for it was more than sixty degrees below zero that morning.
-He pulled the fur strap of his cap across his nose and leaned out from
-the car steps to scan the snow-streaked plain.
-
-In the distance were low hills covered with sparse fringes of pines and
-larches. At the base of the hills, huddled against them like a flock of
-sheep seeking shelter, were primitive huts of the aboriginal Buriats,
-and stray Mongol herdsmen in winter quarters.
-
-The train made a detour on temporary trackage to get round the wreck of
-a bridge that had been blown up. The little river was frozen and
-peasants were cutting a hole in the ice to get water for a pair of
-scraggly little Siberian ponies with coats of long frost-covered hair
-and icicles hanging from their nostrils. The men stopped to watch the
-train go past, and flailed their bodies with their arms to keep warmth
-in their blood.
-
-Once more the slowly moving train changed direction and drew near to low
-hills ahead, their crests serrated by timber and their sides slashed
-with snow which was held in the frozen water courses. As it rounded
-these hills and ran in through a low pass, a city of bizarre appearance
-was unmasked. It lay in a great cup between hills—in a wide valley,
-level as a plain.
-
-At first sight the city looked more like the smoldering ruin of a vast
-settlement that had recently been destroyed by fire. Rising from a sea
-of small huts was what appeared to be a forest of gigantic white
-fungi—columns of ivory smoking from the tops, or some poisonous growths
-like giant toadstools, or a land filled with tiny craters from which
-rose gray fumes that spread high in air into motionless clouds. These
-queer pillars were nothing but smoke rising from the buildings of the
-city and the warm air from chimneys rising straight up in the still,
-frigid air.
-
-Through the pillars of steam and smoke could be seen taller buildings,
-and here and there minaretlike spires lifted out of the ruck, and
-catching the morning sun, reflected the light with tints of gold and
-bluish green. And there were great blue domes marking the synagogue,
-while a cross and a crescent glinted with gilt from the top of a Moslem
-mosque. The old exile settlement of Chita—the Valley of Despair—had
-grown to a city and filled the plain.
-
-On the slopes of the hill above, Peter saw a great yellowish stockade
-built of upright logs which enclosed low, rambling buildings. The sun
-flashed from tiny windows which were smaller than the gun ports of a
-frigate, or where the tiny windows were broken there were black holes
-like eye sockets in a skull. Many stubby chimneys built of stone gave
-the low buildings the appearance of castellated walls. But no smoke
-issued from the chimneys.
-
-In contrast with the smoking city below, the place of the stockade
-seemed to be deserted. The scant snow all about it was unbroken by any
-path, showing that if there was a road leading to the stockade, it was
-not in use. The yellow color of the walls suggested an unhealthiness—a
-place shut away from the population of the city. The lines of the place
-were clearly etched upon the slope like the skeleton of some monstrous
-animal which had died upon the dreary and deserted hillside. And it was
-a dead thing—the wreck of the old prison of the Valley of Despair.
-
-The train puffed into the station. The platform was thronged with a
-surging mob of people making a mad clamor to get into the cars filled
-with soldiers. They pleaded to be allowed to ride to any place, but
-there was no room for them in the stifling train and the Czechs refused
-to allow the refugees aboard. So they gathered up their pitiful
-belongings and swarmed back into the station out of the cold to wait for
-other trains which might take them away.
-
-Peter gathered up his blanket-roll and his bag and slipped out of the
-car. He got a porter at the station, a big _moujik_ in a dirty white
-apron, to take the things to a droshky in the square.
-
-Once free of the mob, and with the station between him and the train,
-Peter looked across the square. Some soldiers were drilling in the open
-place—short chaps, of heavy build and awkward movements, learning to
-march and countermarch under the commands of Cossack officers.
-
-There were many brick buildings of three and four stories. But between
-them were the low, squat log houses of old times, battered and unkempt,
-run-down pioneers now relegated to the position of poor relations and
-long neglected.
-
-Peasant women trotted round and round their crude carts, selling blocks
-of frozen soup and loaves of black bread to refugees from the station.
-The cold air was laden with sour odors. There was a great gabbling
-between buyers and sellers. The women and men kept running round in
-circles for warmth, their breath bearding them with steam from their
-nostrils. To the half-clad and hungry, merely keeping alive in such cold
-was an agony.
-
-A group of boys with tattered newspapers gathered about Peter, noting
-his furs and his brown field-boots with curious eyes. These boys were
-wrapped with long woolen scarfs, and wore uncouth clothes and men’s
-boots long since thrown away by the original owners—boots lacking soles
-except for rags bound round the feet. If the lads stood still for but a
-minute, it was to shiver violently, so they kept jumping up and down
-like marionettes moved by a string. Peter’s eyes filled with tears at
-the sight of them, and he threw them a handful of paper rubles and
-kopecks that they might have hot cabbage soup.
-
-“Poor little chaps!” he said, and, getting into a droshky, told the
-_iswostchik_ to drive to the best hotel. The horses broke into a gallop
-at once, straight across the square, and it was then that Peter noticed
-an ancient building in the line of the street ahead. It was built of
-logs in the old style.
-
-“Is that the old post-house?” he shouted to the driver.
-
-“Yes, that is it,” said the driver.
-
-“Then stop! In front of the post-house!” cried Peter, slapping the
-driver on the back with a lusty thump. “Turn, please—and stop!”
-
-“But it is a restaurant now,” said the driver. He seemed bewildered, but
-he swung his horses into the street before the old building and brought
-them up abruptly, muttering in his whiskers.
-
-“You said to go to a hotel, and this is a restaurant,” he complained.
-“How am I to know what you want, when you say two different things to me
-about where you want to go?”
-
-“I wish to stop here but a minute,” said Peter. He jumped out of the
-droshky, and, standing in the street, looked up and down its length, and
-turned to survey the old post-house. Sure enough, the sign over it said
-it was a restaurant, and through the tops of the partly clear windows he
-could see the gaudy colors of curtains hanging within.
-
-“The Sofistkaya!” whispered Peter. “I would never have known it.” He
-studied the square, the big white station, and the buildings of the
-street. He walked through the loose sand to a spot directly in front of
-the door of the old post-house, but well out from it, and crossed
-himself twice with both hands in the old way.
-
-He looked down at the sand and dirty snow.
-
-“Blood of my father!” he whispered. “I have come back to keep the vow! I
-pray that I am not too late—that Kirsakoff still lives!”
-
-He stood there a few minutes, the tears streaming down his cheeks and
-freezing on the flesh. He uttered prayers, and then strode back to the
-droshky, entered it, and was once more rolling up the Sofistkaya.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- THE ATAMAN’S DECISION
-
-
-WHEN Captain Shimilin raised his hand to the window, there was a sharp
-command in the courtyard below, followed by the crash of a volley from
-the rifles of the soldiers Katerin had seen standing before her father.
-
-Katerin, kneeling in front of the icon, fell forward upon the floor at
-the sound of the volley. Shimilin, still at the window, stood gazing
-across the room at her, a puzzled look upon his face, as if he did not
-know what to do next. He heard Wassili wailing in the kitchen below, and
-from the court came the sounds of metal being thrust into flinty soil
-and laughter and joking comments from soldiers.
-
-Katerin lay still for several minutes. Then she sat up, and stared at
-Shimilin as if she had just been awakened from a dream and was still in
-doubt about her surroundings and why she should be there.
-
-“It is finished,” said Shimilin. “Your father is dead. I am sorry for
-you, but the Ataman must be obeyed. If you will give up the money now, I
-will protect you.”
-
-She did not answer him, but continued to stare at him, attempting to
-grasp what had happened.
-
-“You have killed my father!” she whispered, putting her hands up to her
-cheeks. “You have killed my father! And now you want me to pay you for
-it!”
-
-“It is Zorogoff who has killed your father,” said Shimilin. “I obey his
-orders—as you must.”
-
-He walked over to Katerin and held out his hand to help her to her feet.
-But she evaded him, and stood up.
-
-“You are a murdering dog,” she said quietly, hatred and revulsion in her
-look as she shrank away from him. “You lied to us—and you lie now! You
-are no better than the Mongol—worse than Zorogoff, for he would not kill
-his own kind for you!”
-
-“Take care!” he warned, moving toward her threateningly. “Take care! My
-soldiers are still below.”
-
-She cried out with rage against him, and sprang at him and struck him in
-the face with her open hand. Then she threw up her arm and whirled away
-from him, to run behind the screen of her bed as if to get a weapon. But
-Shimilin grasped her by the shoulders and pulled her back into the
-center of the room. She tore away from him.
-
-“Kill me!” she cried. “There is nothing left in life for me now. Kill
-me, too!”
-
-“No, I will not kill you,” said Shimilin suavely. “We do not kill women
-like you too soon, Katerin Stephanovna.”
-
-“You are swine!” she raged. “You told us my father was to go to the
-Ataman. Talk to me no more, but kill me here!”
-
-Shimilin said nothing, but stood looking at her with every sign of being
-on the verge of complying with her command. But he did not put hand to
-pistol. Instead, he shrugged his shoulders and smiled, went to the bed
-behind the screen and pulled off a blanket. He threw it to her but she
-let it fall upon the floor.
-
-“Take the blanket,” he said gruffly. “You may have death if you want it,
-but not by my hand. Take the blanket and come with me to the soldiers
-below.”
-
-Katerin kicked the blanket aside.
-
-“I do not fear the cold any more than I fear death,” she said quietly,
-and moved to the door. “Come! I will show you how a Russian woman can
-die!”
-
-Shimilin followed her down the stairs to the hall below. The old woman
-in the kitchen who did the cooking was crying in a room beyond the
-kitchen, out of sight. Katerin felt impelled to call a farewell to the
-old woman, and to Wassili, but she refrained because she suspected that
-the two servants might protest to the soldiers and draw ill treatment
-and probably death.
-
-So she passed down the hall and out through the double doors into the
-courtyard. The place was full of soldiers, and her eyes lit at once upon
-a pile of fresh, brown earth near the wagon-shed. That, she knew, was
-her father’s grave. She walked straight to the mound, and stopping
-beside it, turned and faced the soldiers.
-
-The heavily clad men stood about with their rifles, looking like great
-beetles, their heads topped with big caps, their faces wrapped in fur or
-rags, their bodies rotund with many garments, and the breath from their
-nostrils making what might have been inverted white horns as the air
-they breathed out turned to steam and spurted out from their faces
-behind the straps over their noses. They were not in ranks, these men,
-but gathered in groups as if waiting for some one to tell them what they
-should do next.
-
-Captain Shimilin followed Katerin halfway across the yard, where he
-stopped to speak to a tall soldier in a long coat. The pair talked
-together quietly, looking at Katerin. Shimilin carried a towel which he
-had snatched up as he had passed out of the hall. He whipped the towel
-against his coat while he talked with the other soldier, and it was
-plain that the Cossack was in bad humor.
-
-Katerin glanced at the spade and the old pickax which had been cast
-aside from the mound of earth. She lifted her eyes to the upper windows
-of the house. Then she threw open her sable coat, revealing the dull
-crimson of her velvet gown and the white of her throat. Gray and white
-and crimson, she made a striking picture against the dull background of
-the old buildings. The morning breeze which whipped in gustily over the
-courtyard wall and rattled the dead vines along its top, lifted wisps of
-her hair about her ears. The cold tortured her, but she gave no
-indication of her suffering. She looked like a beautiful flower which
-had grown in a drab garden now infested by wild things which had broken
-in for destruction and hated all things beautiful.
-
-She let her hands fall to her sides. The cold was numbing her.
-
-“I am ready!” she called to Captain Shimilin.
-
-The Cossack moved to her, and held out the towel. “I shall cover your
-eyes so that you shall not see the rifles,” he said.
-
-“Please do not touch me,” she begged. “It is all I ask. Let them shoot!”
-
-The soldier who had been talking to Shimilin walked up to Katerin and
-peered into her face. His features were concealed by a strap of fur.
-Katerin knew by his manner that he must be an officer, though he wore no
-insignia. After a casual glance at him, she looked beyond him and fixed
-her gaze upon the house.
-
-“Do you understand that you can save your life if you will follow the
-advice of Captain Shimilin?” asked the stranger.
-
-“I do not seek the advice of Captain Shimilin—nor any other person,”
-said Katerin.
-
-“You prefer to die?”
-
-“I have done with life.”
-
-“You talk like a brave woman,” went on the stranger.
-
-“Oh, be done! I am cold!” said Katerin. She noted that a group of
-soldiers had fallen into line before her, and that the others about the
-yard gathered closer, regarding her with curious eyes.
-
-The tall officer drew apart again with Shimilin, and they carried on a
-low conversation once more. The men in line began to examine their
-rifles to be in readiness. Both Shimilin and the other officer returned
-and stood before her again.
-
-“Because your father, General Kirsakoff, was Governor here in the old
-days, is no reason why you should expect to oppose the new ruler,” said
-the officer.
-
-Katerin did not answer.
-
-The officer threw open his long coat, showing a uniform of gray tunic
-and blue breeches. He pulled the strap from his face and revealed the
-dark face of a Mongol. Sparse mustaches fell from the ends of his upper
-lip, clinging to his jowls as they drooped past the side of his mouth.
-His black eyes were set in close to a wide flat nose. Yet his face had a
-proud and serious mien—the face of an Asiatic of high degree, the face
-of a stoical and cruel man.
-
-“I am the Ataman Zorogoff,” he said. “I rule. Your father would not loan
-his fortune to my government. That is all I ask of you. I give you your
-choice—submit or die.”
-
-Katerin looked at him scornfully.
-
-“I am nobody,” she said. “I submit only to God and the saints of heaven.
-I do not recognize your right to rule, even though you take my life.
-Tell your brave soldiers to shoot.”
-
-Zorogoff laughed harshly.
-
-“You have the spirit of the devil, mistress.”
-
-“Speak of the devil and we see his tail,” retorted Katerin, using an old
-Russian proverb.
-
-“You are a brave woman,” repeated Zorogoff. “You have the blood of good
-ancestors—a fighting, ruling breed—as were mine.”
-
-“My ancestors have never feared death.”
-
-“Do you know that I am a prince in Mongolia?” asked Zorogoff tartly. He
-seemed nettled by Katerin’s way of looking at him, rather than by her
-scornful words.
-
-“I do not doubt it, sir. And you belong there.”
-
-“Ah! Is that true? Though your father is governor no longer, you still
-tell people where they belong. My people ruled this land before your
-people came, and once more we shall rule. But if you will give up your
-money to the government, in time you shall have it back. My soldiers
-need food and clothing. What is your answer, mistress?”
-
-A tremor of cold shook Katerin’s body. The air was stifling her, and she
-was chilled till she no longer felt pain.
-
-“Death!” she answered through quivering lips.
-
-Zorogoff turned to Shimilin.
-
-“The better the horse the worse his bite,” said the Ataman. “But once he
-is broken, you have a good horse. I do not want to kill a woman so brave
-as this one.” Turning to Katerin, he went on, “Your sons would know how
-to rule, mistress.”
-
-“I leave no sons,” she said, now too chilled to care or perceive what
-the Ataman’s meaning might be.
-
-“I was thinking of what your sons might be like,” went on Zorogoff. “Do
-not be too sure about sons.”
-
-Katerin gave a cry of agony. She knew now what Zorogoff meant—and she
-feared now that she might not die after all. She looked at Zorogoff, as
-he stood before her, peering into her face.
-
-“Kill me!” she cried, and then realizing that unless she angered him by
-insults, he might not give the order to the soldiers, she spoke with
-infinite loathing, loud enough so that the soldiers might hear. “You are
-a lowborn dog! Your mother was a scullion and your father a mover of
-dead bodies! You are neither Cossack nor Mongol, but vermin from mud
-huts and a disgrace to both white and yellow!”
-
-“Ah!” said Zorogoff. “Now I know that there is fear in you, and fear for
-what, my lady! You prefer the rifles to a palace. What if I should give
-you the fate you dislike?”
-
-“Go to the market place for your women, you swine!” cried Katerin.
-
-The Ataman stepped aside and beckoned Shimilin after him. “Let us see
-how brave she is,” whispered Zorogoff, and he made a gesture to the men
-with the rifles. The muzzles lifted promptly and the men took aim at
-Katerin.
-
-“I will show you who rules now,” called Zorogoff.
-
-“And I will show you how a woman of the nobility can die, lowborn one!”
-
-“Fire!” commanded Zorogoff, throwing up an arm in a gesture of command.
-
-But the rifles did not speak, though they remained leveled at Katerin.
-She began a prayer, gazing steadily into the muzzles which faced her,
-and waiting for the impact of the bullets.
-
-Seconds passed. They became minutes. Katerin closed her eyes against the
-cold. After a wait she opened her eyes again and eight rifles still
-pointed straight at her.
-
-“Shoot!” she pleaded. “Please shoot!”
-
-She closed her eyes once more. The minutes passed, and Katerin’s body
-wavered, swayed, and she collapsed in a faint across the fresh mound of
-earth.
-
-“Take her up and carry her into the house,” commanded the Ataman. “She
-is a brave woman—but stubborn. She shall submit.”
-
-The soldiers picked Katerin up and carried her through the hall to the
-kitchen. Wassili and the old serving woman began to scream, thinking
-that their mistress had been killed.
-
-Zorogoff and Shimilin walked out of the yard and into the street.
-Shimilin whistled on his fingers. Soon the troika of the Ataman swung
-out of a side street and the horses came galloping up. There were three
-men in the troika—two soldiers—and Michael.
-
-“Where is my daughter?” demanded the old general. “What have you done
-with her? Does she still live?”
-
-“You will find her inside the house,” said Shimilin. “She is not dead.”
-
-“God is good,” said Michael, at once careful of his words.
-
-“Go back to your house,” said Zorogoff, “and wait till I return.”
-
-“So?” asked Michael. “And why do you return?”
-
-“You shall know then. There has been too much talk to-day.”
-
-Michael got out of the troika and the Ataman got in with Shimilin.
-Already the soldiers were marching out from the yard, and swinging back
-into the city.
-
-“Take care that you do not leave the house,” warned Zorogoff, as Michael
-stood waiting for the soldiers to be clear of the gate. “I do not wish
-to have you and your daughter run the danger of being fired upon by the
-sentries. I wish you both to live as long as God lets you.”
-
-Michael, afraid that there was still a trap and that the Ataman had no
-intention of leaving, though he had been covered by the robes in the
-troika and had swathed his face and head in furs, did not dare turn his
-back upon the precious pair in the vehicle.
-
-“I thank you for your consideration,” said the old general. “I thought I
-was to die, but I still live and my daughter is safe.”
-
-Zorogoff leaned out and spoke earnestly. “If the cat wants a fish, let
-her wet her feet,” he said. And then added with taunting irony, “You are
-proud of your rank and your race, Michael Alexandrovitch—you and your
-daughter hold yourselves superior to a Mongol who is of the blood of
-rulers, and who rules. But I, too, have pride. You should know more of
-me and mine, and to that purpose you and your daughter shall live in my
-palace. I go to prepare for you, and you shall both live under my roof.”
-
-“What?” cried Michael. “That is a new string to the fiddle! Why should
-we live in your palace?”
-
-“So that I may take care of your health, Michael. And I shall need your
-advice in government.”
-
-“My advice in your government! You come with a firing squad to kill me
-and now you talk of taking me to your palace! Surely, this is a day of
-madness, and I do not understand!”
-
-“You will in time,” replied the Ataman. “You have a lesson to learn. It
-is that you must not hold yourselves superior to Mongol princes. For
-your grandchildren, Michael, are to be Mongols, and you and your
-daughter shall hold them in your arms. You both shall love them—though
-they be of Mongol blood.”
-
-Zorogoff spoke to the driver and the horses galloped away, leaving
-Michael cursing under his breath. Then he ran into the yard as fast as
-his cold-stiffened legs could carry him, and entered the house, calling
-for Katerin.
-
-Wassili burst through the door of the kitchen into the hall, and cried
-out in terror at sight of the master whom he supposed to be dead. The
-_moujik_ fell to his knees, crossing himself and making the sign to ward
-off devils.
-
-“Katerin! Katerin!” shouted Michael, as he saw the form of his daughter
-stretched upon an old bench that had been turned into a couch. The old
-serving woman was giving her mistress restoratives and attempting to
-warm her—but she fled, screaming, as Michael entered.
-
-Katerin opened her eyes and shivered violently. She stared at her
-father, who stood over her, and then closed her eyes again and began to
-cry. She supposed that she was delirious and that her father was not
-really there.
-
-“Have they tortured you?” cried Michael. “Oh, Katerin Stephanovna, you
-are spared to me—and I live! Look, my daughter!”
-
-He lifted her up from the bench and kissed her, crying to her again and
-again that he was not dead.
-
-“Oh, God! Thou art good!” she moaned, and then she was swept by sobs of
-joy and fell back upon the bench.
-
-Michael collapsed upon the floor, and when Wassili and the old woman
-overcame their fears and entered the kitchen again they found father and
-daughter crying quietly and clinging to each other consolingly.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- THE PRISON ON THE HILL
-
-
-PETER did not stop at the Hotel Dauria to see the room which a
-sleepy-eyed youth said might be had. There was a red-hot stove in the
-entrance-hall, a dirty stairway leading to an upper floor, a pair of
-stuffed bears standing among pots of rubber plants, and a few old
-benches on which in better days the droshky-drivers, the fur-hunters and
-the gossips of the city gathered of nights. The front windows were
-boarded up and the place still bore signs of the work of looters—leather
-hinges on the double doors, wall-paper ripped off in great gashes which
-exposed the rough plaster, and here and there the mark of a bayonet
-point or the pock marks of wild bullets.
-
-Peter simply dumped his baggage in the entrance-hallway and went out
-again to pay off the _iswostchik_. Where he went, Peter wanted no one
-watching, so he set out as if on a casual ramble through the almost
-deserted streets.
-
-He knew the way to the old prison. It would be up the Sofistkaya and
-over the little bridge which spanned the frozen stream running through
-the city. But it was not the same old wooden bridge which Peter expected
-to find. It proved to be a sturdy arch of concrete, level and wide.
-
-Some of the buildings near by had been half wrecked or burned. One big
-building was but a shell, a black ruin streaked with snow, with the
-windows out and the interior walls revealing old log pillars and a few
-crazy rafters. From a lower window there fluttered a bit of curtain,
-like a distress signal from an abandoned derelict. It was the old house
-of the governor—Kirsakoff.
-
-Peter lingered and studied this building. There were few people in the
-streets, and they paid no attention to him, for in his furs there was
-little about him to mark him as a foreign officer, or a soldier at all,
-for that matter, because he wore his pistol under his outer coat in such
-way that he could reach it through a pocket.
-
-Water-carts hauled by ponies passed, bringing water from the city wells.
-They were shrouded in ice. A few peasants were on their way to the
-station bazaar with bundles of vegetables or partridges. Chinese trotted
-about with packs on their backs, smugglers in sugar and tea, or traders
-in luxuries brought in by hand over the railroad—such luxuries as
-candles, buttons, cigarettes, and salt.
-
-Peter went on till he could see above him on the hill the yellow walls
-of the old stockade. He mounted the slope, but headed as if to pass the
-prison far below, and walking as if he had no other intention than to
-wander up the hill and look back upon the city. He stopped at times, and
-looked behind him.
-
-As he went up the slope he managed to draw in closer to the stockade.
-The old road had no tracks upon it, proof that the prison must be
-deserted. And, in fact, the city itself seemed to be deserted as he
-looked down into it from the upper land. Though smoke came from the
-chimneys, the people kept mostly indoors. There was an ominous hush in
-the air, as if the inhabitants were afraid to be seen. The forests gave
-off no sound of woodsmen or hunters. Away on the side of the plains
-toward Manchuria Peter could see groups of three and four horsemen on
-patrol. But the Valley of Despair seemed like a place in which a
-pestilence raged, so bare was it of living beings except around the
-station.
-
-“The place is accursed!” said Peter, as he stood and gazed out over the
-valley and the city. “After America, I know now what this all means. And
-there is something which has brought me back. My father, can it be you?
-Can you know? Have you guided me so that justice may be done? I pray
-that Kirsakoff be still alive!”
-
-And Peter did know the meaning of it all. Chita was a ghastly city built
-from the weeping of women and the curses of men doomed to chains and
-living deaths in dark cells. The very soil reeked with the blood of
-exiles.
-
-And Peter Gordon, the American, was once more Peter Petrovitch Gorekin,
-the Russian. During the three weeks that he had been on the train from
-Vladivostok, he had become more Russian every day. He knew now that the
-Russians were not free, though the throne had been overturned. There was
-still work to do.
-
-Peter went on, now straight for the entrance to the prison, where he
-found the heavy gate lying in the snow, torn from its iron hinges and
-covered with the dents of logs and rocks which had battered it down.
-
-He entered the prison yard. There were broken tables and piles of half
-burned records among charred logs. The sentry platforms had been dragged
-down from the inner wall and made a clutter of wrecked timbers. The
-little windows gaped open and the iron bars across them had been bent
-outward. Fine, hard snow covered the wreckage like a powder, gathered
-here and there in the cracks of the stone walks and in the holes where
-the flat stones had been ripped out and overturned.
-
-The place was without life. Yet it seemed to throb with life. Peter half
-expected to find people inside the long galleries of the prison
-buildings, though he knew that there could be no living person in such a
-place of horrors.
-
-The door opening to the inner guardroom was also down, a thing of planks
-strapped together with iron bars. It lay askew across the stone
-threshold, and Peter walked over its side. It gave out a dull, hollow
-sound, which set the echoes going through the long inner galleries of
-the cell-wings. A vile odor assailed him as he stepped inside, and he
-shivered.
-
-He knew this place well. There were broken desks here, and gun-racks on
-the walls had been ripped from their supports. It was here that he had
-been taken the morning after his father had been cut down by the Cossack
-before the post-house. And Peter saw again in his mind’s eye the
-commandant with the gold bars on his shoulders, he heard again the
-careless questions snapped at him. Then he saw himself, a terrified
-little boy, led down the long gallery and thrust into a dark cell.
-
-He pushed on now into the gallery with its battered cell doors lying
-half inside and half outside the cells, some swinging crazily on bent
-hinges, some partly burned and lying in bits of charred wood, others
-splintered and their fragments strewn along the stone-floored passage.
-
-His feet made dull echoes. There was a sound of frightened things
-scampering into dark holes before him. And to Peter it seemed that there
-were thousands of men in the place—men who peered out at him derisively
-and gave long hooting laughs at him.
-
-It was colder inside the prison than outside in the clean air—a dark,
-dank, penetrating cold combined with the sickly smell of an old cage in
-which frozen white shoots of growing vegetation killed and preserved by
-the cold glimmered uncannily in the rank air.
-
-He found the cell that had been his—sixth on the right side. The big
-door was swung inward. The stone benches inside were black and polished
-with years of dirt and years of being sat upon. The stained log walls
-were covered with thousands of marks which recorded days and years spent
-in the cell by exiles. Among these rows of time-keeping scratches were
-also etched words of hate and messages of comfort and the scribbled
-jeers of men who had made a jest of going from such a place to the
-execution yard.
-
-One line on the wall caught Peter’s eye under the searching beam of his
-pocket flash light. “God curse Kirsakoff,” Peter read. The letter had
-been formed by his own boyish fingers with a nail—fingers stiff with
-cold. He laughed at the sight of it now, and slapped the pistol on his
-hip under his greatcoat. His laugh came back to him multiplied a hundred
-times from the cells of the long galleries stretching away in the
-darkness. The echoes sounded like a scornful chorus from ghosts.
-
-He sat down on the stone bench and looked at the dirty hole in the door
-through which food had been passed in to him—black bread and greasy soup
-made from the refuse of cabbages. He sat there several minutes, and
-threw his memory back to the days and nights which he had spent there
-buried alive, doubting at times that he existed till food was brought
-and the rats gathered round him, squeaking for their share.
-
-Fear gripped him. He sprang up and ran, his boots making a clatter over
-the planks of the broken doors in the passage. He gained the prison yard
-and his whole body was laved in a sweat of agony. He got out into the
-open, and stopping an instant to scan the slopes below to see if he had
-been observed or followed, he turned away to the left to the fenced-in
-grove which was the old burial ground of the prison.
-
-It was in there that his father had been buried, but Peter did not know
-where. A few rotten boards lay upon the ground; a few weather-beaten
-crosses scored and twisted out of shape, littered the ground. Peter
-stood with tears in his eyes and looked over the rough ground.
-
-“Peter Petrovitch has come back, my father,” he said. And crossing
-himself, he said a prayer. Then he turned and descended the slopes
-toward the city, bearing off to the right and trying to make it appear
-to any watcher that he had been wandering about aimlessly. The thought
-struck him that he had been unwise in going to the prison. It might lead
-to gossip, especially when it became known in the city that he was an
-American. Why should an American officer go prowling about the old
-prison of a city which——
-
-Peter checked his thoughts in that direction. It seemed strange that he
-should refer to himself as an American. America was now very far away, a
-dim vista in his memory, hard to realize, like an old dream faintly
-remembered. It seemed odd that America had receded so far into the
-background of his mind. For was he not a Russian? Yes, he knew that he
-was Russian to the core. His Americanism had never been anything but an
-outer shell, a readjustment to new conditions, a learning of new things,
-and a new life. But he had not changed—only the clothes upon his back.
-True, he thought, the clothes would serve a purpose. Who would ever
-suspect that an American officer had come to Chita to do what he hoped
-to do? Who would ever suspect that the American lieutenant, Peter
-Gordon, could be Peter Petrovitch Gorekin, the son of an unfortunate?
-
-He entered the city again, this time far to the right of where he had
-gone up the slope, and rambled along the Sofistkaya till he came to the
-old post-house again—the restaurant. He went in, and found a few
-soldiers sitting about tables talking and playing games. He took a table
-to himself and when the gypsy girl came for his order, he called for
-vodka. He was chilled by his walk on the hill and his spirits were
-depressed by the prison. The liquor warmed him.
-
-The restaurant was a dirty place. The old plank floors were spotted with
-mud where the ice-balls from the heels of patrons had melted, and the
-blackened log rafters were cobwebby and sooty. There was an ancient icon
-in the corner. The walls had been partly stripped of a moldy old paper
-so that the yellow plaster showed through the gashes. And here, as in
-the hotel, there were bullet craters.
-
-Peter finished his glass of vodka and went out again. He hurried back
-toward the hotel, but he had not gone far when he espied in between two
-modern buildings and well back from the street, an old hut—an _isba_ of
-the old days. He stopped in his tracks and stared at it. The building
-was not more than eight feet square, of single story, with a small
-window under the eaves. There was a rude chimney of stones at one end. A
-sign over the door told that cigarettes, matches, and holy cards were
-sold within.
-
-Peter went in between the two buildings and pushed open the low and
-sagging door of the hut. There was an old man sitting on a bench under
-the window with a newspaper—a thin old hulk of a graybeard with a face
-shrouded in white whiskers that were stained yellow about his hidden
-mouth. He wore a tiny black skullcap on his head which brought out the
-bleached whiteness of his whiskers and the pallor of his crinkled
-forehead. His hands were tucked in the sleeves of his ragged old coat,
-and he huddled up toward the smoldering fire in the ancient fire-pit.
-
-Startled by Peter’s entrance, the old man thrust the newspaper behind
-him quickly. As he got to his feet he kicked the paper out of sight
-behind a box. He stood looking at Peter with questioning eyes, knowing
-that there was something strange about the visitor but not being able to
-tell what in the vague light coming through the frosted window.
-
-“Do you sell cigarettes here?” asked Peter.
-
-“Yes, I sell cigarettes here,” croaked the graybeard. “Is it that you
-have come for cigarettes to this poor place—you, who are dressed in odd
-clothes?”
-
-“What else should I come for?” asked Peter pleasantly. “Do you think I
-have come to rob you?”
-
-The old one appeared relieved, but he was still on his guard.
-
-“We never know what a man comes for these days. And you are not a man of
-Chita, I can tell that.”
-
-“What does it matter where I came from, if I pay for what I take? Come!
-Let me see some cigarettes!”
-
-The graybeard grunted and shuffled across the room to a shelf and took
-down some packets of tin covered with a faded paper.
-
-Peter looked the room over. It was hard to believe that this tiny hut
-was the place in which he had worked with his father. In his memory it
-had taken on vaster proportions, yet in reality it was but a boxlike
-hovel. There was the same old adz-hewn plank bench well polished by
-years of use; the floor near the fire-pit had the very depressions worn
-into the wood by the legs of his father’s stitching-frame. And the same
-stone in the chimney on which his father had whetted the leather-knives!
-By that fire-pit Peter had spent many nights studying out Russian
-letters and words in battered almanacs. The place still smelled of
-leather—or Peter fancied it did.
-
-“Here are cigarettes of the best quality from Harbin, _gospodeen_,” said
-the old man, proffering a long tin box. “I keep them for such as are of
-the upper class. I must pay grease to Chinese for bringing these
-cigarettes in, and if you buy, you will be back for more—and twenty
-rubles for the box.”
-
-Peter sat down on the bench and pretended to examine the packet of
-cigarettes. But he was really looking at the little battered samovar on
-the little wooden table. Beside the samovar was a blackened piece of tin
-which was used to transfer hot coals from the fire-pit to the samovar.
-And the rude shelves with their packages of “Moscow biscuits,” matches,
-cigarettes, and holy cards for the holidays and the name days of
-children drew Peter’s eyes. The stock in trade was smoke-blackened and
-fly-specked by countless summers and winters. And the room reeked with
-smoke, which made the old man’s eyes red and watery.
-
-Peter saw that the cigarettes were of the cheapest grade.
-
-“Why do you double the price because I am a stranger?” asked Peter. “You
-know that half a ruble would buy these in the old days, and now with the
-money bad, ten is enough for them?”
-
-“God protect us! You speak the Czar’s Russian, though you wear a foreign
-coat! Have you come here to buy from me, or to find who is smuggling?
-There is no duty now, true, but I have to pay grease, as I said. I would
-say the same to the Ataman himself.”
-
-“But I know something about the price of cigarettes,” said Peter. He was
-willing enough to pay the price but he knew that reluctance would draw
-the old man out, and that an argument would probably develop an
-acquaintance which might be useful.
-
-“But the troubles have come and that makes the price high,” whined the
-old man. “Am I to starve among my cigarettes? There are few enough to
-buy these days, I tell you.”
-
-“I will pay, but you are an old robber,” said Peter, going into his
-pockets and fetching out two ten-ruble notes of Imperial money. The old
-man’s eyes danced, for he knew Imperials to be worth twice again the new
-paper money on which his prices were based.
-
-“Did you come here for a _ruganie_?” demanded the old man, meaning a
-mutual slandering of each other in Russian in which both parties to the
-argument call names of an import so evil as to chill the marrows of
-respectable listeners. “And you! You look like a gentleman. From what
-place have you come?”
-
-“From the place I go back to. Have you been in Chita long, little
-grandfather?”
-
-“I?” asked the old man, stroking his whiskers. “Yes. What does it
-matter? I shall be here all time. See the hills outside? My bones shall
-build them higher,” and he broke out into a cackling laugh as if the
-joke were one that he used often and still liked its flavor.
-
-“You were here in the old days?” pressed Peter.
-
-The old one gave Peter a keen look, and sat down on the end of the
-bench, hiding the precious ten-ruble notes away somewhere under his
-arms.
-
-“I? Why not?”
-
-“You were here when the prison was full of unfortunates?”
-
-“I was here when it was emptied, too,” and he laughed again and bent to
-poke the fire with an old cane. But he was getting cautious again, as if
-he suspected that there might be more behind the twenty rubles than he
-had bargained for.
-
-“What happened when the prison was emptied? It must have been a joyful
-time.”
-
-Graybeard made a noise in his throat which might have been a chuckle,
-and turning from the fire stood up and straightened his back, to gaze
-frankly at Peter as if to ask why so many questions were being asked. It
-was plain that he disapproved of giving gossip extra with what he sold.
-
-“You should have been here if you wanted to know,” he said.
-
-“I suppose they killed the soldiers,” went on Peter.
-
-“No, the unfortunates did not kill the soldiers—except, perhaps, the bad
-soldiers who had been cruel. Were not the soldiers made free also by
-revolution? As well as the unfortunates?”
-
-“True,” assented Peter. “But the officers? Many of the officers were
-killed, eh?”
-
-“The square down there by the station,” and graybeard threw out his arm
-and his eyes took on a reminiscent look, “the square is full of dead
-folks—old and young, officers and all, rich and poor, high and low,
-witches and holy men. But the unfortunates did not harm me. I am Rimsky
-and the friend of all, though many were drunk and did not know who were
-friends. But I got into a potato-cellar till the worst was over, though
-I was stiff in the legs a good month after. But I was out in time to see
-them all go off to Petersburg to kill the Little Father, the fools!”
-
-“Would you have the Czar back? Is that what you mean?” asked Peter.
-
-“I? Why do you ask me that? Is it not enough to know that in the old
-days there was peace—and that I would have peace in which to die. Should
-not a man have peace in which to meet the dead? That is all I ask you.”
-
-“But are not the new times better than the old?” asked Peter. “Would you
-have the old times back—and the prison on the hill full of people?”
-
-Rimsky lighted the fragment of an old cigarette and smoked a minute
-before he replied, pulling at his whiskers.
-
-“New times, new troubles,” he said with tired voice. “We knew in the old
-times what to do to be happy, and likewise what not to do. It was all
-put down plain in the laws and the rules of the governors. Those who
-wanted better government did not know that bad government is better than
-none. Now it is all fighting, and no man trusts another. But I am not
-afraid, for my life is behind me. Now, when the railroad came here, it
-was said that everybody would be rich and happy. Before then we had only
-the mail-sledges, with their bells and horses. The people were happy
-enough, but for these educated fools always talking about what should be
-done with government and getting themselves and poor people into
-trouble. Now what do we have? All night an accursed ringing of railroad
-bells and screeching whistles till a man wakes in his bed, thinking the
-devil is calling. And people and cows get killed by the railroad—and mad
-soldiers come to kill and burn honest people. Is that good? Who is made
-rich thereby, and who is made happy?”
-
-“Then you think you would be happier if the Czar were back,” suggested
-Peter.
-
-“Is that what you have come to ask me?” demanded Rimsky, giving Peter a
-shrewd look. “Is it that you are counting those who want the Czar back?”
-
-“No, no,” said Peter. “I have nothing to do with the government. I will
-not say to any one what you say.”
-
-“I cannot be too sure of that,” said Rimsky, and blew the smoke from his
-cigarette upward. “But when the Czar ruled, I had a watch.”
-
-“Do you want a Czar back?” asked Peter.
-
-“_Tchuk!_” cried Rimsky. “The Czar is in a well, they tell me. But how
-do I know what to believe? First it is one lie, and then another, till
-our heads whirl and we get drunk to forget so much talk about nothing.
-How do I know but that the Czar is on his throne and eating fish-pie for
-his dinner?”
-
-“But suppose a new Czar should come to the throne?”
-
-“Ah, now you are trying to have me talk politics and get into prison. It
-does not matter. I want only a fire, my tea, a good soup with meat and
-bones in it, and a pair of boots—and men who can be trusted, even if
-they be Czar’s governors and cruel. Who is a man to appeal to now if he
-is robbed, as was I last month? In the old days robbers were hanged, and
-it taught them something, too.”
-
-“But you are speaking of Chita, of course. You had no complaint here,
-for you had a good Governor.”
-
-Rimsky went to the samovar and took off the little teapot, shook it with
-a circular motion, filled it with hot water and poured a glass made from
-the bottom of a bottle full of tea for Peter.
-
-“You talk too much for a stranger,” said Rimsky. “What do you know about
-our Governor? Is this the first time you have been in Siberia, young
-man?”
-
-“Of course,” said Peter, taking the tea. “But I have heard about Chita
-before.”
-
-“You may know more than you want to know about it before you get out,”
-warned Rimsky. “Are you going to stay long—and buy more of my
-cigarettes?”
-
-“I’ll be here a few weeks, I suppose. I came to see if I could buy some
-furs.”
-
-“Oh, but you are a soldier,” said Rimsky. “And you will find no furs
-that are good. Everybody is hunting men these days,” and he broke out
-again in his cackling laugh, as he drew himself some tea in a little
-yellow bowl.
-
-“Did the unfortunates kill the Governor who was here when they got out
-of the prison and freedom came to the people?”
-
-“Did they?” asked Rimsky. “You tell me.”
-
-“But you were here, and you know. I was not here,” said Peter.
-
-Rimsky shrugged his shoulders and sucked his tea from the bowl.
-
-“The _provodnik_ on the train told me that the soldiers killed the
-Governor here. What was the name? Kir—— well, I can’t remember.”
-
-“Those fellows on the trains do a lot of talking,” said Rimsky. “They
-are know-it-alls, and all they do is take grease from people who want to
-have food sent up to us.”
-
-“I’m afraid they don’t tell the truth,” said Peter.
-
-“So they told you the soldiers killed Kirsakoff, did they? But Kirsakoff
-was not the Governor. You see that they lied.”
-
-“Perhaps they did not say he was Governor when he was killed. But they
-said he had been a Governor in the old days.”
-
-“If Kirsakoff had been killed, I would know it,” said Rimsky.
-
-“True,” agreed Peter. “I thought the _provodnik_ was talking to make
-wind and a big man of himself. I knew he was lying.”
-
-“How did you know that?”
-
-“I guessed it. Now that you say Kirsakoff was not killed, I know it was
-a lie. Just big talk.”
-
-“Why should anybody kill Kirsakoff?” demanded Rimsky.
-
-“That is what I should like to know. Everybody said he was a good man,
-but perhaps some people did not like him—people in the prison, of
-course, who were against the government.”
-
-“General Kirsakoff had been retired when the troubles came,” said
-Rimsky. “More than seven years ago he was retired. I remembered well the
-time—I had a sore foot.”
-
-“Was he gone from Chita when the troubles came?”
-
-“No, he was here,” said Rimsky, looking straight at Peter.
-
-“Ah!” said Peter. “So the _provodnik_ lied when he said Kirsakoff was
-dead. He is still here.”
-
-“What does it matter where he is?” asked Rimsky.
-
-“It does not matter,” said Peter, and set the glass on the table,
-buttoning his coat about his neck in preparation for leaving.
-
-“I hear much gossip in this place,” said Rimsky. “Where do you live in
-the city?”
-
-“Thank you for the tea,” said Peter. “It is cold outside. I may want
-some more cigarettes—at twenty rubles a box.”
-
-“I hear many matters spoken of here,” hinted Rimsky with confidential
-air. “About where governors are and such talk.”
-
-“Is Zorogoff a good man?” asked Peter.
-
-“It is a very cold day outside, true,” said Rimsky. “But this is a good
-place to hear gossip.”
-
-“I care nothing for gossip. But I can see that you live on it, as an old
-gander lives on snails,” said Peter laughingly. “I am going to the
-Dauria—I am an American officer. But see that you do not gossip about
-me, old fellow.”
-
-Rimsky wagged his old head and cackled wisely.
-
-“A tight lip fools the devil,” warned Peter. “If you talk I’ll tell
-Zorogoff you charged me double for cigarettes. But I’ll come in and see
-you some day, and bring a bottle of vodka.”
-
-“Then God guard you till you return!” cried Rimsky, and Peter went out
-through the door of the hut.
-
-Rimsky sat chuckling into his beard after Peter had departed. And more
-than once the old cigarette-seller told himself, “The sturgeon does not
-become a sterlet because he leaves the river for the lake, and the
-Russian does not become a foreigner by changing his coat.” That was a
-saying of wise men.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- OLD RIMSKY THINKS
-
-
-OLD Rimsky had a wise head. Many people were afraid of him and said that
-he talked with witches and had charms against evil—and he did sell
-charms against sickness, bad luck and poor crops. Besides, he had the
-reputation of knowing many things before they happened. But he was
-merely a wise old owl with the keen perception of human motives which is
-sometimes given to the unlettered man, though he could read well enough
-to get the meanings out of newspapers if there were not too many words
-in the articles invented by aristocrats to fool the poor people.
-
-He spent the remainder of the day thinking about the Russian in the
-American coat who paid double for cigarettes and took a profit in
-getting answers to questions. He had watched Peter closely, and turned
-the whole matter over mentally, sitting by his fire and drinking tea.
-
-Rimsky decided that he had not been clever enough with the stranger. It
-was plain enough now that the stranger had come to learn something about
-Michael Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff who had been Governor. And the stranger
-did not know where Michael was to be found. In some way the business
-could be turned to profit and over many glasses of smoky tea Rimsky
-evolved a plan by which he could put money in his purse.
-
-There was an old pig-killing _moujik_ named Ilya Andreitch who slept in
-the basement of a bakery on a street up near the bazaar. Ilya had worked
-for Kirsakoff years before, and should know where the general lived if
-anybody did. As for that, Rimsky now remembered that Ilya had once
-boasted that he knew where Kirsakoff lived since the troubles came and
-all the rich people were in hiding.
-
-But there might be little in the boast, for Ilya was an old fool who was
-always pretending to know things. But for all his outward stupidity,
-Ilya was a sly rascal. His father had been sent into exile for taking
-money from revolutionists in Moscow by pretending to have knowledge of
-what the secret police were going to do—who was going to be arrested,
-and so on.
-
-It happened that Rimsky had Ilya pretty much under the thumb, as the
-saying is. For Ilya had once fed the pigs of a watch-fixer in the city,
-and had stolen from his employer a whole handful of silver holy medals.
-Rimsky had bought them from Ilya for a tenth of their value. Out of
-appreciation for buying them, Ilya had spent all the money he got on
-vodka with Rimsky. The vodka had been stolen by a waiter in a restaurant
-owned by a Greek, and at half price sold it to Ilya, which was quite all
-right, for everybody stole from foreigners if they could. The thing for
-the foreigners to do is to stay at home and not go about selling food
-and drink at prices too high.
-
-Rimsky knew that he might be able to induce Ilya to tell where Kirsakoff
-was living. That might mean double money for Rimsky. Kirsakoff would no
-doubt pay well to know that an American was seeking him, and the
-American would probably pay well to know where Kirsakoff might be found.
-It was only a matter of handling them properly.
-
-And by delaying the information sought by both Kirsakoff and the man who
-called himself an American, a pretty penny might be realized. It was by
-such smart methods, Rimsky felt sure, that rich folks got rich. And by
-getting rich, they made poor folks poorer. Being rich was all simple
-enough, for there was only so much money in the world, and the trick was
-to get a lot of it by being smarter than other folks. There being many
-fools, the problem was easy enough. Rimsky knew that the Jews got rich
-by being able to figure interest on money, and by selling only when
-people wanted to buy and buying only when people wanted to sell.
-
-So he contrived a plan by which Ilya was to supply the information for
-little or nothing, and Rimsky was to sell it for a bundle of rubles. It
-would not do to tell Ilya what was wanted. It would be best to loosen
-his tongue with vodka, and then accuse him of having lied when he had
-said he knew where Kirsakoff was living. That method would get Ilya to
-boasting and he would pop it all out. It could all be passed off as
-drinking talk, and if Ilya insisted on keeping his secret, it would be
-easy enough to turn the talk to holy medals. That would make Ilya see
-the honey pot, as the saying is; then he would get Ilya so drunk that he
-would forget all that had been said.
-
-So when the lights began to appear in the shops across the Sofistkaya,
-Rimsky put up his own shutters over the window and wandered toward the
-bazaar to look in at the bakery where Ilya might be found.
-
-It was quite dark when Rimsky reached the courtyard in rear of the
-building of the bakery. There was a shaft of flickering light dancing
-out from a partly open door, and the yard was filled with the comforting
-odor of burning dough. Rimsky planned to ask the bakers first for a man
-who once hauled wood for them—a peasant dead several months before. That
-would be excuse enough for coming, and talk could be made till it was
-time to ask casually for Ilya. That would throw sand in Ilya’s eyes as
-to why Rimsky appeared at the bakery.
-
-The old cigarette-seller prowled in through the door and stumbled over
-loose wood in the hall till he came to the great room where the bakers
-were working. A big man, bare to the waist, was drawing huge loaves from
-the stone stove with a wooden shovel. His damp skin shone in the dancing
-light. A group of men and women was sitting on benches in the dark side
-of the room about a samovar. A ball of dough was smoking on an iron
-sheet laid on the shoulder of the stove.
-
-There had been the murmur of voices till Rimsky stood framed in the
-doorway of the room, looking in. When he appeared there was a sudden
-hush and silence, except for the grating of the wooden shovel as it drew
-out the steaming loaves and the cracking of the fire in the fire-pit.
-
-“God’s blessing on those who labor for us,” said Rimsky, crossing
-himself.
-
-Some one gave a muttered reply. The man drawing the loaves turned and
-peered at Rimsky and then went on deftly pulling out the bread,
-puckering his face against the heat.
-
-A man came clumping down the hall and fell over the wood. Rimsky stood
-aside from the door, and the light from the fire revealed the man with a
-face shrouded by long and unkempt whiskers, and on his head a sheepskin
-cap black with dirt. He wore a ragged old coat with a rope turned round
-his middle several times as a belt.
-
-“So this is my old friend, Ilya Andreitch!” exclaimed Rimsky. “It is
-long since I have seen you. Perhaps you can tell me of the friend I am
-looking for.”
-
-Ilya ogled him suspiciously.
-
-“What has gone wrong that you should be here?” he growled. He had a
-healthy fear of Rimsky and wanted to forget the business of the holy
-medals.
-
-“Can you tell me where I can find Vanusha?”
-
-“You are chasing ghosts,” grumbled Ilya, crossing himself at mention of
-a dead man. “That man is dead. Or is it that you are looking for souls
-for the devil?”
-
-“Dead!” exclaimed Rimsky. “Now that is a pity. I came to get a drinking
-friend, but now I shall have to go and have a glass of vodka by myself
-in his memory. He owed me two rubles but he was a good man, I can say
-that for him.”
-
-“Better than I can say for you,” Ilya called out into the dark yard
-after Rimsky, who had retreated abruptly from the hall. “He never drank
-his vodka alone, for one thing, like others I know, and they not far
-off. He was civil to his friends, I can say that—and when you are dead
-you had better take care that folks say the same of you.”
-
-“Then you didn’t learn your manners from him,” retorted Rimsky, stopping
-in the court. “You swing your tongue too much for an honest man—or to
-have it wet with vodka. When I drink I wish to be merry.”
-
-“You are an old wolf with the fleas!” called Ilya.
-
-Rimsky laughed at him.
-
-“May you die blind!” bawled Ilya.
-
-“Oh, come and warm your belly with a sup of vodka,” said Rimsky, “unless
-you think that if you turned good-natured you would come down with a
-distemper.”
-
-Ilya ran after him and the pair walked down to the little restaurant
-kept by a one-eared gypsy from Bessarabia where in the old days the
-thieves gathered to dispose of their loot to Chinese.
-
-There were but a few people inside the place. A Buriat, who had probably
-sold some cattle, was lying across a table in a drunken stupor, his
-purple conical cap on the floor under his feet. A crippled beggar was
-drinking soup from a bowl with a wooden ladle, and a Chinese peddler of
-charms was gambling in a corner with a Mongol holy man.
-
-Rimsky led the way to a table distant from the others and called for the
-serving girl. He was in good humor and ordered a whole bottle of vodka,
-swearing that he would take only the best and would break the tax seal
-with his own fingers.
-
-“Something has turned your way, you old shark!” said Ilya. “Or perhaps
-this is your name day.”
-
-“No, it is that I am getting old and may as well spend my money before
-it falls into the hands of robbers,” said Rimsky. “Soon I shall go to
-meet the dead. I pick up a few rubles a day. What is the use of keeping
-them these days? I want to spend them with my friends, and you are a
-good fellow and a great joker, Ilya Andreitch.”
-
-“True, I can make jokes if I have the wine,” said Ilya, and hastened to
-take a swig from the first glass poured.
-
-They proceeded to talk of nothings, and finished the bottle.
-
-“Fetch another!” Rimsky called to the girl, “and I’ll drink a health to
-the rings in your ears, my damsel. When you were—what am I saying?—when
-I was younger you would not have escaped without a kiss.”
-
-“You had better be putting your grandchildren to bed,” retorted the
-girl, but she brought the bottle.
-
-Ilya was suddenly filled with a desire to be modest in his drinking. He
-felt it would not be wise to abuse such a show of hospitality on the
-part of Rimsky. And the _moujik’s_ crafty brain suspected that there was
-a purpose behind Rimsky’s unlimited generosity. Folks were not so
-free-handed without having good cause, he reasoned. So for every full
-glass that Rimsky drank, Ilya managed to dispose of but half a glass. He
-had a notion that if he could get Rimsky drunk there might be part of a
-bottle left which could be made away with and the joyous occasion could
-be carried on alone into the night and perhaps the following day. Also,
-he took good care that Rimsky always paid in advance by making a joke
-with the gypsy girl that Rimsky had no more money. Rimsky’s generosity
-made Ilya suspicious.
-
-“Pooh! Money!” said Rimsky, when the third bottle was brought. “I have
-enough money to buy all the vodka in the city.”
-
-“That’s the vodka talking,” sneered Ilya. “I feel as if I could buy a
-farm, but it would be another matter for me to find the money. That is
-the way with you.”
-
-“Don’t go on so with big talk,” warned Rimsky, “or I will begin to talk
-of the holy medals.”
-
-“Talk and the devil take you!” cried Ilya, thumping the bottle down on
-the table angrily. “If you do I’ll go my way and wish a curse on you!”
-
-“Sit still!” commanded Rimsky. “I’ve money enough, I tell you. If not, I
-can go and borrow from my rich friends.”
-
-Ilya laughed so loudly at this that he disturbed the drunken Buriat, who
-lifted his black head from the table and glared about the room. He
-looked like a mandarin, with his long thin drooping mustaches.
-
-“But I tell you I have rich friends,” insisted Rimsky. “I could go now
-and get a hundred rubles if I needed them—yes, twenty and a hundred and
-no interest. Kirsakoff would let me have them, and no questions asked,
-and nothing about when they should be paid back.”
-
-“What!” exclaimed Ilya, staring at Rimsky. “You say the old Governor
-would lend you twenty and a hundred rubles! _Tfu!_ That’s crazy talk!”
-
-“Yes! You think I don’t know the old Governor, eh! Well, Kirsakoff is a
-friend of mine, you had better know that.”
-
-“Pooh!” snorted Ilya. “You are an old mud-head! You don’t even know
-where the old Governor lives in the city, and you sit there telling to
-me that he is your friend! Oh, ho, ho!”
-
-“Perhaps you think you are the only one who knows where Kirsakoff lives?
-You are a fool who thinks he is wise, and that’s the worst fool of all.”
-
-Ilya was cautious at once. He gave Rimsky a careful look, but Rimsky
-paid no attention to the look.
-
-“Who told you I said I knew where Kirsakoff lived?” demanded Ilya.
-
-“You said it yourself. I heard you say it last Butter Week in the
-bazaar. You were drunk and you went boasting about to the old man from
-Pischenko with the red boots. I heard you say it, Ilya Andreitch.”
-
-Ilya ruffled his brow and tried to remember when he had been talking to
-a man with red boots from Pischenko. He knew no one in that town who had
-red boots—unless it was the butcher’s assistant who married the
-cake-maker.
-
-“True,” said Ilya. “I might have known then where Kirsakoff lived. I
-don’t deny it. Perhaps I was drunk Butter Week. It wasn’t my fault if I
-was sober. But that was a long time ago as time runs now—and I don’t
-know where Kirsakoff lives now. And if I did, I wouldn’t tell you.”
-
-Rimsky laughed good-naturedly. “Let us have another drink. You are a
-good fellow. Of course you do not know where Michael Alexandrovitch
-lives. If you did, you could have money, as I have. It is worth money to
-know where the old Governor lives.”
-
-Ilya saw that Rimsky was getting very drunk and seeking an argument.
-
-“If you knew where Kirsakoff lived, who would pay?” asked Ilya, becoming
-greedy at the mention of money.
-
-“Who? There are many. That is something I do not want to talk about,
-Ilya. Hold your tongue,” and Rimsky picked up his glass and filled it
-again.
-
-Ilya drank with sad mien, turning over in his mind Rimsky’s statement
-that it was worth money to know where Kirsakoff lived. If that were
-true, Ilya argued to himself, he should have the money, for he knew
-where Kirsakoff lived with his daughter in an old log house in the
-outskirts of the city.
-
-“I don’t intend to hold my tongue,” Ilya announced. “What I want to know
-is who would pay money to know where Kirsakoff lives!”
-
-Rimsky was startled by the suddenness and vigor with which Ilya had put
-the matter before him. And Ilya leaned across the table, with a big and
-dirty fist thrust forward.
-
-“Who?” asked Rimsky. “Why do you ask me that? What is there to fight
-over? We are good friends—we are—you are friend to me, or——”
-
-Rimsky swayed in his chair and could not finish. He made an effort to
-rally his drugged brain, but slipped deeper into the chair and his eyes
-closed on him despite all he could do to keep them open. His right arm
-flopped across the table limply, as useless as a dead seal’s flipper.
-
-“Everybody knows where Michael Kirsakoff lives,” went on Ilya. “Why
-should any one pay money for what every one knows. That knowledge is not
-worth a beggar’s kopeck.” Ilya lied, but he sought to learn all he could
-before Rimsky got too deep into drunken slumber.
-
-“True,” muttered the befuddled Rimsky. “You talk true talk, Ilya
-Andreitch. But why do you fight with me when I can’t see? What did I
-say?”
-
-“You talked about there being money in knowing where Kirsakoff lived,”
-accused Ilya.
-
-Rimsky tried to remember why he had said any such thing. The matter must
-be as Ilya said—no one would give a beggar’s kopeck to know where
-Kirsakoff lived. For that matter, Rimsky cared about nothing. The world
-was a very pleasant place for all people said about bad times. He could
-feel himself slipping away into a delicious unconsciousness, and he
-talked aloud the thoughts which crossed his mind.
-
-“There is something wrong about this,” he confided to himself, unaware
-that Ilya could hear what was said. Then he went on, head on chest, and
-almost under the table, muttering into his whiskers.
-
-“The American officer—no, a Russian—well, the American officer—he wants
-to know where Michael lives. And he—will pay well. Didn’t he come to my
-place asking about the old Governor? And where did he go? Yes, the
-Dauria, I remember, even if I am drunk—to the Dauria, where the
-Bolsheviki smashed all the windows. I know. I remember the time my
-father’s cow fell in the river. Was Ilya there? No. How could Ilya be
-there—I am dreaming now. Let us all—be merry, for this is Carnival. Am I
-not a young man? That is right—dance—dance——”
-
-Rimsky began to snore softly. The gypsy girl came and grinned at Ilya,
-who reached out unsteadily and plucked the flame from the candle.
-
-“Let him sleep,” said Ilya to the girl. “He is a good fellow,” and
-putting the cork back into the vodka-bottle which was half full by the
-best of good luck, he slipped it into his pocket, pulled his ragged old
-coat about his shoulders and tightened the rope belt. Then he slipped
-out of the restaurant, chuckling at his cleverness at putting Rimsky
-under the table and learning something which might put money into his
-own purse. Besides, he had the half-bottle of vodka.
-
-He made up his mind to go at once to the house of Michael Alexandrovitch
-Kirsakoff and sell the news he had heard—an American officer was at the
-Hotel Dauria and wanted to find the old Governor. Perhaps Michael would
-give five rubles for that news—if not five, then four, anyhow, a piece
-of boiled partridge. But Ilya decided that he would do his best to get
-five rubles. Michael Kirsakoff had plenty of money, and who was he
-anyway?—once a Governor, true, but no better now than Ilya Andreitch.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- PETER LAYS HIS PLANS
-
-
-PETER went back to the Hotel Dauria after his talk with Rimsky. The
-sleepy-eyed youth who had promised a room, carried Peter’s baggage to
-the upper floor, where Peter signed the register in a cage-like little
-office.
-
-Then they went on down a hall past a dining room which was deserted.
-Peter looked in. It was filled with battered tables, tubbed rubber
-plants in the window sills, and crazy chairs which had been used in
-defense and had legs in splints.
-
-The walls had been stripped of paper. The mirrors of the buffet-counter
-at one end of the room had been smashed out and triangles of broken
-glass still stuck in the frames. The curtains had been pulled from the
-poles over the windows and the doors. Painted decorations on the
-wainscoting had been smeared with the contents of catsup and vinegar
-bottles, which had burst against the walls like star shells and the
-acids had discolored the pictures of the crude drawings so that the wall
-was spotted and leprous-looking.
-
-Peter was taken to a large room at the end of the hall. It had three
-double windows overlooking the end of a side street that ran into the
-Sofistkaya, with a view of the latter. He could see the old post-house
-and the roof of Rimsky’s hut sticking up between two higher buildings.
-
-There was an iron bed without bedding. There was a standing screen in
-front of it. The chairs had been broken but were repaired. There were
-slashes in the woodwork about the door where bayonets had evidently been
-thrust at former guests. And some of the guests had fared badly, judging
-by the dark stains on the old oilcloth which covered the floor.
-
-The plaster of the walls was pitted with bullet-holes, especially
-opposite the windows, and the panes of glass were newly puttied and
-still marked with the thumb-prints of the workmen.
-
-“Can I have my meals served in the room?” asked Peter. The youth yawned.
-
-“Yes. If you pay extra. Ring this bell three times for the samovar
-girl,” and he pointed to a button in the wall near the door, and the
-youth departed, as if afraid that he would be asked to do something.
-
-There was an electric drop lamp on a writing table, and running water in
-a little sink against the wall behind the screen. There was a tall
-wardrobe set against a second door which evidently led to another room.
-
-It was hard for Peter to realize that Chita could be so modern. And the
-room, poor as it was, seemed like a palace to Peter. His mind had been
-readjusted to the things he had known as a boy by his visit to Rimsky.
-Peter Petrovitch Gorekin would have thought himself a king to have a
-room like this one in which Peter Gordon was to live.
-
-But there was no Peter Gordon now. Peter Gorekin was back in Chita. The
-scene which opened to him from the windows had been for twenty years in
-the back of his brain. The little hut, the post-house, the Sofistkaya!
-He found it hard to believe that he had ever been away from Chita at
-all.
-
-He sat down by the window. The mild heat from the radiator had thawed
-away most of the frost in the panes and he looked out over the city.
-Things that had been but memories were now real, truly existing before
-his eyes in spite of his years of trying to blur their images out of his
-mind.
-
-The old superstitions of peasants and exiles which he had learned in his
-father’s hut as a boy returned to his mind—tales of werewolves who took
-the shapes of men for diabolical purposes. Was there not something in it
-all? Was not he himself something like a werewolf? Was he not a Russian
-in an American coat? Michael Kirsakoff would never suspect an American
-officer of being the son of a dead exile. Nor would Kirsakoff suspect an
-American officer of being the same poor boy who had been thrown into
-prison for a whim—now come for vengeance.
-
-The mysticism inherent in his race, the queer inarticulate yearnings and
-the dissatisfactions of the Slavic soul, came to the surface in Peter’s
-consciousness. But now he had knowledge of things, and power, and the
-means of carrying out his own ends. He would play the game carefully to
-an end in Chita, and then go on to Irkutsk without any one’s suspecting
-that the American officer had killed Kirsakoff.
-
-He began to think of his return to Chita as a holy mission. Affairs had
-turned out well for him from the first. He had managed to get to Siberia
-instead of going to France. He had managed to get himself ordered to
-Irkutsk, and had slipped away from his Russian orderly with no one the
-wiser that Peter Gordon was really a Russian. And there was every
-evidence that Kirsakoff was still alive and that he was still in Chita.
-The reticence of Rimsky in discussing Kirsakoff was proof enough to
-Peter that the former Governor might be found somewhere in the Valley of
-Despair.
-
-He took off his tunic and rang for a samovar. A slattern of a girl,
-dirty and unkempt, came trembling to the door to ask what was wanted.
-She was not more than fifteen—round-cheeked, with scared blue eyes, and
-brown hair down her back. She was wearing men’s cast-off old shoes.
-Peter looked at her with pity.
-
-“Will you bring me some spice-cakes and a samovar?” he asked gently.
-
-“Yes, master,” she said, and turned to escape.
-
-“Don’t be frightened,” said Peter. “I am an American.”
-
-“Yes, master,” she repeated. But she had no comprehension of what he had
-said.
-
-“Here are five rubles for you,” said Peter, holding out the note to her.
-
-But she fled through the door as he moved toward her.
-
-“The same old system working,” thought Peter, as he watched the poor
-girl running down the hall. “The poor people frightened out of their
-wits by the ruling class! Damn such a country!”
-
-He closed the door. He realized now that oppression was not dead in the
-country. His years in America had dimmed his memories of such scenes. He
-had begun to think that the revolution had bettered conditions for the
-people, that in the twenty years since he was a boy in Siberia there had
-been improvement.
-
-The old rage began to grow in him again. He lusted to kill. He wanted to
-help the people, aside from his own blood vengeance. He wondered if his
-dead father had not been able to help in having the son return to Chita.
-His return might be in the nature of a destiny which it would be sinful
-to avoid, even divine in its workings. It was all as if some controlling
-star had put power into his hands, and had swung him back to the land of
-his boyhood. It would be impossible to go against fate. He felt that no
-man could stand out against what had every sign of being a directed
-destiny.
-
-Peter was filled with a strange exaltation, a very frenzy of joy over
-the thought that it would now be possible to pay off his old debt of
-revenge against Michael Kirsakoff. The words of an old folk song began
-to run through his mind and he hummed it gently, pausing to catch some
-of the almost forgotten words.
-
-He got out his razor and shaved himself before the big wall mirror
-between the windows. The peace and quiet of his room were luxuries after
-the days and nights of living and sleeping on the pounding train among
-the Czech soldiers. He had time now for careful planning, and he desired
-to make the acquaintance of Kirsakoff at leisure, arrange the details of
-how the Governor should be killed and then carry through the project
-with all possible skill so that his tracks might be covered. There would
-be many pitfalls to avoid, many nicely balanced circumstances.
-
-It would not be enough for Peter merely to kill Kirsakoff. The Governor
-must know who brought death to him, must understand before he was sent
-into eternity that it was Peter Petrovitch Gorekin, son of the
-bootmaker, who took vengeance.
-
-The girl came with the samovar and the cakes and left them on the table.
-She fled again without taking the five-ruble note which Peter had left
-upon the table for her.
-
-Peter sat by the window and ate and drank. The sun dropped behind the
-rim of the hill and twilight came swiftly. In the street below a line of
-rude carts passed, drawn by frosty ponies with their drivers plodding
-along behind the carts. They walked like men in their sleep, oblivious
-of everything about them and steeped in the torturing cold.
-
-Farther up the street four men were drifting about aimlessly, tipsy with
-vodka. They drew together at times to engage in maudlin argument, and
-staggered about like clumsy bears, lurching at one another in wild
-plunges and falling in the street.
-
-The four roisterers disappeared. A squad of Japanese soldiers came
-stumbling down the street, evidently going on guard at the station for
-the night. They appeared to be half frozen, but they doggedly maintained
-some semblance of military formation. Their heads were so wrapped in
-cloths that they could hardly see their way, and the fur straps across
-their faces were white with frost from the moisture of their nostrils.
-Their big shoes were stuffed with straw, which hung out over the tops.
-The agonizing cold, despite the heavy clothing of the men, had
-penetrated to their bodies and had chilled them to a condition akin to
-lethargy. They walked as if through semiliquid air which impeded their
-movements.
-
-Peter remained by the window smoking, while the frost gradually grew up
-the windows. He was wondering how he could find Kirsakoff. It would not
-do to make direct inquiries. It might be possible to draw more from
-Rimsky, but it would be wise to wait before pressing the
-cigarette-seller to talk about Kirsakoff. The graybeard would be
-suspicious—he was already suspicious that Peter had some other motive in
-going to the hut than buying cigarettes. Yes, it would be safer to keep
-away from Rimsky for a few days, and perhaps wise not to move about the
-city too much and start gossip. He might be watched at first, but after
-a few days his presence in the city would be taken as a matter of
-course. Then he could begin his quest for Kirsakoff.
-
-With this decision for the future, Peter prepared for bed.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- ILYA USES HIS WITS
-
-
-ILYA ANDREITCH, having left Rimsky in a state of gorgeous befuddlement
-at the gypsy’s restaurant, hurried up the street to the house of Michael
-Kirsakoff and his daughter. It would be great news, the coming of an
-American who wished to find Kirsakoff. It might be a government matter,
-for as everybody with an ounce of brains in his head knew, the Americans
-were going to take full control of Russia—some wise folk even said that
-the Americans would annex Russia as a province of America. Others said
-the Czar had gone to America and had conquered it, including Venice.
-Those were matters which Ilya considered in spare moments; just now he
-felt that this news of the American needed full attention.
-
-Ilya could see the glowing coals of a sentinels’ bonfire up near the
-church. Also, there were sounds of music and singing in the direction of
-a barrack, and the rattle of a droshky coming across the little bridge
-over the Ingoda. So he did not feel too lonely. There was no moon up
-yet, but the stars were out and hanging low. The thin, sweet air
-drenched his lungs, and cleared his brain somewhat.
-
-Now he heard a man walking near by. Ilya stopped to listen, cocking his
-head to one side. But when Ilya stopped, the man stopped also—and then
-Ilya realized that it was his own footsteps which he had heard,
-crunching the hard snow musically. He laughed discreetly, taking care
-that the sentries should not hear him, and started on again toward the
-outer rim of the city.
-
-But he was a little afraid that he might not get past some of the sentry
-groups without being stopped and questioned, or perhaps arrested. He got
-off the hard walk and into the center of the sandy street, so that his
-boots would not make a noise. He got out his bottle—the bottle which he
-had taken from the restaurant table—and had a swig from it to give
-himself courage. It would be no simple matter to go talking to
-Kirsakoff, who, though an Excellence, was a cruel old bones of a man.
-
-But Ilya reflected that times had changed. He was as good as anybody
-now, and knew as much as anybody. The revolution had done that for him,
-and a revolution was good fun. Was not even Rimsky, who had once held
-himself to be better than a _moujik_, now buying vodka for _moujiks_?
-Hurrah for the revolution! And as for that, hadn’t he fooled Rimsky and
-drawn from him the news that the American had come to see Kirsakoff?
-That was proof enough as to who had the better wit. Ilya gave himself
-credit for the manner in which he had handled the whole matter.
-
-Kirsakoff should give at least five rubles for the news, not a kopeck
-less. Ilya settled that to his own satisfaction, took another swig, and
-went on. A wolf howled in the hills above the city, and Ilya crossed
-himself against the wiles of the devil.
-
-He passed the black dome of the church. The air was like crystal and
-nothing cast a shadow, not even the iron fence about the old cemetery of
-the church. And when the stars are so bright and hang so low that
-nothing throws a shadow, there are witches about.
-
-Ilya hurried on, getting more nervous with every step, till he was in
-the outer limits of the city. Then he crossed some old gardens to get in
-among the log houses which stood at the end of the street. In that way
-he avoided a group of sentries who were singing about their fire.
-
-He located Kirsakoff’s house. It stood on a corner of two streets, with
-a log wall enclosing the _dvor_, or courtyard—the garden, the well, the
-wagon-sheds. The windows let out no light, but stood out like tablets of
-ivory set into the dark house, their frosty panes glistening under the
-stars.
-
-Ilya went round to the great gate. Some old water casks were lying about
-it in disorder. One of them was close to the wall of the court. Ilya
-moved it a little, and mounting it, reached up to some old cords and
-dead vines running along the top of the logs. He took off his mittens
-and felt for a cord that had tied in it a certain number of knots. He
-pulled it thrice, and then climbed down from the cask, and stood in
-close to the wall, so that any person looking up the street would not
-see him, for his figure would be merged with the dark background of the
-wall.
-
-A sentry-fire burned redly out in the end of the street. A few dark
-figures were visible about it. Somewhere Ilya heard a Cossack challenge,
-and the rattle of a riflebolt in the crisp air. A pig began to squeal
-away in the direction of the Chinese quarter. Ilya missed the friendly
-barking of dogs, for the dogs of the city had somehow disappeared since
-the troubles came and many people were starving. The unnatural stillness
-of the night held a covert menace, as if all creatures, humans and wild
-beasts, were walking about on their toes in dread, or crouched to spring
-upon some lurking enemy. It was likely that hill tigers were about. The
-occasional howl of a wolf seemed to be tinged with a note of triumph, as
-if they were waiting for their old wilderness to be restored to them by
-men. The wolves were once more hunting close to the city and getting
-arrogant and fat. Men were too busy hunting each other to waste time or
-ammunition on the great packs of timber wolves.
-
-A small door in the wall, close to where Ilya stood, opened inward a few
-inches, slowly and cautiously, for the frost cracked the ancient hinges
-with sharp complaints.
-
-“It is Ilya—Ilya Andreitch,” he whispered into the aperture of the gate.
-
-“You are a fool to come here in the starlight,” growled Wassili. “Are
-you blind, that you cannot see the brightness of the stars, or have you
-a mole for an uncle?”
-
-“What does it matter?” whispered Ilya easily. He did not mind being
-insulted by Wassili, knowing in time that he would have the laugh on
-Kirsakoff’s _moujik_.
-
-The gate opened a few more inches, and Ilya needed no greater hint, but
-slipped through, and the gate closed after him.
-
-“You smell like a _kabak_,” grumbled Wassili.
-
-“That is why you opened the gate,” said Ilya with a chuckle. “You have a
-nose for vodka, even if you are not civil to your friends.”
-
-“But you will be seen by enemies, to come here so boldly,” went on
-Wassili, not so easily altered in his temper.
-
-“I? No one saw me. I am as secret as an owl. Those fools of soldiers are
-all drunk and talking in their sleep. They shoot their guns at the moon
-every night, to scare honest folk away.”
-
-“What brings you?” demanded Wassili. “Am I to stand here freezing
-because you want to gossip?”
-
-“I came to talk with Michael Alexandrovitch,” said Ilya with pomposity.
-He swayed unsteadily on his feet, for the vodka he had drunk was again
-asserting its potency because he had been standing still so long outside
-the gate. He blew gently down into his whiskers to melt away the ice
-which had formed in the bristles from his breath.
-
-“Hmf!” growled Wassili. “Perhaps you think Michael Alexandrovitch has
-baked a pig for your coming? Have you forgotten that Michael
-Alexandrovitch is an Excellence?”
-
-“I am as good as he, Excellence or no Excellence,” retorted Ilya. “What
-I remember is the revolution, and that Ilya Andreitch is as good as the
-Czar. But I have brought news for the Excellence. Are we to stand here
-warming the night with our breaths, when Michael Alexandrovitch would be
-glad to know what I know?”
-
-“He could salt his porridge with what you know,” scorned Wassili. “What
-news do you bring?” He was still doubtful of the legitimacy of Ilya’s
-visit, and suspected his coming to be a desire for drunken argument.
-
-“When a man brings news in these times, he might have a glass of hot
-tea,” hinted Ilya. “It is about government, and I have come with big
-news about what is being done outside this place.”
-
-“You have brought a monkey with you, that is what,” muttered Wassili,
-meaning that Ilya was foolishly drunk. But he fastened the bolt of the
-gate. He was now shivering with the cold and sulky about it, though he
-did not dare risk sending Ilya away if there was any chance of valuable
-information’s coming to the attention of his master, Kirsakoff.
-
-“Whoosh! Is not a monkey smarter than a fox? You old pothead, you sit
-here all day looking at your feet, while I learn government news and
-risk my neck to bring it here and——”
-
-“Be still!” commanded Wassili. “You can be heard to the hills a night
-like this! You smell of fresh-killed pig and vodka, for all your
-government talk. Is that the way to come to the house of Excellence?
-Follow along with that noisy tongue of yours, but keep your fingers on
-it, for it wags too freely and you will lose it along with your head, if
-you are not careful.”
-
-“Yes, and I’ll bring a drink of vodka along for you, if you have a fire
-in your samovar, you old spider.”
-
-“It is good you bring something besides talk,” grumbled Wassili, as he
-led the way under the overhanging roof of the shed and along through the
-gloom to the door of the kitchen. Ilya stumbled along after him,
-blundering among the kettles and other gear and making such a racket
-that Wassili cursed him for having too many legs. But Ilya, in a gay
-mood, chuckled into his beard and was only concerned lest he lose his
-footing and have a tumble that would break the precious bottle in his
-pocket.
-
-They entered the kitchen, which had its windows hung with old blankets
-to keep the light hidden. There was a wall-stove and a cooking stove
-with ovens built of stone. A candle burned on the table. There were
-partridge feathers in a sink and the remnants of cabbages that had been
-cut up on a board. A big earthen jar of gooseberry jam stood open on the
-table and beside it a fat yellow bowl full of white honey, which gave
-off a sweet odor and made Ilya think of bees in the fields in summer.
-
-Wassili sat down and rested his elbows on the table. His pockmarked face
-had a glum look, and his pale yellow whiskers bristled with belligerency
-for Ilya, as if the _moujik_ were in for trouble unless his story should
-be of sufficient import for the visit. Wassili’s blue caftan, pale and
-washed out like the garment of a Chinese coolie, was strapped about him
-with a bit of scarlet cloth which had once been embroidered. His feet
-were wrapped in skins, ready to be slipped into the big boots standing
-limply by the bench upon which he sat. He had not put them on when he
-went out to admit Ilya.
-
-“Let us be merry while we can,” began Ilya, anxious to improve the
-atmosphere of the kitchen as represented by the scowling Wassili. So
-Ilya threw himself down sprawlingly on a bench opposite Wassili, and
-loosened the old rope about his coat. Then he pulled his bottle from his
-pocket with a flourish of good-fellowship and slammed it down upon the
-table with a thump. “We will all be dead in time that will come soon
-enough, so I will have a glass of tea and a spice-cake before I talk
-with the Excellence.”
-
-“The wind is full of news,” said Wassili sadly, but the sight of the
-bottle put him in slightly better humor. He leaned down and squinted
-across it, to gauge its contents.
-
-“How is the health of Excellence?” asked Ilya, his courage bolstered by
-a sudden remembrance of his own importance and a desire to return to the
-subject of statecraft in connection with Michael Kirsakoff.
-
-Without answering, Wassili poured himself a generous draft from the
-bottle into a thick glass, and nodding to Ilya in place of speaking a
-health, tossed the liquor off with a clicking sound in his throat and a
-harsh appreciative grunt.
-
-“Bring the spice-cakes and the glasses for tea,” he called out to the
-other room. An old serving woman peered into the kitchen, appraised Ilya
-with critical eyes, and then shambled away for the cakes and glasses.
-
-Ilya’s yellowed teeth grinned across the table at Wassili.
-
-“Now when am I to talk with Michael Alexandrovitch, eh?” he demanded,
-crossing his legs importantly and rubbing one knee with his paw of a
-hand. “Don’t forget why I have come, Wassili, and that my business is
-with the master.”
-
-“You will see Excellence when you see him,” said Wassili.
-
-“True!” said Ilya. “But I shall not leave that to you, if I have to
-hammer him up myself. This is a matter of government.”
-
-“There is no one in the house but the old woman and myself,” said
-Wassili, with a flourish of his arm. “Excellence is gone, and your
-whiskers will be longer before you see him.”
-
-“May the devil tear out your tongue, for it does not speak the truth,”
-said Ilya without anger. “This is not a time for lying, when your master
-is waiting for news from me.”
-
-Wassili flourished his arm as an expression of his annoyance, and
-blurted out surlily, “Then go above for yourself and see, if you know
-better than I.”
-
-The old woman shuffled into the room, and put the glass and a plate of
-cakes before Ilya, giving him a suspicious eye, and glancing
-disapprovingly at Wassili for permitting what she regarded as a
-dangerous intrusion. But she did not linger at the table longer than was
-necessary to throw down the plate and the tea-glass.
-
-Ilya picked up a spice-cake and inspected it carefully by the light of
-the candle, the maneuver being nothing but a way of delaying his speech
-till the old woman had disappeared.
-
-“I have come with news about an American who is in the city,” he began,
-and bit into the cake.
-
-Wassili turned upon him quickly.
-
-“You are a liar!” he exclaimed with ferocity. “There are no Americans in
-the city here—they are only in Vladivostok, and you are blowing a
-trumpet in this house while you eat our cakes.” Wassili’s attitude was
-almost ferocious.
-
-“Then you know better than I,” said Ilya, blinking at him across the
-table and munching the dry cake.
-
-“You are drunk, and you dare come here in these times and put a fool’s
-cap on me—and the master!”
-
-“True, I am drunk,” replied Ilya through a mouthful of dry cake. “And I
-hope I’ll die drunk and go to heaven. But do you think I’m fool enough
-to run my legs off and come here, risking bullets in my back when I
-might be sitting by the fire with my bottle? Do you think I come here
-just to look at your old mud-head? I cared nothing for your master
-before the revolution, but now that I’m as good as he, why should I not
-do him a good turn if I can—and he has a few spare rubles to make it
-worth my time?” Ilya blew crumbs of dry biscuit at Wassili with the
-words.
-
-“Don’t come here and preach at me like a pope!” cautioned Wassili, who
-was puzzled by Ilya’s newly acquired attitude of independence. Ilya was
-evidently sure of his ground—or gone mad entirely.
-
-“What!” cried Ilya. “You talk to me like that! And I have come to tell
-the master news! Very good. I know the way home again, and may your
-bones never know what it means to be buried.”
-
-“Where are these Americans you talk about?” demanded Wassili, as he saw
-that it would be wiser to let Ilya have his say.
-
-Ilya snorted, but showed his teeth in a grin of triumph. “I shall go and
-tell the American officer that Kirsakoff and his daughter have gone, eh?
-That is what you say. Very good. That will be all right, I suppose—till
-it happens that way, and then Excellence will kick you till you squeal.
-Then you will wish that you had listened to Ilya Andreitch and had not
-tried to make yourself into an Excellence with big manners.”
-
-“Come, come,” protested Wassili amiably. “Let us not argue. Tell me what
-you know and——”
-
-“I shall tell Excellence myself,” broke in Ilya. “I am a free man. What
-good is a revolution if one man cannot speak to another? Go and tell
-Excellence that Ilya Andreitch, who cut wood for him in the year of the
-pestilence, has come with news.”
-
-Wassili laughed, and taking advantage of a fit of sneezing suffered by
-Ilya from having breathed particles of dry cake, helped himself to
-another draft from the bottle of vodka.
-
-“Perhaps I had better tell Excellence that a Grand Duke has come to see
-him, eh?” and Wassili reached across the table and poked Ilya in the
-ribs.
-
-“Am I not as good as a Grand Duke?” demanded Ilya. “I am alive to enjoy
-my vodka and many a Grand Duke would like to be able to say that, you
-old fish-gut! Go and tell the Excellence that I have come.”
-
-Wassili got up. “See that you don’t finish the bottle while I’m gone,”
-he warned Ilya, and disappeared through a door into a hall, and Ilya
-heard him climbing a creaky stairs.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- X
-
- “AN AMERICAN HAS COME!”
-
-
-MICHAEL KIRSAKOFF was seated at a table writing a letter by the light of
-a candle when Wassili knocked at the door of his room. The old general’s
-eyes lifted to the door and made a pair of gleaming points against the
-gloom behind him. The broad gold straps on the shoulders of his uniform
-jacket set off his white old head so that it appeared to be resting on a
-golden tray which threw out a quivering sheen of yellow light with the
-trembling of his shoulders. His thin white hand dropped the pen. He
-motioned to Katerin to move behind him so that she stood in the shadow
-of his body, and recognizing Wassili’s cautious knock, he ordered the
-_moujik_ to enter.
-
-“Master, Ilya Andreitch has come with news of the government.”
-
-“Who is Ilya Andreitch?” demanded the old general.
-
-“Ilya, he who once cut wood for the Excellence. I know the man well. He
-has often bought food for us in the bazaar since we came here. He helped
-me to bring many things to this house from the other, but he is drunk
-to-night. Yet he vows he has news of the government.”
-
-The old general was puzzled. Katerin stepped into the light and looked
-at Wassili eagerly.
-
-“What is the news Ilya brings?” she asked gently, afraid that her father
-might say something which would discourage Wassili from permitting Ilya
-to tell his story.
-
-“There is an American officer come to Chita to find the Excellence,”
-said Wassili, with a bow. “I do not know—it is Ilya Andreitch who says
-it and he——”
-
-Katerin struck her hands together and gave a cry of joy. “An American!”
-she cried. “Can it be, my father, that our friends have at last sent
-help to us?”
-
-“You say an officer?” exclaimed Michael, his eyes on Wassili, and
-burning with an eager light.
-
-“So it is said, master.”
-
-“By the Holy Saints!” exclaimed Michael. “We shall escape Zorogoff if
-this is true! Who else can have sent him but our friends?”
-
-Katerin was crying with joy. She threw her arms about her father’s neck
-and kissed him. Till now she had restrained her emotions, hidden her
-fears, and faced death calmly, but the news that aid was at hand
-released all her terrors and flooded them with a burst of happiness.
-
-“True, our friends have got our letters and have sent an American to
-save us!” she exclaimed through her tears. “God of the heavens is good
-to us, and has answered our prayers at last, so that we shall have peace
-and safety. This is the end of your tortures, my father!”
-
-“It is of you I think, Katerin Stephanovna,” said Michael, and he
-grasped her hands and pulled them to his mouth to kiss them. “What I
-have suffered I have suffered for you, for death means nothing to me if
-you can be safe.”
-
-“Tell us, Wassili,” urged Katerin. “Did the American officer bring word
-from friends? Is he to come here for us and take us away? And did he say
-who sent him?”
-
-The gray old head of Michael snapped forward, the wisps of white hair
-waving gently. His eyes bored into Wassili while waiting for the
-_moujik_ to answer.
-
-“Ilya Andreitch told me but little, master. At first I thought he was
-drunk and did not trust him. And when I told him that he must tell me,
-he said he would talk with no one but Excellence, and that it was
-secret. Thus I would not bring him up till you had given the order for
-his coming.”
-
-“Then he is below now? Bring him up, and hasten, for we have no time to
-lose. Zorogoff may be here again with the light of morning and I am but
-now writing what shall be done when he has killed me. We must see this
-American officer with all speed before the Ataman is able to balk him.
-By the Holy Saints! This will save my daughter from death—for she will
-die before she submits to the will of this Mongol brigand! Go! Bring
-Ilya Andreitch before me and we shall hear his say!”
-
-Wassili ran out into the hall and down the stairs, well pleased with the
-results of his report to his master, for he had feared that he had made
-a mistake in admitting Ilya at all.
-
-Michael and Katerin could scarcely wait for Ilya to come up. The news of
-deliverance from their dangers—safety so close at hand after long weary
-months of hiding and worry—came like a pardon to two who were condemned
-to death. It had been five days since the Ataman had left them. He was
-still torturing them, for his threat against Katerin would undoubtedly
-be carried out unless she killed herself. They knew that Zorogoff would
-attempt to take them to his “palace” in revenge for their insults. And
-they had planned to die together rather than to permit the Mongol to
-carry out his evil purpose. That was the only way in which they could
-defeat him.
-
-“Our letter to the Baranoffs got through,” said Michael. “It is they who
-have sent this American.”
-
-“And do you think he will come here—to-night?” asked Katerin, her pale,
-drawn face alight with the joy of escape. “I cannot believe yet that we
-are to be safe again! God has answered my prayers! My father, I had
-given up hope!”
-
-“Perhaps Ilya brings a letter from the American officer,” said Michael.
-“If he has sent word to us by Ilya, he must have also given Ilya
-something so that we shall know the American comes from friends. We
-cannot delay. If the Ataman should hear of this American——”
-
-“They are coming up,” said Katerin, and they heard Wassili and Ilya
-mounting the stairs. Soon the light of a shaking candle appeared down
-the hall, and Katerin threw open the door of the room.
-
-Wassili blew out the candle when he entered, and thrust Ilya in ahead of
-him.
-
-“Here is Ilya Andreitch, master,” said Wassili, and Ilya blinked at the
-candle on Michael’s table, bowed, and stood nervously fingering his cap.
-
-“You bring us news, Ilya Andreitch,” began Michael when Katerin had
-closed the door. Michael’s thin, weak voice took on some of the relief
-he felt at knowing that help was at hand after months of danger in a
-world which had apparently gone mad, and he spoke somewhat in his old
-manner of authority.
-
-“I?” asked Ilya. “Yes, Excellence. I bring good news to your house—and
-to the mistress.” He bowed again, this time to Katerin, who had gone to
-her father.
-
-“Wassili says an American officer has sent you,” prompted Katerin,
-seeing that Ilya was perturbed and might be stricken dumb by fear of
-being before the former Governor.
-
-“He is at the Dauria, mistress,” said Ilya faintly, and turned to
-Wassili as if he expected the _moujik_ to take up the story now, and go
-on with it.
-
-“At the Dauria Hotel,” agreed Katerin. “And you have brought a message
-from him to us?”
-
-Ilya looked round the room wildly, seeking some escape from the eyes of
-Michael which bore upon him steadily.
-
-“Have you a message from the American?” asked Katerin gently.
-
-“I?” Ilya looked at her in amazement, and turned toward the door. Then
-he bowed again to Michael and Katerin to cover his confusion.
-
-“What did the American say?” urged Katerin, and Wassili gave utterance
-to a faint snort of disgust and prodded Ilya in the back.
-
-“What did the American say? Who knows?” asked Ilya.
-
-“The fool is drunk!” growled Michael. “Come! Speak up! Or have you
-drowned your tongue in vodka and come here to make fools of us?”
-
-Ilya’s face began to perspire, and he twisted his cap into a rope.
-
-“Have no fear, Ilya,” said Katerin soothingly.
-
-“May God smite me!” cried Ilya. “It was Rimsky who told me about it and
-I ran here to tell the Excellence!”
-
-“And who is Rimsky?” demanded Michael. “Where did he learn of the man
-who has come to see me?”
-
-Ilya brushed his brow with the back of his hand. “Rimsky is an old
-friend of mine—a good man, Excellence, who means harm to no one and is a
-loyal man to his Czar.”
-
-“And what did this Rimsky tell you?”
-
-“That the Excellence would pay me well to bring the news.”
-
-Michael laughed and his irritation disappeared.
-
-“So you have a friend named Rimsky who gives away my money, eh? And so I
-will pay you—if we can dig the news out of your skull. Now tell us what
-it is that the American said.”
-
-Ilya began to twist his cap into a rope with both hands, and swallowed
-spittle.
-
-“Excellence, I have done no harm,” he began. “I am a poor man. I once
-cut wood for the Excellence. I am very secret. Rimsky tried to fish it
-from me where the Excellence was living, but I did not tell him. I left
-him drunk, and he does not know that I know where the Excellence lives,
-and he does not know I have come to the house of Excellence.”
-
-Ilya looked triumphantly at Katerin after this speech, and bowed again,
-feeling that he had handled the matter well, though he sought a sign of
-approval from the daughter of the Governor.
-
-“What has all this to do with the American officer?” asked Michael.
-“That is what we are talking about, Ilya. You are very smart to have
-done what you did—now tell us more of it.”
-
-“Rimsky sells cigarettes in an old _isba_ in the Sofistkaya,” resumed
-Ilya. “He told me it was a pity he did not know where the Excellence
-lived, and he fished me for it. That is all. And I have come to tell
-Excellence.”
-
-Michael expressed his dismay by a look at Katerin. He believed now that
-Ilya’s visit was only some drunken foolishness, or probably a trick.
-
-“They have told this to Ilya so that they might follow him here. This is
-the work of enemies,” said Michael.
-
-“Master!” began Wassili, holding up his hand, and then turning to Ilya,
-said, “You told me it was a matter of government. You said there was an
-American. Tell the master, as you told me, fool!”
-
-“May God smite me, it is as I say!” retorted Ilya to Wassili with a show
-of anger. “There is an American come for Michael Alexandrovitch
-Kirsakoff, the master general and Governor. It is truth!”
-
-“You say it, but how do you know it?” asked Katerin. She was beginning
-to feel that her father was right—that there were no grounds for their
-hopes other than a desire of this crafty _moujik_ and some of his
-fellows to squeeze money from her father. But she concealed her
-disappointment.
-
-“Rimsky told me, mistress, that is how I know,” said Ilya with a bow.
-
-“And it was Rimsky who sent you to this house?” said Michael. “Now, the
-truth!”
-
-Ilya stared at the floor and tried to think. In a way, it was true that
-Rimsky had sent him to the house, and yet it was not true in just the
-way that Michael was saying. The _moujik’s_ brain was not equal to a
-quick and accurate reply when folk of education twisted things up so.
-
-“I? No, master. Rimsky does not know I came to this house. How could he
-send me here when he has no knowledge of where the Excellence lives? I
-told no one because I am very secret, master.”
-
-“Then the American did not send you?” snapped Michael.
-
-Ilya turned to Katerin. “There is an American, mistress,” he insisted.
-
-“You know nothing of an American but what this fool Rimsky told you?”
-insisted Michael. “Come! You have not seen the American?”
-
-“How could I see him, master?” asked Ilya.
-
-Michael gave a snort of disgust and leaned back in his chair. “It is
-nothing,” he said sadly. “Send Ilya away,” with a look at Wassili.
-
-“I can see the American, mistress,” pleaded Ilya, aghast at the idea
-that his visit had come to nothing and fearful of what Wassili might do
-once they were in the courtyard again. “I speak truth! There is an
-American officer come seeking the master general!”
-
-“Ilya Andreitch, I will give you fifty rubles if you will find this
-American,” said Katerin, hopeful again as she saw that Ilya was in
-earnest—at least she was determined not to make the mistake of sending
-Ilya away without making sure of what he did know. She knew that he was
-frightened, and that behind his fear there was more information than he
-was able to put into words.
-
-“I can find him, mistress, if he is at the Dauria—I know the place well.
-I was there but yesterday with pig-livers.” His eyes glittered with the
-richness of the reward promised.
-
-“This is a trap of Zorogoff’s to get us to leave the house,” growled
-Michael.
-
-“Not if there is an American in the city to see us,” said Katerin.
-
-“Some spy got Rimsky to tell this story to Ilya and then watch him to
-see where he went. I do not like it. Or perhaps they want you to go to
-the hotel seeking this mythical officer and seize you there. I tell you
-it is a trap, my daughter.”
-
-But Katerin picked up the pen on the table and wrote on a sheet of paper
-this note in Russian:
-
- _The man who takes this to you can find us again. Time is
- precious for we are in great danger. Be discreet. Say who sends
- you that we may know you are from friends._
-
-She did not sign the note, but dried the ink over the candle, folded it,
-and handed it to Ilya with a handful of rubles which she took from
-between the leaves of a book on the table.
-
-“Give this to the American officer if you find him at the Dauria. If he
-has come for us, let him tell you so. But you are not to come back here
-to our house—Wassili will meet you at the _sobrania_ at midnight, and
-you are to tell Wassili what the American says. Do not tell the American
-where we are but let him send a message and the name of the friend who
-has sent him. That will be our proof that he is not an enemy. Talk with
-no one about this—and when you have told Wassili what the American says,
-go home to bed and do not drink. If you give a true message to Wassili
-you shall have fifty rubles more to-morrow.”
-
-“He will be drunk as an owl ten minutes after he gets to the Sofistkaya
-and the first _kabak_,” grumbled Michael. “And if he finds this
-American, how is the American to read Russian?”
-
-“If he come from friends, he must know something of Russian, else he
-would not have come by himself—and perhaps he has with him some man who
-can read it for him.”
-
-“You are wasting your breath and my ink,” said Michael. “I think nothing
-of this business.”
-
-“God’s blessing on you, mistress,” said Ilya, crossing himself twice and
-turning to follow Wassili out of the room. “I shall be very secret and
-do as you command—and I shall not go drinking wine with the money.”
-
-Wassili lighted his candle from the flame of the one burning on the
-table and opened the door. Ilya went out before him, and they both
-descended the stairs.
-
-“It is all a trap, as I have said,” Michael went on again, staring
-disconsolately into the flame of the candle, his head bent forward on
-his breast. “This is the Ataman’s work—and he will come again in the
-morning to mock us.”
-
-“I have faith that God has saved our lives,” said Katerin. “If an
-American is in the city who seeks us, I shall go to him myself in case
-Ilya fails us.”
-
-“Then you would be going to your doom, my daughter,” and Michael dropped
-his face into his outspread arms upon the table to conceal the dejection
-which had come over him again since he believed that Ilya had come on a
-fool’s errand.
-
-“Hope is greater than fear, my father,” said Katerin, and lifted his
-head from the table to kiss him. “Who knows? By dawn we may be safe with
-this American. We must pray that Wassili will bring us a message at
-midnight which means the end of our troubles. Zorogoff will not dare
-defy an American officer.”
-
-“Zorogoff will defy the devil himself,” said Michael. “I put little hope
-in this fool’s tale, but if it will make you happy, I will hope and
-believe till we know that there is nothing to be gained from this Ilya
-and his foolishness. And what you have just said about going to the
-hotel yourself—that must not be. I shall not let you out of my sight.”
-
-“Then perhaps we may both go,” said Katerin. “We would be in no greater
-danger if we tried to find the American than if we waited here for
-Zorogoff.”
-
-“We shall stay here,” said Michael. “I am too old and wise to be fooled
-by Mongol tricks. If I knew you could be safe I would be happy to say
-farewell to you forever—but God tells me that we are in greater danger
-now than ever, and we must trust no one. Come! Hand me my pen again,
-that I may write down the things you should remember when I am dead.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- THE FLIGHT
-
-
-WASSILI lurked in front of the _sobrania_ from midnight till near
-morning. There was a ball going on inside the building and many people
-coming and going during the night, mostly officers of Zorogoff’s forces
-and their women. But Wassili saw nothing of Ilya, though he gossiped
-with the droshky-drivers about the _sobrania_, warming himself against
-the biting cold by frequent drinks of tea at a restaurant across the
-street.
-
-When he had almost decided to return to Kirsakoff and report that he had
-not seen Ilya, he heard that Ilya had been killed. Then Wassili gathered
-such details as he could, and along toward morning hastened homeward
-with his story.
-
-Katerin saw the disaster in the _moujik’s_ face when he appeared at the
-door of her room, breathing hard from a run up the stairs. His hands
-were covered with candle wax as a result of their shaking.
-
-“What news, Wassili?” she cried.
-
-“The Cossacks killed Ilya soon after he left this house, mistress,”
-panted Wassili. “He crossed an old garden to evade the sentries, and did
-not stop when they halted him. He fell with six bullets in him—and they
-say in the city that he was a spy, for he carried a secret message.”
-
-“Your message to the American,” said Michael, who had waited up for the
-return of Wassili. “It is as I said—Ilya was bait for the Ataman’s trap.
-There is no American. If you had gone with Ilya you would have been
-seized, my daughter, and if I had gone, I would have been shot down. We
-are lost—the story about the American was a myth to draw us from the
-house.”
-
-“But, master, there is truth in what Ilya told us,” put in Wassili.
-
-“What?” cried Michael. “You, too? Are you fool enough to believe now
-what Ilya Andreitch said?”
-
-Katerin had sat down on a bench when she heard that Ilya had been
-killed, her hope crushed again. Now she sprang up at Wassili’s words,
-waiting for him to go on.
-
-“It is truth, master,” insisted Wassili. “I had the news in the city, so
-what Ilya said must have been true.”
-
-“Who told you?” cried Katerin. “Did they say he had come for us? Is he
-at the Dauria? Did you see him?”
-
-Wassili was overwhelmed by such a volley of questions, and he paused to
-catch his breath and assort his information from his memory before he
-should reply.
-
-“Come! Come! Rattle your tongue, Wassili!” commanded Michael. “Sit here
-and talk!”
-
-Wassili sank upon the bench while Michael and Katerin hovered over him.
-
-“An _iswostchik_ told me,” began Wassili. “His father was in the
-Siberian Rifles with mine and I can trust his word. He told me that he
-drove an American officer to the Dauria—two days ago. If the American
-officer is there now, I cannot say. But there is none among the
-_iswostchiks_ who has taken him back to the station. That I know, for I
-asked many of them—and they would know if the stranger had been taken
-away.”
-
-“Thanks to God!” cried Katerin. “Then though poor Ilya is dead, there is
-still hope for us. We must pray that he spoke the truth. Tell us more,
-Wassili.”
-
-“It came about this way,” resumed Wassili. “I heard my friend boasting
-of how he had brought a rich American to the Dauria—this officer—and how
-he paid double fare in Imperial rubles without any complaint. Not
-knowing what was the right fare, and not knowing that Imperials are
-worth thrice the money now in this city prove him to be a stranger. That
-he was an American, my friend is sure, for he was in Vladivostok last
-month and smuggled opium in here for the Chinese when he came up by the
-train. Why, he even knows the Americans so well that he speaks American.
-He cannot be fooled—he got rich in Vladivostok changing money for
-Americans.”
-
-“But does the American seek us?” urged Katerin. She was anxious to
-establish the fact that the American had come to help them escape the
-Ataman.
-
-“I heard nothing of that, mistress,” replied Wassili.
-
-Michael pondered the matter carefully.
-
-“It all means no good for us,” he said finally. “This officer may have
-sent Ilya to us, but why was Ilya shot? I say it looks like a trap.”
-
-“But Zorogoff’s spies may have known that the American sent Ilya, and
-may have killed Ilya so no word could go back from us,” said Katerin.
-
-“I grant that, yes,” said Michael, but still he had his doubts, and
-shook his head sadly.
-
-“And if Zorogoff knows that an American officer has come, then the
-Ataman will not dare persecute us further. Did you hear the name of this
-American, Wassili?” asked Katerin.
-
-“Mistress, I know nothing more. I did not dare go to the hotel when I
-heard that Ilya had been killed, but came back here for the orders of
-Excellence.”
-
-“And that was right,” said Michael.
-
-“Shall I go now to the American officer, master?” asked Wassili.
-
-“Let me think on it,” said Michael. “They killed Ilya and they may also
-kill you. It is dangerous business and we must be cautious. If it is
-true that an American has come, then the Ataman will do one of two
-things—strike speedily or leave us in peace. I believe that he will
-destroy us. I wish my wits were equal to telling me what I should do.”
-
-“We must not leave it to the Ataman,” declared Katerin. “The time has
-come for us to make our decisions—we it is who must act and not wait for
-the Ataman to make up his mind.”
-
-“We! What do you mean, my daughter? What is it we can do?”
-
-“Do something before the Ataman returns.”
-
-“What? What is it we can do, surrounded as we are?”
-
-There was a new look of determination in Katerin’s face. “The time has
-come to be bold,” she said. “If Zorogoff expects us to wait here for his
-will or his coming, we must surprise him—we must go straight to this
-American officer and ask him to help us to escape the city, even if he
-has not been sent to us by friends. But I’m sure we will find that he
-has been dispatched here to rescue us.”
-
-Michael put his hands to his face and stared at Katerin, aghast at her
-suggestion. He turned and sat down in his chair as if he had no strength
-to remain standing longer. “What in the name of God are you saying?” he
-whispered. “Do you mean we should put ourselves at the mercy of the
-Ataman?”
-
-“Are we not now at the mercy of the Ataman? Are we not waiting for his
-men to knock at the door? How much worse off will we be if we make an
-attempt to reach this American?”
-
-“And how much better?” asked Michael. “Will it do us more good to be
-shot down by the sentries as was Ilya than to remain here waiting for
-some turn of fortune which will save us?”
-
-“Fortune has made the turn,” replied Katerin. “What more do we ask than
-that an American officer be in the city?”
-
-“But if we never reach the hotel? What good would a regiment of
-Americans do us if we are shot on the way?”
-
-“We must take the chance and get to the hotel,” declared Katerin.
-“Surely, you must see that it is better to risk ourselves for the short
-time necessary to get to the Dauria than to remain here and wait for
-certain doom.”
-
-“Madness!” exclaimed Michael. “What we would be going to would be death
-in the dark.”
-
-“We shall go by the first daylight, while the sentries are being changed
-in the streets,” said Katerin quietly. It was plain that her mind was
-settled upon the thing.
-
-Michael peered at her across the candle flame as if he doubted her
-sanity. But Katerin looked back at him without the slightest sign that
-she wavered in her determination to abandon the house.
-
-“I see what you mean,” said Michael sadly. “You prefer to die by bullets
-rather than by the poison. Perhaps it is the better way—and I shall go
-with you and we shall die together.”
-
-Katerin went to him and took up his hands. “I shall not cross the
-threshold of that Mongol’s house alive, my father. I prefer to chance
-death—and if we fail—then we are with God and have died as Russians. It
-is better to die by the bullet of a soldier than by my own hand.
-Remember the threat of Zorogoff and consider my reasons for not fearing
-death.”
-
-Michael gave the table a mighty thump with his fist. “Truth, by the Holy
-Saints!” he exclaimed. “But I am the one to make the attempt to get to
-the hotel—and find the American. I cannot see you walk into the streets
-with such wolves about.”
-
-“No,” said Katerin, “I do not wish you to go alone. We shall go
-together—and if we must, we shall die together. But we cannot go against
-the designs of God—if the American officer has been sent to this city by
-friends to save us, we must not lose a minute in making ourselves known
-to him. The Ataman said he would come back—and he will come. He knows
-what I fear more than death. Very good. We must not wait here for him to
-come—It is not in us to lie hidden here like jackals in traps for the
-pleasure of the Mongol dog. We must flee with all possible speed toward
-the American.”
-
-“You are right,” agreed Michael. “Zorogoff will lose no time if he
-learns of this American—and perhaps he knows of the stranger now. At
-least, as Wassili heard it, it must be common gossip in the city. So
-whatever Zorogoff plans against us he will accomplish without delay. But
-how are we to escape from the house? Are we to go out openly, as we
-are?”
-
-“We shall escape through the servants’ gate,” said Katerin, her eyes on
-the candle as she planned. “It will be safer to wear the clothing of
-peasants. If there is a morning fog, it will help to conceal us. The
-greatest risk is in being seen as we get into the street. We cannot know
-how closely the house is being watched. But once clear and into the
-street, who is to think that two poor peasants are Michael Kirsakoff and
-his daughter—unless we should be stopped by soldiers and made to tell
-what our business is, where we came from, and who we are.”
-
-“True, that is the difficulty,” said Michael. “But as you say, if we
-once get to the hotel, Slipitsky, the old Jew, if he is still alive,
-will take us to the American. Do you know if Slipitsky is still in
-charge of the Dauria, Wassili?”
-
-“When I heard last, master, Slipitsky still lived,” said the _moujik_.
-“Am I to go with the master and the mistress and do what I can to
-protect them?”
-
-“No,” said Katerin. “You would be recognized and betray our identity to
-observers. You are to stay here with the old woman, and if we die, you
-shall be rewarded for your loyalty. Bring us old boots—the worst you can
-find—and cabbages to carry in a bundle, that we may appear to be
-peasants come in from the country to market.”
-
-Wassili went out and at once Katerin began plans and preparations for
-their flight from the house. By the time the morning sun revealed a
-white fog over the landscape everything was in readiness. An old shawl
-had been filled with packets of rubles wrapped in old newspapers, and on
-top had been put her sable coat and other clothing. But before the shawl
-was tied up at the corners, three cabbages had been put in on top so
-that they showed through the openings.
-
-The thick fog of morning gave promise that they could get away from the
-house without being observed, unless there were sentries close by the
-servants’ gate.
-
-When they were ready to depart, Michael put on the ancient gray
-coat—that one which was padded with paper rubles. He belted the shabby
-garment about him with an old rope and dropped his pistol into a side
-pocket. A dirty old sheepskin cap covered his head and a long muffler
-was wound about his neck, the ends trailing over his back. With the
-muffler pulled up over his face he could see through the mesh of the
-fabric, but his face was concealed. He also carried a short-stocked whip
-with a dozen lashes, such as the farmers carry with them. In such attire
-it was hard to believe that he had been a general of the Czar and once
-Governor—now he was but a bent old _moujik_ who thought of nothing but
-his crops and what money he could get for the few provisions he was
-carrying into the city.
-
-Katerin wrapped her head in an old shawl, tied a raggy towel across her
-nose against the cold, and drew the shawl down over her brow so that she
-peered out through a narrow slit. Her chin was concealed in the collar
-of a dirty and torn coat which had been mended with many faded patches.
-She wore a discarded pair of Wassili’s boots, which had been retrieved
-from the wagon-shed, where they had been hung up to be used for hinges
-or pieces of leather for repairs. But she also took with her in the
-bundle her light shoes and her slippers.
-
-When she finally picked up the bundle with the cabbages, she was a poor
-farmer’s daughter come in from the plains to sell her cabbages and buy
-salt and candles in the bazaar—and say a prayer at the church.
-
-Before they set out from the house Wassili was sent into the street and
-pottered about the casks at the small door in the wall to see whether
-the house was being closely watched. He came back soon and reported that
-he could see no one.
-
-The old woman who had been doing the cooking stood crying and rubbing
-her eyes with her red hands as she saw the mistress ready to go forth
-and face the dangers of the city. She cried and prayed by turns, being
-sure that disaster awaited them both. Michael quieted her by a plentiful
-handful of rubles and an assurance that if they made to the hotel
-safely, she should be provided for before they escaped the city—but the
-old woman was disconsolate.
-
-“God go with you, master and mistress,” said Wassili, as he said
-farewell. He stood in the kitchen door and watched Michael and Katerin
-slip through the gate, bent on reaching the hotel and seeking the help
-of the American officer against the menace of Zorogoff.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- HIDDEN AGAIN
-
-
-MICHAEL trudged along stolidly through the dirty snow in the middle of
-the street, his head bent against the cold in peasant style. Katerin
-followed him, close behind, carrying the bundle which showed the
-cabbages.
-
-Once away from the house they felt they had a chance of getting to the
-hotel without being halted if they did not appear too eager. So they
-proceeded without haste, plodding along as if weary after a long walk in
-from the plains. To any one who might watch them they were apparently
-heedless of their surroundings and concerned only with where their feet
-were to be planted for each step, but they were really watchful through
-the cloths which hid their faces. It was not possible to see more than a
-hundred yards in any direction, for the fog shut them in and helped to
-conceal them from observation.
-
-They had not gone far before they made out the glow of a sentry-fire.
-Having planned carefully what they should do in various circumstances,
-they had no intention of attempting to avoid any soldiers, so Michael
-bore straight for the group about the fire. The soldiers looked up and
-scanned the approaching couple for a minute, then resumed their talk.
-Michael turned out just enough to pass them, lifted his head to stare at
-them through his muffler, gave them a gruff good-morning, and passed on.
-The four men about the fire supposed that the man and the woman must
-have passed through the outer cordons of sentries and given a
-satisfactory account of themselves. So Katerin also walked past them
-with a friendly nod, and though she was nervous for a few minutes after
-she had turned her back on them, they said nothing.
-
-As the two drew in toward the business section of the city they passed
-people who peered suspiciously at them. There were times when Michael
-feared that they were being followed, but in time the supposed followers
-turned up side streets and went about their business.
-
-Then a band of roistering soldiers swarmed out of a _kabak_ and bore
-down upon the father and daughter. The men were tipsy after a night of
-drinking and were singing wild songs and indulging in pranks among
-themselves. They hailed Michael with pleasantries but made way for him,
-and were respectfully silent when they passed Katerin, willing enough to
-let peasants go on without being molested. Had they known that the two
-“peasants” were General Kirsakoff and his daughter their attitude might
-have been entirely different.
-
-Katerin struggled along, the great boots tiring her, for they were heavy
-and ill-fitting, and where the snow was packed hard at the street
-crossings, the boots slipped under her and with the heavy bundle she
-found it hard to walk. But she knew her father could not help her if
-they were to keep up the pretense that they were peasants. But Michael
-slowed his pace at times to let Katerin come up with him.
-
-They reached the church, and stopped before it a few minutes to rest.
-They prayed and crossed themselves and lingered as long as they dared,
-for though they were both tired and cold, they hoped to get to the hotel
-before the fog was dispersed by the sun. They were fortunate that so few
-people were abroad.
-
-“Have good heart,” muttered Michael. “It is not far now to the hotel,
-and the roads will be better.”
-
-“The boots make me slow,” whispered Katerin. “But do not think of me.
-Save your strength, for I can walk all day. And we must not appear to be
-in a hurry.”
-
-“It is plain that no one has suspected us,” said Michael, peering back
-through the fog to make sure that they were not being trailed.
-
-“The test will come at the hotel,” said Katerin. “There we may encounter
-spies, so we must be most careful.”
-
-“It is too early for many officers of the Ataman to be about,” said
-Michael. “But there is safety in boldness.”
-
-They went on. Soon they passed the ruin of the great house which had
-been their home in the years while Michael was Governor. Only one wall
-stood, black and charred and penciled with white in crevices of the
-timbers where the powdered snow had sifted in. The vacant windows yawned
-upon them, showing a dismal background of drifting fog. In that house
-they had lived as rulers of the Valley of Despair.
-
-In time they came to the upper end of the Sofistkaya where a road turned
-off to the prison on the hill. They moved down past the big store which
-had been looted thoroughly by the Bolsheviki and the exiles who had been
-freed from the prison after the fall of the throne. The great windows
-along the street were boarded up, and a pair of Japanese sentries stood
-by the entrance. From the roof flew a red and white flag which marked
-the headquarters of the Japanese commander.
-
-Next they passed the wrecked bank. It was there that Michael’s partner
-had been slain while attempting to save what was left of the bank’s
-money after the first big raid. The windows were also boarded, so that
-in case of another uprising by revolutionists the building could not be
-used as a rifle-nest for snipers.
-
-Now there were more people in the streets. But every one was going about
-his business and paid little attention to Michael and Katerin. Such
-soldiers as they saw ignored them. They reached the bridge over the
-Ingoda, and now could see the front of the Dauria, not far ahead. They
-soon gained a position on the street opposite the entrance to the hotel,
-and crossed in the middle of the street after the manner of people from
-the country. Michael paused before the door, and waited for Katerin to
-come up with him.
-
-“This is the place,” said Michael gruffly, and then he pushed open the
-door. He was afraid that there might be a group of people inside, but
-his fears were relieved at finding a sleepy-eyed youth drowsing by a
-fire-reddened stove on a bench.
-
-Once through the door, Katerin let her bundle drop to the floor. It was
-so warm inside that she began to worry lest they be expected to uncover
-their faces, and in that case, if they did not find Slipitsky at once,
-they might be recognized by some casual passer-by who would carry the
-news of their arrival at the hotel to some of Zorogoff’s spies.
-
-The youth by the fire roused himself reluctantly and gave an angry look
-at the intruders. It was plain he felt that people so poorly dressed had
-no business in the hotel. He eyed the bundle which Katerin had put down,
-and then motioned them out of the door with an angry gesture.
-
-“Get away with your cabbages!” he snarled. “This is no public place
-where people can warm themselves. This is the best hotel in the city and
-only for rich people.”
-
-Michael bowed abjectly. “I have come to pay to Mr. Slipitsky money which
-I owe him.”
-
-The youth stared the harder. The heat from the stove was oppressive
-after the cold of the streets, but Michael and Katerin made no move to
-uncover their faces.
-
-“You can give me the money,” said the youth, holding out his hand,
-though he did not rise from the bench. “Slipitsky is not here and if he
-were, he would have no time to bother with you. Come! Hand the money to
-me and get out!”
-
-“Slipitsky not here?” demanded Michael. “But he told me to come. You
-mean that he has gone away?”
-
-“I said he is not here,” said the youth curtly. “I have other things to
-do besides answer questions. I’ll take the money.”
-
-“No, no,” said Michael. “Mr. Slipitsky must sign the paper if I pay him
-the money—it is always so. I do not know who you are. I must see Mr.
-Slipitsky, I tell you.”
-
-The youth got to his feet and looked closely at Michael, as if
-suspicious of his purpose. He had probably been shrewd enough to
-understand that Michael did not talk wholly as a peasant. Having
-scrutinized Michael, he turned and looked at Katerin, but she ignored
-his gaze and looked about the walls at the dirty old posters with
-pictures of Russian ships.
-
-“Go away!” said the youth finally. “I can’t be troubled. This is no time
-to come asking for Mr. Slipitsky.”
-
-“But I have come twenty versts this morning to see Mr. Slipitsky and
-give him the money and I must get back to my cow,” insisted Michael,
-seeing that he was making an impression on the youth despite the
-latter’s show of contempt. “And if I have to go back to my house, it
-will be two months again before I can pay——”
-
-A black figure appeared at the top of the stairs while Michael was
-talking, and called down sharply, “Dazo! What are you doing? Who is
-there?”
-
-“I don’t know who it is,” said Dazo. “Some fools in from the country who
-have lost their way and——”
-
-“And is it a grand ball or something you are having down there with all
-this talk I hear, till I can’t do anything with my figures?” demanded
-the one above wrathfully. “Who is it come to talk with you so early in
-the morning? Maybe some rich gentleman from Moscow, eh?”
-
-Michael now recognized the person above as Slipitsky, and knowing that
-they were safe at last, called out, “Mr. Slipitsky, I have come to pay
-you the money I owe to you.”
-
-Slipitsky leaned forward and peered down the stairs. “What! Somebody
-would be paying me money and that stupid goat of a Dazo does not know
-what is wanted. Dazo! Is it money you would let slip away from me in
-these times? Oy! A poor man you would make of me, stupid one! Tell the
-gentleman to come up.”
-
-But Michael did not wait to be urged by Dazo to go up. He started at
-once, and Katerin picked up the bundle and followed. Slipitsky remained
-standing in the dim light of the upper hall at the head of the stairs,
-peering down, and as Michael drew near the top, waved him forward. “Come
-this way to my office, please. And you—Dazo! Keep the door shut or I
-shall be beggared with buying wood from the Buriats. It is the house we
-wish to warm, and not all of Chita.”
-
-Slipitsky trotted ahead of Michael and led the way into a tiny room. By
-the time Michael entered, the old Jew was standing behind a desk.
-
-“You have come to pay me money?” he demanded when Katerin had entered
-the room. “Who is it, I ask?” he added, suspicious now because Michael
-had not uncovered his face.
-
-Slipitsky was old and bent himself, with long black whiskers, a grave
-and wrinkled face, small black eyes that seemed to grasp what they
-looked at. He wore a round black cap on his head, and about his
-shoulders was a long black cape tied in at the middle with a green cord
-which had ended its usefulness as a curtain cord. His brow was furrowed,
-and he had no teeth that were visible, but his face had a benevolent
-expression as if he found it hard to be stern with people. There was
-something about his manner as he stood behind the desk which suggested a
-teacher. A wrinkled little smile lurked about his eyes—a ghost of a
-smile which had dissipated perhaps under the cruel times that had come.
-His breath smelled of boiled onions and the same odor pervaded the close
-little room.
-
-“Who is it, I ask?” repeated Slipitsky when Michael made no answer but
-turned to close the door behind Katerin. The old Jew was on his guard at
-once, for he knew these muffled figures might be robbers or secret
-police sent by Zorogoff to arrest him.
-
-“We have come to have a talk with you privately,” whispered Michael.
-Slipitsky’s face was instantly screwed up with terror, and his jaw
-dropped. For an instant he was in something of a panic and he drew back
-into a corner, for he knew that no rude peasant would speak so correctly
-as had this stranger before him. And whispers always meant secrecy if
-not imminent danger.
-
-“You are not peasants!” mumbled Slipitsky. “You have come in here by a
-trick! You do not speak now as peasants! Who has sent you here to make
-trouble for me in my house?”
-
-Michael whipped the muffler down from his face by way of answer and
-thrust his face forward into the light from the frosted window so that
-Slipitsky might recognize him without further talk.
-
-“Prophets of Israel!” cried the Jew, suddenly relieved of his worry as
-he recognized Michael. “You are dead!”
-
-“Not yet, by the kindness of God,” whispered Michael, and turning to his
-daughter, said, “Also Katerin Stephanovna has come with me. You must
-hide us both, for we are beset by the Ataman and have fled away from our
-house to save our lives.”
-
-“True enough, it is Michael Alexandrovitch, his Excellence who was
-Governor!” whispered Slipitsky as if assuring himself that he was not
-deceived by his eyes. He clapped his hands over his ears. “It was said
-that you were both dead! Four months ago I heard you had been killed! Is
-it that you have risen from the dead by a miracle, my old friends? By
-the patriarchs! This is a sight for me! Both of you—and dressed in poor
-rags like serfs come in from a farm to sell butter!”
-
-Katerin had exposed her face and smiled joyfully at the old Jew.
-
-“Take care or you will be heard speaking to us and we shall be
-betrayed,” warned Michael. “No one must know we are here, or Zorogoff
-comes——”
-
-“Enough!” cried Slipitsky, and ran out from behind his desk, keys
-jangling in his pockets, and shot the bolt on the door. “As you say, the
-place is like a beehive with spies,” he whispered, turning back to
-Michael. “That rascal, Dazo, below stairs is one of Zorogoff’s men, I
-know! The Cossacks made me make a place for him there at the door to
-watch—but I know he is an underground for the Ataman!”
-
-“Then we shall be delivered,” said Michael, pulling up his muffler over
-his face again. “If it be already known to him that we are here——”
-
-“We must fool him,” said Slipitsky. “What is the good of having a head
-if we do not use it? You must go out again and——”
-
-“But where shall we stay?” demanded Michael, alarmed at the Jew’s saying
-they must go. To be turned into the streets again meant certain capture
-by soldiers of the Ataman.
-
-“Please, you must hide us for our lives!” pleaded Katerin. “If you do
-not hide us somewhere we shall be killed!”
-
-“We shall all be killed!” exclaimed Slipitsky. “Take off your covering
-and let me see your face again, mistress! Ah, yes, it is you! Can you
-doubt that I will not do what I can for old friends? Be patient.”
-
-“Then we can stay?” asked Katerin. “But what of the spy below? Will he
-not reveal us?”
-
-“We are desperate,” urged Michael. “Zorogoff has given us the mental
-torture—if he finds us again he will take my daughter to his palace
-to——”
-
-“Toosh!” exploded Slipitsky. “Zorogoff is not to find you. I have known
-persecution in my day—who of my people have not? And in your time you
-were good to some of my friends. Ah, I never forget, my friend! I will
-hide you well. But if Zorogoff knows, then we are all dead together—as
-dead as the prophets! That Ataman is a robber, Excellence! Every week I
-must pay him money till I am beggared. Taxes, he calls it! Is the last
-kopeck from a poor man taxes, I ask? And every name that goes in the
-book he watches, for fear I would have a stranger under my roof who
-might be a spy against him! And that dog of a Dazo is his eyes. But we
-must fool Dazo, as you shall see.”
-
-“He will know if we do not go away again,” said Katerin. “How are we to
-fool him on that?”
-
-“Toosh! Who is to suspect that the two peasants who came this morning to
-pay me money were his Excellence the General and his daughter? It is how
-you get out again, as Dazo sees it, that gives me troubles. But I shall
-put you in rooms and no names in the book for the spies. So we must fool
-that stupid one below. Wait here for me, Excellence.”
-
-The Jew unbolted the door with cautious fingers and looked down the
-hall. Then he went out and closed the door after him to look down the
-stairs. He saw Dazo lying on the bench, his back to the stove,
-apparently napping.
-
-“Dazo!” yelled Slipitsky frantically, at the same time beginning a wild
-caper like a dance, “Dazo! Stop the two—the old man and the woman with
-the cabbages! Stop them I say, or I am ruined for twenty rubles! Oh, oh,
-oh!”
-
-Dazo rolled off the bench and sat up, staring about him in bewilderment,
-startled out of a sound doze by the screams of Slipitsky.
-
-“What is the trouble?” called the youth. “What has happened now?”
-
-“Enough has happened!” cried Slipitsky. “The two peasants who came in
-with the cabbages to pay me money! Stop them! Oh, I am ruined!”
-
-“But I saw no one!” cried Dazo. “I tell you no one has come in or gone
-out from this place while——”
-
-“Stop the talk and run!” screamed Slipitsky, wringing his hands in
-agony. “I signed the receipt but the rubles they gave me were bad!
-Twenty rubles, I say, I lose! They just went out the door while you were
-dreaming of the wife you beat in Irkutsk! They just went out the door!
-Run for them and drag them back by their hair! Run, run—hurry!”
-
-“You are crazy,” muttered Dazo, but he reached for his coat to the
-wooden hook on the wall, not sure now that the two strangers had not
-evaded him while he was asleep.
-
-“I am crazy for my twenty rubles!” raged Slipitsky, and Dazo pulled on
-his coat and dashed into the street.
-
-Slipitsky ran back to his little office and let himself in.
-
-“Come!” he commanded. “I will put you in rooms, now that I have sent
-that fool of a Dazo down the Sofistkaya looking for you.”
-
-Michael and Katerin followed him down the long hall. The Jew put a big
-brass key into a door, and, turning the lock, thrust Michael into the
-room and handed him the key. “Keep quiet till I come with food, and if
-any one knocks do not answer. We have fooled that fox of a Dazo, and we
-shall fool the Ataman!”
-
-And the old Jew put his fingers to his lips against the thanks which
-Michael and Katerin would have expressed, slipped out through the door
-and was gone, wailing through the hall about the fictitious twenty
-rubles which he had lost by the carelessness of Dazo, the spy.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- KATERIN PLANS TO MEET THE AMERICAN
-
-
-SLIPITSKY returned to the Kirsakoffs in an hour, bringing with him a
-small samovar, some bread, and a cold partridge. In his pocket he
-carried a bottle of wine for Michael.
-
-“You will need something to warm and hearten you, Excellence, for there
-is not much warmth,” he said when Katerin had let him in.
-
-Michael was sitting on the bed, his boots off and his eyes blinking, for
-he had been sleeping, being worn out with waiting up for the return of
-Wassili the night before, the preparation for the flight, and the
-journey afoot into the city.
-
-“Ah, that is good!” said Michael. “I am famished, though I have had a
-good sleep—without bad dreams, for now we are out of danger, old
-friend.”
-
-Slipitsky turned and looked at him in surprise. “Out of danger! Do not
-think my hotel is so safe, Excellence. Zorogoff may ask for all my rooms
-any day for more of his officers—and when he takes the notion he
-searches the place. So you are still in danger—unless you have a plan
-for escape from the city. Surely you and the daughter must have some
-scheme for getting out by an underground!”
-
-“Oh, true!” said Michael, taking a glass of wine from Katerin’s hand.
-“That is why we have come—there is an American here?”
-
-“Friends have sent an American officer to us,” explained Katerin to the
-Jew. “Is he not here in the house?”
-
-“So-o!” whispered Slipitsky, betraying his amazement. “It is you he has
-come for? And that is why so little has been seen of him! Two nights he
-has been under the roof and he has not stirred out, but sits all day
-smoking by a samovar! I have seen him in the hall once—a big fellow,
-maybe a colonel! And he has paid a week in advance, too, but I could not
-read what he wrote in the book for Dazo. So he got word to you that he
-was here—well, that is good for you.”
-
-“We have heard that he was in the city looking for us,” said Michael.
-“But we are not sure—we must look into the matter. But I doubt if
-Zorogoff will dare interfere with an American—or us if the American has
-come to help us.”
-
-Slipitsky sat down and pulled his beard thoughtfully while Katerin
-busied herself with brewing the tea at the samovar.
-
-“It is hard for us to tell what that devil of an Ataman will do with
-anybody,” said Slipitsky. “But an American—that is different. So your
-friends have done this for you! And the American has sent word to you
-that he is here waiting for you, eh?”
-
-“We heard it through Ilya Andreitch, a peasant, who came to our house
-last night with the news,” explained Katerin. “But when Ilya was sent
-here with a message last night he was killed. But the American did not
-tell Ilya to go to us—Ilya got news from friends of his.”
-
-Slipitsky opened his eyes at that, and rolled them thoughtfully. “Then
-the American did not send the word to you by Ilya?” He was puzzled—and
-troubled again. “And Ilya was shot? That is bad.”
-
-“We shall have to be very cautious about it,” put in Michael, “for I am
-afraid of a trap.”
-
-“Ilya got the news from Rimsky, an old cigarette-seller,” said Katerin.
-
-“What!” exclaimed Slipitsky. “From that old liar? He will say anything
-for ten kopecks. What does he know about our American? Rimsky has not
-been here to see him. I tell you, there is something wrong about this—it
-may be that Rimsky is a spy.”
-
-“Ah, yes!” said Michael, frowning thoughtfully. “What if Rimsky is a
-spy, as you say, and Ilya was fooled about the American’s having come
-for us? That is what I said from the first!”
-
-“But it may be that the American asked Rimsky about us before he came to
-the hotel at all,” said Katerin. “And perhaps Rimsky gave the news to
-poor Ilya, and perhaps the news was truth. Then would it not be right?”
-
-“I would like to see something that is right if Rimsky has had a hand in
-it,” grumbled Slipitsky, who was getting more worried as he considered
-the matter. He was reluctant to ask too many questions, for he supposed
-there might be angles to the situation which the Kirsakoffs would prefer
-not to discuss.
-
-But Katerin was becoming alarmed by Slipitsky’s doubts. She realized
-well enough that there had never been any proof beyond Ilya’s word that
-the American had come seeking them, and that Ilya himself had been
-dependent upon what Rimsky had said. But she did feel that there was
-protection of some kind for them in the bare fact that an American was
-under the same roof with them now, and that Zorogoff might not dare
-persecute them openly or take them from the hotel. She was determined to
-appeal to the American, but she wanted time to make her own plans. What
-she feared now was that Slipitsky, by his suspicions and doubts, would
-put her father back into his mood of dejection and discouragement. So
-she laughed gayly and served her father with tea and the cold partridge.
-
-“I shall find some way of talking with the American,” she declared to
-Slipitsky. “You must help me in some plan.”
-
-“I can go to him and tell him that I know where the Kirsakoffs may be
-found,” suggested the Jew. “He will tell me, I think, at once, if he
-seeks you or not.”
-
-“I am not so sure,” said Katerin. “He may not want to discuss a secret
-with you—he will be suspicious of any person who talks with him about
-us, if he is trying to find us unbeknownst to others in the city. He
-might deny that he seeks us, and thus we should be deprived of his
-help.”
-
-“True,” said Slipitsky. “The owl says little but thinks much, so what he
-knows is his own, which is wisdom. We need not fear the American—I wish
-there were more of them here. But this old fox of a Rimsky! It would be
-well to know what he is at.”
-
-“No,” said Michael. “You cannot go running to a stranger and saying you
-know where we are hidden. And we cannot go to him and make ourselves
-known till we know for sure that he is seeking us. The matter will have
-to be arranged with more care.”
-
-“Yes, Excellence, the wolf knows the forest and its ways,” said the Jew.
-“We must be wise about it, for there is no tax on wisdom. It would be
-well for me to bring Rimsky to the house and question him about what he
-knows—and what he said to Ilya.”
-
-“You say you do not trust Rimsky,” said Katerin. “You say he is a
-liar—and may be a spy for the Ataman. Even if the American asked Rimsky
-about us, Rimsky might lie about it—and even if he tells the truth,
-whatever he says we will mistrust it. And we must be careful that we do
-not set his tongue wagging in the city. Till we have thought more about
-it, we must be most cautious.”
-
-“Then shall I ask the American about it, mistress?” asked the Jew.
-
-“No, thank you—I shall go and see the American myself.”
-
-“See the American yourself!” gasped Michael in astonishment.
-
-“Yes, I shall see him,” replied Katerin calmly. “That is the simplest
-and best way to learn what we want to know.”
-
-“That is sensible,” agreed Slipitsky.
-
-“You mean that you will go and tell him who you are?” demanded Michael,
-his horror intensifying at the idea the more he realized that Katerin
-meant what she was saying.
-
-“He may know who I am when he sees me,” said Katerin.
-
-“It must not be done, my daughter,” said Michael, his agitation only
-growing. “We can trust no one, especially not a strange man who comes
-from whom we know not. This is no time to be rash, and I cannot let you
-put yourself into danger.”
-
-“If this American has come seeking Michael Kirsakoff and his daughter,
-will he not have descriptions of us? And if he is not seeking us, how is
-he to know who I am? I shall not tell him my name, you may be assured of
-that, unless he knows me—or unless he tells me that he seeks us. So what
-can the danger be, my father?”
-
-“There is some truth in what you say,” admitted Michael, as he resumed
-eating the partridge. “If he knows you, he knows, and that would mean he
-has come from friends. But if he does not recognize you, and he does not
-tell you that he is seeking us, what have you learned? And how are you
-to go talking with a man you do not know? I tell you you must not take
-risks on what Ilya has said!”
-
-“That is wisdom,” assented the Jew, nodding his head slowly. “You must
-always test the ice before you walk upon it, else you will find yourself
-in the river with the fish.”
-
-“Tell me, where is the room of the American?” asked Katerin.
-
-“The other way—down at the end of the hall with windows that look up the
-Sofistkaya, mistress.”
-
-“Can you put us in rooms near him?”
-
-“Yes, mistress, I could. When Dazo goes out later in the day, it can be
-accomplished secretly. Is it that you intend to watch the American? You
-will see little of him if he keeps to his room as he has.”
-
-“What good would it do us to watch him?” asked Michael. “It would tell
-us nothing to see him going and coming.”
-
-“No,” said Katerin. “But I wish to be near him for protection in case
-the Ataman’s officers come here. Now, have you a servant for us who can
-be trusted not to talk about us?”
-
-“Yes, mistress—a sister of my cousin. She waits upon some of the
-Ataman’s officers who live in the house. It is she who will bring you
-your samovars and your food. She is safe—not too much sense and little
-to say to any one.”
-
-“Then this is my plan,” said Katerin. “If you will contrive to put us
-near the American officer, the next thing will be to take care that when
-the American rings for a samovar the girl does not take it to him, but
-brings it to us. And I shall carry the samovar to him. He, thinking I am
-but a samovar girl, may talk with me and I may learn if he seeks among
-the people of the city for a man by the name of Kirsakoff.”
-
-“A Kirsakoff a servant! You, Katerin Stephanovna, a samovar girl in this
-hotel! How can you think of such a thing?” cried Michael.
-
-Katerin laughed merrily and tossed her head, already in a mood for the
-plan which she had evolved. “I would not be a samovar girl because I
-play at it, my father,” she said. “What is it but fun? Who can help the
-Kirsakoffs better than God and themselves?”
-
-“But I say you are not to be a servant!” objected Michael.
-
-“Better a living servant than a dead aristocrat,” replied Katerin. “What
-harm can come of it? Is it not wise to be known here as a servant? We
-have come here as peasants and wish to be known as such for safety. Look
-at my old black dress! I have on my slippers—see—and I can let down my
-hair. How will an American know that I am not a samovar girl—unless, as
-we have said, he recognizes me at once as a Kirsakoff? And I can talk
-with him, perhaps. He will not be afraid of saying things to a girl who
-is a servant which he would keep from others.”
-
-“And what then?” asked Michael with a frown. “Do you think that this
-American is going about telling his secret business to any samovar girl?
-Fi! You must take him for a fool before you have seen him!”
-
-“I am afraid that he will know you are not a servant, if I am allowed to
-say my opinion, mistress,” said the Jew dolefully.
-
-“But he is an American,” persisted Katerin. “He probably knows little
-Russian. But what I wish to learn at once is whether he will know me for
-a Kirsakoff. And if he does not recognize me, and yet sees that I am not
-of the servant class, all the more reason why he should suspect that I
-might know the Kirsakoffs. So he might ask me if I know them. Why should
-he not ask a samovar girl, when he has asked old Rimsky for General
-Kirsakoff? Do you think I will only take his food to him and then run
-away without a word?”
-
-“And what else can you do?” asked her father.
-
-“I shall talk to him—of the weather, and the troubles that have come
-upon the people. And if he does not tell me why he has come to Chita, I
-shall try and learn it from him. Can he speak Russian, do you know, Mr.
-Slipitsky?”
-
-“He must speak a little,” said the Jew. “He is alone, and he has made
-his way about. He talked with Dazo, who knows nothing but Russian, the
-stupid ox. But the American wrote in the book in English and I could
-make nothing of it—just a scrawl.”
-
-“Then he will be able to talk a little with me,” said Katerin. “At
-least, enough so that I may gain his confidence and be able to talk with
-him in a way of gossip about General Kirsakoff who was Governor here.”
-
-“By the Prophets!” said Slipitsky. “The mistress Katerin Stephanovna
-should be in the secret police, Excellence! It is all a good plan, and
-the mistress should be allowed to have her way in it.”
-
-“I wish there were some other way to go about it than this business of
-being a samovar girl,” said Michael as he lighted a cigarette. “We shall
-know how wise it all is when we see what we shall learn by it. But I
-shall not prevent its being done, for we are in danger enough, and
-making danger for you, my friend.”
-
-“Think not of my danger,” said the Jew.
-
-“Then I shall do it,” said Katerin. “We cannot delay, and we cannot take
-outsiders, like this man Rimsky, into our confidence. Our safety now
-depends upon keeping secret where we are, and upon making the best of
-such time as we have. Who knows when the Ataman will learn where we have
-gone from the house? And you shall be well paid for your help, Mr.
-Slipitsky, and for what you have done.”
-
-“Ah, it is not for money,” said the Jew. “When are you to begin as
-samovar girl, mistress? I must make the arrangements and be sure that
-everything is ready.”
-
-“The morning is the best time for me to go to the American,” said
-Katerin. “I shall take his morning samovar to him, the girl bringing it
-to me first. And I shall go on serving him till I have learned what I
-need. And if he should not tell me before he is to leave the city, I
-shall tell him that we wish to escape the city under his protection.
-Surely, we need not be afraid of an American!”
-
-“No,” agreed Michael. “He cannot be from enemies if he is not from
-friends. But it is best to learn what we can first, and you must have a
-good rest before you begin a battle of wits.”
-
-The Jew left them again, and later in the day he put Michael and Katerin
-into two rooms next to the room in which Peter was resting and planning
-how he should deal with Michael Kirsakoff if he could be found in Chita.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- THE SAMOVAR GIRL
-
-
-IT was nine o’clock by his wrist-watch when Peter got out of bed that
-morning. From what he could see of the city through the frosted windows,
-it was a cold gray day, with the position of the sun above the ridge of
-hills marked by a yellow blotch through the scattering fog.
-
-The room was cold and he dressed rapidly. He rang at once for a samovar,
-and began shaving. He had made up his mind to make definite efforts this
-day to trace Michael Kirsakoff, for he was now rested from his journey
-on the train. He thought of Rimsky. It might be wise to go in and see
-the graybeard again, and pick up once more the conversation and the
-gossip. In time Rimsky would be willing to talk more freely, Peter was
-sure.
-
-The samovar girl was slower than usual in coming. Peter rang again—three
-times, and with as much insistence as he could put into the pressure of
-the button. He finished shaving, and had a mind to go out to the dreary
-dining room and see what could be done about getting some hot tea there.
-It was apparent that the stupid and slatternly girl who had been serving
-him could not be depended upon for prompt service—and he was beginning
-to suffer from the cold.
-
-When he had decided that he should wait no longer, there came a knock at
-the door. He opened it—and stared! For instead of the peasant girl who
-had been serving him since his arrival at the hotel, there was a tall
-young woman with a beautiful face—a patrician face, the face of a woman
-of noble lineage! And he was startled, though he was too well trained in
-his business to reveal his amazement to her. Still, he paused for an
-instant, not sure that she had not mistaken the room and had not come in
-response to his ringing. He looked at her over the top of the big brass
-samovar which she bore on a tray before her, and her keenly intelligent
-blue eyes met his with a self-possessed and frank gaze. He half expected
-her to mutter some apology and go away. Instead, she stood gazing at
-him, waiting for him to make way for her, and the trace of a smile came
-into her eyes, as if she felt like saying to him, “Here is your samovar!
-How do you expect to get it if you stand all morning in the doorway?”
-
-Peter bowed slightly, and said good-morning with an effort to be casual.
-In the second which he had stood stock still looking at her, a suspicion
-had crossed his mind—this well-born woman had not taken the place of his
-unkempt serving girl without good reason. It was quite possible, and
-quite in the Russian style, to send an attractive woman to serve him and
-spy upon him. Very well! He decided that he should play a little at that
-game himself.
-
-“Good-morning, master,” Katerin replied modestly, and came through the
-door when Peter stepped aside to admit her. She smiled as a matter of
-duty, and went about her business of placing the samovar and the
-breakfast things on the table.
-
-Peter went before the big mirror on the wall between the windows and
-pretended to be combing his hair. He wished to conceal from the new
-samovar girl his close observation of her, and he could watch her image
-in the mirror without appearing to pay any special attention to her.
-
-Katerin wore her old black dress. Peter knew at once that it was not a
-cast-off garment such as might be given to a serving girl by a woman of
-the upper class—it was obviously her own garment, cut and made
-especially for her. Though the material was old, he knew it for fine
-stuff, probably imported. A real American might have been deceived into
-the belief that this woman was nothing but a servant; Peter, however,
-knew that such a delicate face, such fine features, such a carriage of a
-proud head were to be found only among the nobility of his native
-country. If she had been sent to watch him, he knew that whoever had
-sent her could not know that he was a native Russian—it was presumed
-that he was an American so unfamiliar with Russia as to be easily
-misled.
-
-He smiled as he watched her. She handled the crude dishes as if they
-were of the most fragile china or of fine glass. She put down the heavy
-blue sugar-urn gently; she transferred the tea-glass, which was made
-from the bottom of a bottle, from the tray to the table with infinite
-care. She laid out the old brass spoon beside the heavy plate on the
-dingy cloth as if instead of being brass it were of the finest silver.
-
-He noted her hands. The fingers were slender—and clean. The nails were
-polished. Her black hair, braided down her back and tied with a bit of
-velvet black ribbon, had a sheen which indicated the care which had been
-given to it. And the low collar of her gown revealed the fine texture of
-her skin.
-
-Having arranged the dishes on the table, Katerin stood with her back to
-Peter, hands on hips and watching the teapot atop the samovar. This was
-all in startling contrast to the abrupt manner of the other girl, who
-had dumped the things down upon the table and departed. This new girl
-seemed suspiciously solicitous about the comfort of the American—and was
-possessed of plenty of time for lingering in the rooms of guests!
-
-Peter walked to the table, and sat down with his back to the window. She
-remained standing before the samovar in thoughtful attitude,
-disregarding him. He saw that her face showed traces of strain—a pallor
-which was not natural to her skin and a gauntness about her eyes which
-gave her a sad and melancholy expression. Presently she picked up the
-blue sugar-urn as if to put it better within his reach.
-
-“Ah!” said Peter, rubbing his hands and smiling up at her. “On cold
-mornings like this one the song of the samovar makes pretty music in our
-ears!”
-
-It was an old saying of his father’s—and Peter spoke the Russian words
-with casual rapidity, for he wanted to see what she would think of
-him—an American who spoke Russian as only one born under the Czar could
-speak it.
-
-The sugar-urn slipped from Katerin’s fingers and crashed down upon the
-metal tray, spilling the sugar. And he heard her give a startled gasp. A
-look of utter astonishment came into her face and she gave him a
-frightened stare. The Russian words had put her into a swift panic—she
-was more than astonished—she was actually alarmed at hearing her own
-language flow so freely from the lips of a man she supposed to be an
-American.
-
-“Have I frightened you?” he asked, looking at her with feigned concern,
-and speaking gently. “Do you fear the sound of your own language?”
-
-“You are Russian,” she said simply, but with the faintest trace of a
-question in the words.
-
-“Oh, no, I am an American,” he replied easily. “True, I am of Russian
-blood.” He smiled at her, and she looked away from him swiftly, renewing
-her efforts to save the sugar which had been spilled from being wet in
-the bottom of the tray. He saw her fine white skin show a sudden flush
-of color that rose from her throat and mounted slowly to her cheeks,
-tinting the pale skin under her eyes. He thought now that she was more
-beautiful than he had at first realized.
-
-“Is it because I am Russian that you show fear?” he went on.
-
-She tossed her head a trifle, as if in defiance. “I do not fear you,”
-she said lightly, and gave him a shy smile.
-
-“I would be sorry if you did.”
-
-“It is very pleasant—that we may speak to each other and understand. I
-was surprised—yes. Now, there is your sugar, and I must go.”
-
-“No, please!” he objected as she turned as if to go to the door.
-“Everybody is surprised to hear the American officer speak real Russian,
-but no one stops to talk with me—and I am hungry for talk—talk in
-Russian. I have only just come, and the other girl would say only, ‘Yes,
-master’ and ‘No, master,’ and run away frightened, just as you are about
-to do.”
-
-“But I am not frightened,” she said, pretending to bother with the
-teapot on the top of the samovar.
-
-“But just now, at hearing your own language, you dropped the sugar dish.
-Is it not true?”
-
-Peter was joking her now in an effort to get on friendly terms with her.
-But she still appeared a bit distrait, as if she had not yet recovered
-from the shock of hearing a foreigner speaking the Czar’s Russian.
-
-“Yes, I was startled,” admitted Katerin, and now smiled at him frankly,
-though she gave him a searching look—the silver bars on his shoulders,
-the buttons of his blouse, the circle of brown tape at the cuffs of his
-tunic. “And you would be surprised, American, if a samovar girl should
-speak to you in perfect English.”
-
-“Probably I should,” said Peter. “As it was, you surprised me this
-morning—I was expecting the other girl to come.”
-
-She said nothing to that. She realized now that it would be foolish to
-expect him to think of her as of the servant class, and had already
-given up all ideas of making a pretense.
-
-And as for Peter, he was beginning to abandon his theory that she was a
-spy. There was probably some other reason for her being a servant. He
-was chiefly concerned now with making her a friend, for the thought
-crossed his mind that this girl might be able to give him information
-about Kirsakoff, though the subject of the former Governor would have to
-be approached with great caution.
-
-“The other girl could not come this morning,” she said. “But I shall not
-always bring your samovar—my work is on the other floors.”
-
-“I hope you will, though it is too bad that you have to work as a
-samovar girl.” This was direct angling for enlightenment as to why she
-was serving as a samovar girl—he wanted to give her a chance to set
-herself right with him. If she did happen to be a spy, it would make it
-easy for her to improvise a history for herself and so find it easy to
-talk with him and deflect his suspicions—if she thought he was
-suspicious of her true status. He knew it was quite possible that she
-was a refugee who had turned “worker” for protection against the wrath
-of the masses toward the wealthy.
-
-“People once rich are now poor,” said Katerin, and looked at him
-significantly. She was hoping that he might take this hint, and by a
-closer scrutiny, recognize her as Kirsakoff’s daughter. In that case, he
-would make it known to her that he had come from friends to find her and
-her father. But, as a matter of fact, Peter had forgotten that Kirsakoff
-had a daughter—except for a little girl.
-
-“And it is necessary now that you work?” he asked.
-
-“It is most necessary. I must have food and shelter by some method.”
-
-“You are working here—as a samovar girl—for food and shelter? Is it as
-bad as that with you?”
-
-“Why not I as well as others?” she asked simply, with a shrug of her
-shoulders. “And others have fared worse. What better could I do while I
-wait—for friends—to send help to me—and my people?”
-
-Once more she gave him that steady gaze which she thought would add
-meaning to her words, but though his face was serious, not a glimmer of
-understanding did she see in his eyes. She thought it strange that if he
-had been sent to rescue her father and herself he could not grasp the
-meaning behind her words and her glances. Surely, he would have been
-shown a picture of her, or have a description of her from friends which
-would cause him to recognize the daughter of Michael Kirsakoff easily.
-There were not so many young women of her age, education, and appearance
-in Chita, she knew.
-
-She turned her eyes from his, and colored again, embarrassed by having
-looked so long and steadily into the eyes of a stranger. She drew him a
-glass full of hot water from the samovar for a fresh glass of tea and by
-this means covered her sense of having appeared too bold with a strange
-man.
-
-“So you are waiting for help to come to you, eh?” asked Peter. He pitied
-her—yet he was still reserving his judgment about her. It was possible
-that her story was only to mislead him as to her real motive in bringing
-the samovar to his room.
-
-Katerin smiled sadly. “Yes, I wait for a chance to get away from the
-city. We have sent letters to friends in Harbin and in Vladivostok—weeks
-ago, months ago. We are not sure that they got the letters, for we have
-had no answer. Yet we hope some one will come to help us. Perhaps—_they
-will send some one to us_,” she added with special significance and
-looked at him again with intent eyes.
-
-Peter was puzzled now. He saw that she was trying to make him understand
-something without putting it into words—it might be that she was seeking
-to learn for some other person what his object was in coming to Chita.
-Or he had been mistaken for some other person who was expected.
-
-“Why do you not go to Vladivostok yourself?” he asked, evading saying
-anything that bore upon what he was thinking. “The trains are running.
-Is it lack of money that prevents you from going?”
-
-“No, not money,” she said, and then with a glance at the door, she
-lowered her voice to almost a whisper. “Do you not know about the Ataman
-Zorogoff who is in this city?”
-
-“Yes, I have heard of him. I hope to know more about him. The Americans
-want to help the people. Perhaps you will tell me about Zorogoff.”
-
-Peter thought that was enough for him to say about Zorogoff. He did not
-care to commit himself on the subject of the Ataman—did not wish to
-betray any antagonism toward the Mongol ruler. The Ataman was a man to
-be wary about, and Peter had no intention of taking this girl into his
-confidence as to where he might stand in any matter which involved
-Zorogoff.
-
-Katerin suddenly clenched her hands. “Do the Americans think they can
-help us if they remain in Vladivostok?” she demanded with passion. Then
-she lapsed back into her easy manner as suddenly as she had blurted out
-her feelings, and turned as if she would go.
-
-“Please wait!” he commanded. “This is something that it would be well
-for me to know.” Then dropping his voice as she paused and looked back
-at him over her shoulder, he went on, “You mean that the people are
-oppressed by the Ataman Zorogoff?”
-
-She returned and stood before the samovar, as if settling in her mind
-what her answer should be.
-
-“I think I had better not talk about the Ataman,” she said finally. “He
-is not a safe subject for discussion by a poor and helpless samovar
-girl.”
-
-“Tell me,” he urged, bending forward and speaking confidentially, “are
-you in danger from the Ataman?”
-
-She gave him that quick look again, as if she were not quite sure that
-he could be trusted. “It is better for me not to talk of the Ataman—but
-I am a samovar girl here for my own safety—till some one comes for
-me—_and my father_.”
-
-Once more he understood that he was to get some meaning from her words.
-He noticed that a sudden change had come over her—there was a softer
-look in her eyes, as if she had abandoned all thought of using any
-artifice with him and was on the verge of giving him her confidence. Her
-eyes seemed to burn with a kindlier light for him.
-
-Peter was right about Katerin. She was at that time strongly tempted to
-tell him who she was. She watched him with a quivering expectancy,
-waiting for him to whisper to her that he was the man who had been sent
-by her friends to find her and Michael Kirsakoff. But when he said
-nothing and observed her without any sign that he had comprehended her
-meaning in words or looks, she felt a fear that perhaps she had gone too
-far in her attempts to enlighten him as to her identity.
-
-“Do you live here—in Chita?” he asked. It was in his mind that this was
-a good time to test her as to whether she might have any knowledge of
-Kirsakoff. He realized that if she had her home in Chita, she was of the
-class who would know the former Governor.
-
-Katerin’s lips moved as if to reply, but she did not speak. She had
-recovered her caution. She wanted to evade the answer, for once more she
-had built up a mental resistance against him and was beginning to be
-afraid. She realized that if she pretended to be a stranger in the city
-she would defeat his purpose if he had really come from friends, by
-misleading him. If she told him that she was a stranger in the city he
-would be thrown entirely off the track and never suspect that she was
-Katerin Stephanovna Kirsakoff.
-
-“I have been in Chita long enough to know it well,” she said. “And I
-have been here long enough to be willing to go, too.”
-
-“Then you have friends here,” he said. “You must know many of the
-people—the wealthy people, that is.”
-
-“They are almost all gone—or dead. Most of them are in Vladivostok, or
-in hiding here. But we cannot get away now—it is impossible for us to
-leave by ourselves. We wait for our friends—_to send us help_.” That
-should be plain enough for him, she thought.
-
-“How would they send help?” he asked. “You mean that they would send
-soldiers?”
-
-“Perhaps they would send a man who would be able to take us away from
-the city—they might even send a—foreigner. A man Zorogoff would not dare
-to hinder from going with us.”
-
-Peter now had full understanding of her searching looks, her broad hints
-about help, and her surprise at finding that he spoke perfect Russian
-though supposed to be an American. Also, he saw her reason for coming to
-him as a samovar girl—unless she was really a spy delving into his
-object for being in the city.
-
-“I am sorry I have been so stupid,” he said. “You must think I am a
-fool—but I am not a messenger sent by your friends.”
-
-Katerin was standing at the far end of the table from him, close by the
-door. He saw her turn pale, either with sudden fear of him, or great
-disappointment that she had revealed to him that she was expecting a
-messenger. She was calm enough, but he saw that his admission that he
-was not the expected messenger, chilled her with some unaccountable
-terror.
-
-It was this that had terrified Katerin: This American now denied that he
-was seeking her father—but where had Ilya gotten the word that an
-American was hunting for Michael Kirsakoff? And this American was really
-a Russian! Could it be that instead of being a friend, or from friends,
-he was in reality an enemy? What could this man want with her father?
-she asked herself. He could not have come from friends, else he would
-have easily recognized her. And if he had asked Rimsky for the
-whereabouts of Michael Kirsakoff and was willing that the old
-cigarette-seller and Ilya Andreitch the pig-killing _moujik_ should know
-that he was seeking Kirsakoff, why was he not willing that she should
-know of his quest? She saw that he was willing to ally himself with
-peasants but withheld the object of his coming to the city from
-aristocrats. She saw that she had failed in misleading him as to her
-class. He gave his secrets to peasants—thus he must be an enemy to her
-father and herself!
-
-She laughed suddenly, as if all that had passed between them had been a
-joke. She must change her tactics and get his secret. She must not
-arouse his suspicions as to her identity now, but baffle him in every
-way, for if he were not a friend he must be a new menace to her and her
-father.
-
-“Of course you are not the messenger,” she said, and returning to the
-samovar, took down the teapot, shook it swingingly and looked into it.
-Her face was flushed again under the excitement of what she had
-discovered about him. “Come! Have another glass of tea,
-please—_master!_” She gave a joking twist to the last word, and threw
-back her head and laughed gayly.
-
-“But it is too bad if you have been expecting a messenger,” said Peter.
-
-“Oh, it is nothing. Everybody in Siberia is waiting to hear from
-friends! You Americans! You are too serious about everything—what does
-it matter if you be not the man?”
-
-But Peter _was_ serious. He almost wished now that he had led her to
-believe that he was a messenger. For he was afraid that she would go
-away and he would see her no more. He wanted to see her again and again,
-and in time bring their conversation to the subject of the former
-governor and get from her some information as to where he might look for
-Kirsakoff.
-
-“Is it true that you are in danger?” he asked. “That you must get away
-from the city?”
-
-“We are all in danger here,” she retorted. “Trust no one—the city is
-full of spies, and you must be careful what you say—even what you say to
-me.”
-
-“But I think I could trust you,” he said conciliatingly.
-
-“Please don’t trust me. I would rather not have any secrets. The
-greatest danger in this city is in having a secret which some person
-wants. I prefer to know nothing and be safe.”
-
-“Perhaps I could be of help to you,” said Peter, having an idea that by
-offering protection he could gain her confidence and learn from her
-where Kirsakoff might be found. “I am an American officer, and if I
-should employ you for my government no one would dare threaten your
-safety.”
-
-“Perhaps you could help me,” she said thoughtfully. “But I know little
-about you—what part of Russia are you from?”
-
-Peter hesitated. It would not do to tell her he had been a boy in Chita
-for that news would start gossip, and he would be under suspicion at
-once if Kirsakoff were killed. He drank some tea before he answered the
-question.
-
-“Oh, I have not been in Russia for years—I left Kiev when I was a boy.
-Come! What is your name? We must be friends if we are going to go into
-these matters.”
-
-“What is your name?” she countered.
-
-“Call me Peter—that is my name.”
-
-“Peter! That is no name for a Russian. What are your other names?”
-
-“Peter Petrovitch.”
-
-She laughed at him with a touch of saucy insouciance, and lifted her
-shoulders as if she put small faith in the name. “What is your generic
-name?”
-
-“Gordon, but I hoped you might call me Peter Petrovitch—it has been many
-years since I heard it thus. You make me forget that I am an American,
-I, who am Russian.”
-
-She turned toward the door. “I am afraid that I must go now,” she said.
-
-He rose from his chair and moved after her. “But you have not given me
-your name.”
-
-“Call me Vashka.”
-
-“But that is no name for a Russian,” he insisted. “The generic name,
-please.”
-
-“That will do for now—it is good enough for a samovar girl.” She moved
-toward the door, but lingeringly, as if she had other things she would
-say but refrained from saying them at this time.
-
-“Ah, but I know you are not really a samovar girl,” he said seriously.
-“You are a lady, and I shall be happy to help you and serve you if it is
-in my power. Promise that you will come back to me.”
-
-“Perhaps I shall come,” she replied, and smiled over her shoulder at
-him. She felt unable to cope with him at this time, knowing that Ilya
-had said he sought her father. She knew that before she talked with him
-further she must consider the matter and consult with the sagacious
-Slipitsky. “You are very kind,” she said, smiled again, and went through
-the door.
-
-Peter bowed as she disappeared, looking back at him from the hall as if
-fearful that he would run after her and see where she went. But he
-closed the door, and stood smiling at himself in the big mirror—smiling
-over his thoughts of the amazing samovar girl he had found in Chita!
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- THE TRAP SHUTS
-
-
-SLIPITSKY was with Michael when Katerin returned from Peter’s room. The
-old Jew was consumed with curiosity about the American, and worried for
-the safety of his guests, for he sensed menace in the stranger. Schooled
-all his life in the secret intrigues among exiles and living in an
-atmosphere of spies and counter spies, he had an astounding mental
-perception in devious ways. The fact that Rimsky and Ilya, two peasants,
-had knowledge of the American which pointed to some hidden purpose in
-his arrival in the city, was proof enough to Slipitsky that something
-was seriously wrong. The chasm of caste in Siberia prevents an officer
-from dealing with the lower class of peasants—unless he is using them
-for an advantage against his own class. To the Russian, an officer comes
-from the upper classes, so the idea that Peter could have ever been a
-peasant was beyond the comprehension of Slipitsky or Kirsakoff.
-
-Katerin slipped into the room quickly and fastened the bolt of the door.
-Slipitsky rose from his chair and turned to her inquiringly, but she put
-her finger to her lips for caution. Michael was sitting on the bed. He
-saw the trouble in Katerin’s face, and knew that she could not bring the
-good news which they had hoped for—that the American had come from
-friends.
-
-“What is the word?” whispered Slipitsky. “What says the American?”
-
-“He is a Russian!” said Katerin.
-
-“Holy Saints!” gasped Michael, astounded, and his head began to shake
-with excitement.
-
-“Russian!” exclaimed Slipitsky, looking at Katerin as if what she had
-said exceeded all probability. “How could he be a Russian? Is it that he
-has come to my house dressed as an American and is really a spy?”
-
-“All I know is that he speaks the Czar’s Russian,” said Katerin. “He has
-not come from friends,” and then she went on and hastily told them how
-she had given Peter every hint that she dared, so that he might
-understand who she was, and that he had denied being sent to Chita to
-help anybody.
-
-“Then that fool of an Ilya was lying!” said Michael wrathfully. “He has
-made fools of us! We came here expecting to find a dove and we have
-found a hawk. Ilya had sand in his brains! It was all done to fool us
-and get money! An American who is a Russian—what good can he do us?”
-
-“Hah! A riddle!” said the Jew, and he rubbed his hands and drew himself
-a fresh glass of tea. “Now we must consider what it all means,
-Excellence! The rope is tangled and we must find the end of it!”
-
-Michael sat for a few minutes with his eyes screwed up against the light
-from the window, his wrinkled old face twitching nervously. Presently he
-got up and began to pace the floor in his stockinged feet, hands behind
-his back, his shoulders bent forward in dejection. His weak knees bent
-beneath him as he shuffled about. His body quivered with excitement and
-his eyes glowed as if he were racked by a fever.
-
-Katerin sat down by Slipitsky, and stared at the floor in reflection,
-seeking to piece together in her mind again the whole time of her visit
-to Peter and to gauge the value of what both of them had said. If only
-Ilya were still alive and could be questioned as to how he had learned
-that the American wanted to find her father!
-
-“He knew at once that I was not of the servant class,” said Katerin.
-
-“Only a Russian could do that,” mused Slipitsky. “It is all very
-strange,” and he wagged his head slowly and thoughtfully as he puzzled
-over it. “Did he tell you why he had come to Chita at all?—did he say
-nothing of his mission to this place?”
-
-“Nothing. Yet if Ilya spoke the truth, Rimsky was told why the American
-had come. Why does he trust a _moujik_ and hide his purpose from me?”
-
-“It would not be wise to have too many in the secret,” said the Jew. “He
-knew you were not what you pretended to be, and was careful. The man who
-rides a tiger cannot get off, and this Peter Petrovitch from Kiev is not
-too trusting. I give him credit for that, though we would like to know
-his business.”
-
-“He is an enemy!” declared Michael.
-
-“Then we shall know in good time,” said the Jew. “An awl cannot be
-hidden in a sack.”
-
-“A Russian from America—the worst of all,” said Michael into Slipitsky’s
-ear, as the old general came and hung over the Jew’s chair. “They come
-back here from America with their accursed ideas of liberty! And what do
-they do? Kill the Czar and ruin the country—turn it over to the Mongols!
-Old friend, we have an enemy on our hands who is a greater danger than
-the Ataman. And we have brought trouble to you and your house.”
-
-“We are all in the same boat, Excellence. If we lose our wits, we are
-lost. I am no worse for your coming, and you are no worse. The thing to
-do is to weigh and consider—and in time settle with this fellow who
-calls himself an American officer but hunts with peasants.”
-
-Katerin was discouraged. She had set her hopes on the American’s coming
-to solve their problems and relieve them of the danger from the Ataman.
-But now they were involved in a new puzzle, and could not see their way
-out of it. For more than two years she and her father had managed to
-save themselves, but now it seemed that all their bravery, all their
-devices and stratagems had but pushed them further into a trap. Life had
-become an intolerable nightmare, and the trifles of daily existence had
-become a burden. It seemed easier to die than to go on with the struggle
-against the madness which had come over their world.
-
-Michael went roaming about the room again while Katerin and Slipitsky
-sat in thought. He gazed abstractedly at the furniture, as if he
-expected to find in it some astounding quality which he had never
-noticed before. After he had walked about in this way for several
-minutes, he returned to his position between the chairs of his daughter
-and the old Jew, and leaning down between them, whispered, “We must rid
-ourselves of this man! We cannot live here under his nose and wait for
-him to strike. He is a Russian hunting me. That is no new thing—but it
-proves he wants me for no good. We must poison him!”
-
-“No, no!” said Katerin, taking her father’s arm and pulling him toward
-her. “We cannot kill a man just because Ilya said Rimsky told him the
-stranger was seeking you—we must learn from Rimsky what we can, as much
-of the truth as we can get.”
-
-“I say that, also,” declared Slipitsky. “It must be done. I shall send
-for Rimsky and question him so that he will not know the reason for my
-questions.”
-
-“What! You will let Rimsky know that we are here?” asked Michael,
-alarmed at the idea.
-
-“No, Excellence. But I can comb him for what he knows. A few drinks of
-wine and he will be as putty in my hands. You must trust to me to solve
-this riddle.”
-
-“Then it is well,” said Michael. “But I am resolved upon one thing—we
-must do away with this American, no matter what Rimsky says.”
-
-“I shall send for Rimsky at once,” said the Jew, rising and going to the
-door. “Be careful till I have had a talk with the old liar.” And with a
-gesture of caution, Slipitsky drew the bolt and disappeared in the hall.
-
-Katerin secured the bolt, and sat down again, her hands clenched in her
-lap. She felt that she was at the end of her resistance. Yet she went on
-trying to think of some way in which to learn from Peter the truth of
-why he had come to Chita. There was no reason to fear him, so long as he
-did not know who she was. And there was a chance that the talk that he
-had come for her father was all foolishness, or a shrewd scheme to play
-upon the fears of herself and her father and gain money. In that case,
-she saw that the American might be a protection—that he might take them
-from the city.
-
-“I shall go back to him and talk,” she said to her father.
-
-“You shall go back to poison his samovar,” said Michael. “I have a
-feeling that this man knows already who you are, and is blinding your
-eyes. You must end his life!”
-
-“Would you have me murder an innocent man on the word of Ilya?” she
-asked, making talk now only to keep her father’s mind engaged and
-prevent him from the despondency which threatened him.
-
-“This man is an enemy!” insisted Michael. “We cannot risk such a menace.
-We have trouble enough with the Ataman, and I speak only for your own
-safety. Oh, Katerin Stephanovna! I care nothing for my own life! It is
-you I would save. I would sell the days I have left to live if they
-could be turned into years for you, my daughter. I would die this
-minute, if I could loan you life!”
-
-The old general put his hand on her head and caressed her gently, his
-eyes full of tears and his body shaking with his sorrow for her.
-
-“I know, little father,” she whispered, taking his hands in hers and
-kissing the withered skin. “But your life is dear to me—so dear that I
-would do as you say to save you to me. But I cannot believe that this
-young man intends to harm us. He is a Russian, true enough, but have you
-lost faith in all of our people? And this Peter Petrovitch appears to be
-kind and gentle. You and Slipitsky think in the old ways—only the old
-thoughts of violence and death. This man has been to America and he may
-not be an enemy at all. But if it is true that he is seeking you out for
-evil, then we must be sure of that before we do anything against him.”
-
-“And how are you to find it out? Can you go to him and tell him that I
-am in the next room and ask him what he seeks me for? Do you forget that
-he is using peasants to trace me?”
-
-“I shall learn his secret,” declared Katerin. “A woman has her own ways
-for such things—if he hunts you, he shall first tell me, and the why of
-it.”
-
-“Ah, you women trust too much,” said her father. “This is a matter in
-which no time must be lost with wiles. We must know before the Ataman
-finds——”
-
-“I, too, think of the Ataman,” put in Katerin. “What if the American,
-though an enemy, should protect us from the Ataman?”
-
-Michael gave her an incredulous stare. “Impossible!” he said.
-
-“But it is not impossible,” insisted Katerin, who already had the
-inspiration of a sudden way out of the difficulty. “What if I should
-tell this American that I am seeking Michael Alexandrovitch? Would he
-not confide in me then? And if both of us are seeking you, it is not
-likely that he will keep his secret from me—especially if I should admit
-to him that I plan to have your life.”
-
-Michael sat down upon the bed, speechless for a moment at the boldness
-of the plan.
-
-“Holy Saints!” he whispered after a minute. “You would do that, Katerin
-Stephanovna? That is something worthy of the best of the Czar’s police!
-Ah, but you will be playing with fire—you will need your wits at every
-instant.”
-
-“True, I shall need my wits,” said Katerin. “I am willing to play with
-fire, and match my wits against the stranger. And when I learn what I
-want—then we shall need our wits all the more.”
-
-“I am old and my head is addled,” said Michael. “Sometimes I think I
-must be going mad—here I am, who was governor, hiding in my own city,
-helpless and with——”
-
-There came a cautious knock at the door. Katerin went to it, and heard
-Slipitsky’s voice outside. She let him in—and with him was Wassili!
-
-“You stupid one!” exclaimed Michael at sight of the old _moujik_. “Why
-have you come here? The Ataman will——”
-
-Slipitsky made frantic signals for quiet, and when he had shot the bolt
-behind him, threw up his hands in an attitude of resignation.
-
-Wassili was wrapped to the eyes against the cold, and stood dumbly
-waiting till he should be asked what he had come for.
-
-“This is the last of us!” whispered the Jew. “We shall all be killed
-now! Zorogoff has been to your house, Excellence—and he told Wassili
-where you were—here in my house—the floor and the room! So poor Wassili
-has run away with the warning that you are discovered.”
-
-Michael’s head sank upon his breast, as if he now submitted to fate.
-
-“We must go at once!” said Katerin. “We cannot let you draw the wrath of
-the Ataman because you are hiding us, our friend! We shall prepare to go
-at once!”
-
-“Go!” said the Jew. “You shall not till I am dead! We can all die
-together, mistress. Let the Ataman come, I say, and may he die with ten
-thousand devils dancing before his eyes!”
-
-“Truth! Let him come,” said Michael. “You are here, Wassili, now stay
-with us. Let Zorogoff come, and by the Holy Saints he or I shall be
-carried out of the place on a board!”
-
-“And perhaps the American will be glad to meet the Ataman, eh?” said
-Slipitsky. “We may as well bring him to the test, now that the Ataman
-knows where you are. We are riding a tiger, and we may as well pull his
-ears!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- KATERIN’S STRATAGEM
-
-
-PETER found himself enmeshed in a maze of conjecture about Vashka. He
-knew that she was not a samovar girl, yet it was quite possible that she
-had been compelled to become one for her own safety. But whatever her
-purpose might be, it was apparent to him that she had expected to find
-in him a messenger—and that the expected messenger would be an American
-officer.
-
-As Peter studied the matter, he saw that she would not know the expected
-messenger by sight, but would have to submit him to some test. It was
-plain enough that she had been greatly disappointed in Peter, for he had
-seen in her face signs of actual terror when she realized that she had
-blundered with him.
-
-It was the possibility that some other American officer was expected in
-the city which worried Peter. Such an event might well interfere with
-his plans for killing Kirsakoff. Peter did not want it known to the
-American army that he had stopped in Chita—at least, only casually. He
-did not want his presence in the city, nor the time, established too
-well. He hoped to flit away to Irkutsk and report himself there without
-any mention of having been in Chita. Then he could come back, report
-himself in Chita and go on to some other city. In this way he wanted to
-establish the fact that he had been in Chita, but make it appear that
-his time in the city had been after Kirsakoff had been killed rather
-than during the period of the former Governor’s death.
-
-But it might take Peter a week or more to find Kirsakoff, and then it
-would take time to work out the details of the affair in such a way that
-there would not be the slightest indication that the American officer
-who had been staying at the hotel had had anything to do with it. But
-another American officer in the city would complicate the business. The
-newcomer would expect to keep in close touch with Peter, and would
-probably expect to share his room—and the stranger might have a
-Russian-speaking orderly with him. And that would mean that Peter’s
-facility with the language would be discovered, his request to be sent
-over into Trans-Baikailia would become significant, the leaving of the
-orderly at Nikolsk would build up a chain of circumstantial evidence.
-All that might be awkward for Peter if some slight trifle connected
-Peter with the killing of Kirsakoff.
-
-Peter wondered if he would see Vashka again. It seemed a remote
-possibility that she would return. Why should she? She knew now that he
-was not a messenger, and to visit Peter again could do her no good and
-might reveal to him the line on which she was working. There was a
-slight chance that she might be in the American service, but he
-dismissed that thought, for she had given him no sign that she was a
-member of the military secret service. His mind being occupied along a
-certain channel, he had no basis on which to begin to analyze the aims
-of Vashka. The key to the solution of the problem, for him, was old
-Rimsky. But that Rimsky was in any way concerned with the visit from
-Vashka, was as remote from Peter’s mind as would be a suggestion that
-the samovar girl was the little daughter of Kirsakoff. That little girl
-still lived in Peter’s memory as a child sitting in a sledge the morning
-Peter’s father had been killed. His mind held that picture—held it
-without change. It was a picture which did not take cognizance of the
-passage of years, a butterfly caught in amber, say, through the ages.
-
-If Vashka did not return, Peter resolved that he would go out and try
-his hand again with Rimsky. The old cigarette-seller might be induced to
-tell something which would afford a clew of the whereabouts of
-Kirsakoff. And it might be wise to loaf in the restaurant of the old
-post-house, and strike up an acquaintance with anybody who would talk.
-There was no time to be lost, if Peter was to find Kirsakoff and get
-about the business which had brought him back to the Valley of Despair.
-
-When noon came, he rang for a samovar. Before long he heard some one
-moving in the hall, and after a short interval, there came a gentle
-tapping at his door.
-
-“Come!” he called, and turned his head. “Vashka” entered with the
-samovar, pushing the door open before her with the forward end of the
-metal tray.
-
-“Oh, I am sorry,” he said, rising from his chair. “I did not expect to
-see you—I thought the other girl would come.”
-
-She smiled at him, quite gay and playful now, with a trace of coyness in
-her manner. She seemed amused at him because he had not expected her to
-return.
-
-“Would you feel sad if I never came back? Would you miss me so much?”
-
-“Of course I would miss you,” he replied, not sure what else would be
-safe to say. He would have preferred some light pleasantry which would
-answer her more in keeping with her mood, but he was afraid that she
-might resent gayety on his part, even though she affected it herself.
-
-“Then I may presume to say that I am the favorite samovar girl of the
-American.”
-
-“And it would not be presumption at all,” he said.
-
-He moved and closed the door after her, while she busied herself at the
-table with the samovar. He had a mind for an instant to lock the door
-and to demand that she give an explanation of herself and her reason for
-coming to him in the guise of a servant. But he smiled at his own
-Russianism—his impulse to do the dramatic thing. He decided to draw her
-out in a more careful manner. One thing he was determined upon—to
-settle, as far as possible, her motives in playing servant.
-
-“How long since you have seen Zorogoff?” he asked, going close to her
-and standing so that the light from the window fell across her face.
-
-“I? Why, not so long ago.” She looked at him with curiosity as to why he
-had asked the question.
-
-“Have you seen him since you were here?”
-
-She laughed lightly. “If I had, it is quite likely that I would not have
-come back.”
-
-“Then I’m glad you did not see the Ataman. And please don’t see him, if
-it is going to mean that you will come no more.”
-
-“Thank you,” she said. “I don’t know what you mean—but it appears that
-there is an implied compliment. Do you mean it as a compliment?”
-
-“What other things could I mean?”
-
-“You might mean many things.” She shrank away from him now the least
-bit, as if she distrusted him.
-
-Peter sat down in the chair at the end of the table.
-
-“And what might I mean, for one thing?” he asked with a quick glance at
-her.
-
-“You—you might mean—that you are suspicious of me, and that would make
-me feel sad.”
-
-She stood, as if half intending to flee from the room, and observing him
-in wonderment.
-
-“Suspicious! Why should you be under suspicion?”
-
-“Everybody is under suspicion—no one trusts another here,” she replied.
-
-“No doubt you have suspicions of me—because I speak Russian,” he
-countered.
-
-“I am not sure of you,” she said frankly. “What have I but your coat to
-prove that you are an American officer?”
-
-“You have no more than I have to prove that you are a samovar girl. Oh,
-come now! Let us not play with words! What did Zorogoff say when he
-learned that the American officer speaks good Russian?”
-
-She straightened up suddenly and her body seemed to grow rigid. He heard
-the hiss of her breath, and then an hysterical laugh came gurgling from
-her lips.
-
-“So that is it!” she cried. “You think I am a spy for Zorogoff!”
-
-There was no mistaking the revulsion which she felt. Peter knew now that
-she was sincere.
-
-“I don’t think so now,” he said. “But if I trust you, I must know that
-you are not a spy. You know that I am not the messenger you are waiting
-for, yet you have come back to me. I am glad that you came—but why?”
-
-“Because death threatens me,” she replied. “And Zorogoff is my danger. I
-seek your help.” She uttered the words in a low monotone, but with an
-intensity of feeling which startled Peter. He got up and went to the
-door quickly and turned the big brass key in the lock—and pocketed the
-key.
-
-“Does that mean I am your prisoner?” she demanded. But there was no fear
-in her.
-
-“Sit down, please,” said Peter gently, ignoring her question. He made a
-gesture toward the chair at the end of the table opposite his own.
-
-Katerin—“Vashka”—obeyed, willingly, it appeared. But her readiness to
-obey was not so much submission to his will as he supposed. She knew now
-that Peter had come seeking her father, though the reason was still a
-mystery. She was determined to solve the mystery and learn his secret.
-
-Slipitsky had gone to Rimsky shortly after Wassili arrived at the hotel
-with the news that Zorogoff knew where the Kirsakoffs were hiding. The
-old cigarette-seller, alarmed by the fate which had overtaken Ilya, went
-into a panic of fear when Slipitsky charged him with knowledge of the
-American officer’s purpose in coming to Chita.
-
-The Jew charged Rimsky with knowing more than Rimsky did—and Rimsky
-lied. He attempted to put the burden of the affair on Peter. Ilya was
-dead, so Rimsky felt safe in lying. And, in fact, he did not know
-exactly what he had said to Ilya over the vodka. So to clear his own
-skirts, Rimsky made the flat statement that the American had asked
-directly where Kirsakoff might be found. It was a lie—yet it was the
-truth in so far as Peter’s purpose was concerned.
-
-Thus the story of Ilya was verified. Katerin and her father knew Peter
-sought them. And Katerin had been tempted to reply to Peter’s demand as
-to why she had returned to his room, by demanding why he had come to
-Chita. She refrained because she did not expect that Peter would tell
-her the truth in case he was an enemy. She intended to get at the secret
-by more devious methods.
-
-“Now, you must trust me,” he began, in tones barely audible to her. “You
-have already told me that you are in danger from Zorogoff—which
-indicates that you do trust me to some extent. Why do you fear
-Zorogoff?”
-
-“Because he has already threatened me with death—and worse,” she
-replied, calmly. “He is half Mongol. I do not fear death itself, because
-if he should take me from this place, I have poison——” She slipped back
-the cuff of her sleeve, and showed Peter two white capsules held in the
-hem of the cloth by thread sewn in loosely.
-
-“So that is it!” said Peter, looking into her eyes and seeing the truth
-in them. His face began slowly to change from an expression of startled
-comprehension of her plight, to anger; he drew his lips back upon his
-teeth, and the rising anger glittered in his eyes. “The Mongol dog!” he
-whispered. “Can he dare—with a Russian woman—a woman like you!”
-
-He saw relief from strain come into her face, and she clasped her hands
-together in a quick gesture of joy at his understanding and sympathy.
-
-“So that is why I came back here to you. You were a Russian, and I knew
-you would understand—and an American officer.”
-
-He took her hands and kissed them, with head bowed, after the Russian
-fashion, as an act of fealty and respect.
-
-“I don’t know what I can do,” he said after a minute. “But I do know
-that if Zorogoff dares touch you, I shall stand in his way. True, I am a
-Russian—as this Mongol shall learn.”
-
-“Thank you,” she said simply, withdrawing her hands. “You cannot fight
-an army, and Zorogoff has many men to do his bidding. You would be
-helpless against him. He is not a man to allow a single American to
-thwart him.”
-
-“I do not fear him,” said Peter. “I doubt if he would dare kill an
-American officer.”
-
-She smiled at his belief that Zorogoff could be checked by any fear of
-the American army.
-
-“Who would know who killed you, or when?” she asked. “No, you must not
-risk your life for me. Zorogoff’s hand would not be known if you were
-destroyed—and I would not be any the better.”
-
-“Does he know you are here—in this hotel?”
-
-“Yes, he has traced me. The city is full of his spies, and there is a
-Russian behind his power—a Russian of the old régime who is advising
-Zorogoff.”
-
-“Who?” asked Peter.
-
-“Oh, you would not know him,” she said, with a shrug of her shoulders.
-“I fear him more than Zorogoff, for I know that that this Russian is a
-part of Zorogoff’s government.”
-
-“But I should know,” insisted Peter. “If I am to help you, I should know
-all the facts in the case, so that I may inform my superiors. Who is
-this Russian?”
-
-“He was a Governor here in the old days—before the revolution.”
-
-Peter leaned forward across the table, keenly alert, though he attempted
-to conceal his interest. “A Governor of the old days,” he said slowly
-and softly, so that the sentence was akin to a caress. “That is
-interesting. I wish you might tell me his name.”
-
-She brushed her hand across her brow. “It is a dangerous secret,” she
-warned.
-
-He laughed lightly. “Dangerous secrets are my business,” he said.
-“Learning them—and sometimes keeping them.”
-
-“As I am in great danger because of having this secret, you also would
-be in great danger from Zorogoff if you had it. Remember, I caution
-you—Zorogoff will do all in his power to prevent you from escaping Chita
-if he learns that you know who is behind him and his government.”
-
-“I accept the danger,” said Peter. “Come—we shall be in danger together!
-What is the name of this former governor?”
-
-“General Kirsakoff.” Her eyes held his as she spoke the name. She saw
-his eyelids lift swiftly, and heard him draw in his breath slowly. His
-hands began to close into fists, and the strong fingers sank into the
-palms while the knuckles grew white as the skin was drawn tautly across.
-He leaned back in his chair, and the little muscles of his jaws stood
-out under the skin of his cheeks as he set his teeth together. And there
-crept into his face a look of exultation, of infinite satisfaction—she
-saw him thrilled with the joy of the hunter who at last gets sight of
-his prey.
-
-Peter turned away from Katerin and glanced at the window, but without
-seeing it. His face softened into a smile, and he got up from his chair,
-crossed the room, came back, and sat down again before her.
-
-“Tell me more about this Kirsakoff,” he urged. “What is his name?”
-
-“Michael Alexandrovitch,” she said. “He is a man of noble family—of old
-boyar stock. He ruled here many years before the revolution.” Katerin
-pretended not to notice the smile which was still playing at the corners
-of Peter’s mouth—she looked at him casually as he sat down again, but
-busied herself making squares and circles on the tablecloth with her
-finger.
-
-“Is Kirsakoff in the city—now?” he asked.
-
-“I presume so. He spends most of his time here, but he keeps well
-hidden.”
-
-“Do you know where he may be found? Where he lives?”
-
-“It could be easily learned. What would be the good of knowing?”
-
-“It does not matter,” he said. “Still, it might be of use to know. Do
-you think you could easily find out whether he is in the city or not?
-How would you go about it?”
-
-“My father was an exile here,” said Katerin. “He was transported ten
-years ago, and I followed from Moscow and lived in the Street of the
-Dames. My father was a political—and he knows too much now about
-Kirsakoff for our safety.”
-
-“Then your father is in the city?” asked Peter.
-
-“Here in the hotel with me. We came here and hid against Zorogoff—and
-Kirsakoff. That is why I came to you when I heard there was an American
-staying here. We knew we could trust you.”
-
-She went on and told him how Zorogoff’s soldiers, and the Ataman
-himself, had given her and her father the mental torture with firing
-squads; of the threat of the Ataman for revenge upon her for her
-insults, and the flight from the house to the hotel when they heard that
-an American was at the hotel. But she did not mention Rimsky or Ilya.
-
-“And you have no way of escape from the city?” asked Peter.
-
-“It is impossible,” said Katerin. “Some of our friends got away. But
-Zorogoff put the cordons round the city after that, and then Kirsakoff
-joined with Zorogoff.”
-
-“What kind of man is this Kirsakoff? What does he look like?” asked
-Peter, set upon getting all he could about his enemy.
-
-Katerin looked over Peter’s head, toward the window, and thought for a
-second as if recalling the appearance of her father. “He is a tall man,
-strong but not heavy,” she said slowly. “A face inclined to redness—and
-black mustaches. He is a soldier, of course, and stands very straight.”
-
-“Of course,” said Peter. He recognized the description, for Katerin had
-described her father as he had looked when he was in his prime. “Does he
-go about the city? Could I recognize him by his uniform?”
-
-He was eager but cautious.
-
-“He might be found at the _sobrania_ late at night,” said Katerin. “But
-he will be well guarded. You should be careful in approaching him, for
-he has a secret bodyguard, as well as the officers who generally are
-drinking wine with him. He does not wear a uniform, but rich furs, and
-he wears his pistols out of sight. He does not always dress the same,
-for he has been a cruel man, and is much hated by many people.”
-
-“Do you know where he lives?” asked Peter, who was taking care to
-conceal his eagerness to get all possible details. He asked his
-questions with an assumed indifference.
-
-“No, I cannot say. But I am sure my father knows. But what good would it
-do you to know?”
-
-“Not any,” said Peter. “Yet I would like to find this Kirsakoff. Where
-is your father?”
-
-“Here—in the hotel,” said Katerin.
-
-“Perhaps it would be as well if I were to ask the Ataman about
-Kirsakoff,” said Peter. “Yet I would like to talk with your father, if
-he would see me.”
-
-“By all means talk with my father,” said Katerin hastily. “It would be
-fatal for you to admit to the Ataman that you had ever heard of
-Kirsakoff’s ever being here, or concerned in the government of the
-Ataman. That is a secret they will conceal at any cost—and that is why
-we are in danger, my father and I.”
-
-“But Zorogoff would not know how I had learned about Kirsakoff. And I
-might plead ignorance—I might even test the Ataman by asking him if he
-knew where Kirsakoff might be found.”
-
-“I have put my life in your hands,” said Katerin earnestly. “If you
-mention Kirsakoff to the Ataman, he will know that you have been talking
-with us here in the hotel. And Zorogoff’s soldiers will come for us at
-once.”
-
-She rose, rather agitated by Peter’s idea of talking with the Ataman.
-The effect upon her was exactly what Peter sought—for he wanted to talk
-with her father. If she feared that Peter would go to the Ataman instead
-for information, she would make it possible for Peter to learn more of
-Kirsakoff and his haunts.
-
-“I do not intend to increase your danger,” said Peter, also rising.
-“Have no fear on that score. But I am bound to find Kirsakoff in some
-way—unless your father can help me I shall have to make inquiries in my
-own way.”
-
-“It can be arranged that you talk with my father,” she said, moving
-toward the door. “Is it really necessary that you find Kirsakoff?”
-
-“Not necessary, perhaps,” he said. “But I strongly desire to find him.”
-
-“I—I would like to know the reason.”
-
-“I will tell you that when you tell me where he may be found,” said
-Peter with a smile.
-
-She stood for a time looking into his face. He saw that she was pale,
-and far more excited than her restrained manner revealed to the casual
-glance.
-
-“I will ask my father if he will see you,” she said presently. “He is
-very old and ill—he has been shot by sentries—a bullet through both his
-cheeks, though he is nearly recovered now from that. He is suspicious of
-all strangers, and you must be patient with him.”
-
-“I promise to be patient,” said Peter. “If you will arrange it for me——”
-
-“Ring for the samovar at five,” she said.
-
-Peter held out his hand quickly, as if there were a compact between them
-which must be affirmed. She gave him her hand, and he bowed and lifted
-it to his lips.
-
-“Vashka,” he whispered, “do you wish to leave this city?”
-
-“If I could take my father with me,” said Katerin, “yes, I would be glad
-to escape the dangers here.”
-
-“If your father will tell me where Kirsakoff may be found—I shall take
-you both away.”
-
-“Oh, then we shall find Kirsakoff!” she said with a sudden return of her
-gay manner. “Please! I am your prisoner here! Allow me to return to my
-father!”
-
-Peter unlocked the door, and she smiled over her shoulder at him as she
-ran down the hall.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- SETTING THE SNARE
-
-
-KATERIN returned to her father. She found him sitting by the table
-playing a game of solitaire, and he looked up from the patterns of the
-cards with blinking, questioning eyes. She did not speak at once, but
-her face was eloquent of the surprise and shock she had suffered in her
-talk with Peter. She was coldly calm, as if she knew now something of
-what was before them, and was ready to meet the issue. A plan had
-already formed in her mind, but it was not yet clearly defined and she
-wanted time to think and prepare for whatever was necessary.
-
-“What have you learned?” whispered Michael, leaning toward her from his
-chair. “I can see that you know much—and I doubt that it is good. Do you
-know why this man has come?”
-
-“Yes, I know,” she said, and sat down beside him and drew herself a
-glass of tea. Her hands shook for all her resolution not to betray to
-her father the fact that once more they were blocked in their hopes of
-escape.
-
-Michael waited till she had refreshed herself, and Wassili, who had been
-making Michael’s bed and pottering about the room in pretended busyness,
-came and stood close to Katerin with anxious face, keen to hear what the
-mistress would have to report of her visit to the room of the American.
-
-“Then Rimsky spoke the truth?” pressed Michael. “It is true that the
-American came seeking me?” He had already divined it from Katerin’s
-manner.
-
-“Yes, Rimsky spoke the truth,” said Katerin slowly, and Wassili crossed
-himself and uttered a smothered exclamation of satisfaction.
-
-“And what did the American say?” urged Michael, impatient to have the
-whole story. “Come! You hold it back from me! Is his quest evil?”
-
-“He is most eager to find you,” said Katerin, who was reluctant to give
-the full story too abruptly. She was trying to devise some way of giving
-the facts to her father which would not be too abrupt and alarm him to
-rashness. And she wished to have her own plan worked out mentally so
-that she might have it to offer against the startling import of what she
-had learned from Peter.
-
-“For what purpose?” insisted Michael. His head was beginning to shake
-faster, as it always did when he was in an excited frame of mind. He
-reached for a cigarette from a tin box, and his hands shook so that he
-dropped the tiny tube of tobacco.
-
-“I am not sure yet,” said Katerin. “That is something I have still to
-learn. All I know now is that he is not a friend—that he means evil to
-you and we must be careful. We must do nothing to stir his suspicions of
-who we are, till we have gone to the bottom of what brings him here and
-what he hopes to do.”
-
-“We know enough!” said Michael. “He comes for evil—and I shall kill
-him!” The old general’s agitation disappeared as if by magic. The scent
-of danger steadied him, he thrust his chin out and squared his old
-shoulders, sitting back in his chair as if it were all settled now and
-all that remained for him to do was to go out into the next room and
-kill Peter.
-
-“No, no,” said Katerin hastily. “Nothing must be done too soon! First,
-we must learn more about him.”
-
-“He is an enemy, that is enough,” said her father. “Wassili, a match!”
-
-“Yes, he is an enemy,” admitted Katerin. “But we are not in a position
-to attack an enemy now; besides, what good would it do us to kill him,
-if we do not know anything about him? First, as I said, it is my
-business to draw his secret from him.”
-
-Wassili held a flaming match forth to Michael. “Master,” said the
-_moujik_, as he applied the flame to the cigarette between Michael’s
-lips, “I am quick with the knife—I can strike a good stroke, and no one
-will be the wiser, for I can have the body carted into the forest. Then
-you and the mistress will be free from his danger.”
-
-“If we do well, we can use this man to protect us from the Ataman,” put
-in Katerin. “Though he seems to be a menace, he may in fact be so
-twisted to our use that he will be our salvation.”
-
-“A man who is an enemy! Protect us? Are you talking madness, my
-daughter, or have my wits become addled by age? I shall not allow a man
-who is my enemy to save me even if he would or could. No, no, I say
-it—this American—this Russian who calls himself an American—must die.
-And no time lost in the matter, let me say!”
-
-“But I say you are wrong, father,” insisted Katerin, putting her hands
-on his knees. “If he does not know who we are, what difference does it
-make to us or him if he is an enemy. The thing for us to do is to make
-friends with him—and fool him into the belief——”
-
-“But he will know me!” protested Michael. “You expect him to talk with
-me—even see me—and not know who I am? That would only be putting our
-heads into the maw of the lion! I can tell you this, my daughter—I shall
-strike first, while the advantage lies with me!”
-
-“Truth!” exclaimed Wassili excitedly. “The master speaks truth! And I am
-the one to attend to the task!”
-
-“But he will not know you,” pleaded Katerin. “He thinks of you as you
-were years ago, in the days when you were Governor, while now you are an
-old man in the rags of a peasant, with——”
-
-“Ah, he will know, he will know! We must not trust to ice so thin! I
-shall not turn my horse loose too soon when danger is over the hill. I
-may be old, but I have not lost my cunning with my enemies, I hope.”
-
-“You forget that our lives depend upon our deceiving this Peter
-Petrovitch, my father.”
-
-“I think our lives depend upon his not seeing me till I am ready to
-strike,” argued Michael. “What would our lives be worth if he were to
-come in here now and see me? A beggar’s kopeck—the turn of a hand, the
-call of a quail in the brush! P-fooh! I know!”
-
-“But we have no time to spare. The Ataman’s men may be at the door at
-any minute. Before that we must win this stranger to our side, and
-before he can discover who we are, slip away with him to Vladivostok—to
-Harbin—to——”
-
-“Vladivostok! You expect an enemy to take us to Vladivostok? To Harbin?
-Why, I would sooner, than that——”
-
-“He wants to find you. What if I tell him you may be found in Harbin? Or
-Vladivostok?”
-
-Michael thrust aside a cloud of smoke that had gathered before him, and
-squinted his eyes at his daughter, as if he really doubted her sanity
-now.
-
-“And how could you find me in Vladivostok, when I am here in this
-rat-hole in Chita? Truly, my ears hear strange words. They are not worth
-a last year’s egg.”
-
-“You do not understand. If this stranger looks to me to help him find
-Michael Kirsakoff, and he does not know you for Michael Kirsakoff, what
-is to prevent our telling him that we can take him to some other city—to
-find you?”
-
-Michael cocked his head to one side and pursed his lips. Then a smile
-broke over his face as he began to comprehend.
-
-“We have no time to spare,” pressed Katerin. “It must be done before he
-can learn by any mischance who we are. Once we are free of the city, his
-chances of discovering our ruse diminish.”
-
-“But how can he take us away, even if what you say is true? The Ataman
-would prevent us—he would betray us. There would be some slip—and we
-would be in the hands of our enemy, or delivered into the hands of the
-Ataman. We double our danger and gain nothing,” objected Michael.
-
-“The Ataman would not dare stop an American officer. We must chance
-that. This stranger would give his eyes to find you. Very good, then! We
-shall fall in with his desires and turn them to our advantage. We must
-take him away under the pretext that he is to find you, then in reality
-he will be aiding our escape from the city.”
-
-“Oh, but he would get to know me in time. My voice, my looks, my way of
-speaking. If he has ever seen me at all, he will know me. He may have my
-description—do not be trapped by him. The wolf knows the color of the
-hare he pursues.”
-
-“I told him how you looked——”
-
-“What!” cried Michael. “You told him how I looked and you expect him not
-to know me?”
-
-“How you looked twenty years ago, my father. And he did not know the
-difference.”
-
-“That was to blind your eyes to his purpose,” said Michael.
-
-“And I shall blind his,” said Katerin, with sudden resolution. “Wassili!
-Fetch me the cover of the pillow from the bed! And a knife—with a sharp
-edge!”
-
-Wassili, with a puzzled look upon his face, turned away to obey her.
-
-“And what is all this?” demanded Michael. “Am I to be wrapped like a
-mummy and put into a bundle? Am I to be carried about with a rope to my
-middle like a handle?”
-
-“I shall make sure that the stranger does not recognize you—leave it to
-me, and we shall outwit this stranger and come to safety.”
-
-“Then you had better take good pains with it,” said Michael, “for if he
-gives the glimmer of an eye that he so much as thinks I look like
-myself, I shall kill him!”
-
-“If that must be done, then it must,” admitted Katerin, as she cut the
-edges of the pillow and began ripping it into long strips. “But your
-face must be hidden from him, for he might see something in you that
-would remind him of you in the old days. We must take care against such
-betrayal.”
-
-“And what are these rags for?” demanded Michael.
-
-“A bandage about your face to conceal you further.”
-
-“Oh, p-fooh!” said Michael disgustedly. “What nonsense is this, that I
-should be wrapped up like a Turk? How the devil am I to talk or breathe
-or eat my soup? I’ll have none of it—I, who was a general of majesty!”
-
-“You have had a bullet through both cheeks,” said Katerin. “Come,
-please! Hold up your head—these cloths will only keep your teeth warm
-against the cold. That is my dear father—and remember, it is to save us.
-Better this chance than to sit here and wait till the Ataman sends
-Shimilin for us again. Come!” She held up a strip of the cloth.
-
-“Are you going to tie up my face as if I were an old beggar with boils?”
-demanded Michael.
-
-“Trust to me, my father. When the lion is stricken he must still roar,
-that his enemies will be misled. You have said that to me many times.
-Trust to my wits—and we shall see.”
-
-He puzzled over it for a minute, and then threw back his head in
-submission. “I shall not stand in the way of your safety,” he said. “I
-leave it in your hands. My heart is brave, but the years have put chains
-upon my body,” and he sighed wearily.
-
-Without more ado, Katerin wrapped the grizzled old face with the strips
-of cotton. They passed over the top of his head and down under his chin.
-His eyes, nose, and mouth were clear of the cloths, and his ears stuck
-out oddly behind the wrappings. The white hair on his chin gave him a
-more aggressive look than usual for his beard was thrust forward by the
-bandage. The scant hair on the top of his head stuck up, and wavered as
-he moved, like the crest of a bird.
-
-Katerin leaned back and studied him with critical eye when she had
-finished.
-
-“It will serve well enough,” she said finally. “If he knows you now, he
-would know you in spite of anything we could do. And now listen to my
-plan. You have been a political here for the past ten years—and you
-hated General Kirsakoff, who was a cruel Governor and——”
-
-Michael gave a snort of wrath and wrested the bandage off over his head
-and threw it upon the floor.
-
-“I will have nothing more to do with this madness! I was not cruel—I was
-but just! And I shall not blacken my own character! Not an inch shall I
-give to my enemies on that score—I, who was a general in the army of
-majesty!”
-
-Katerin laughed heartily, and picked up the bandage. She knew better
-than to take her father seriously when he was in such temper, and she
-also knew that she should gain her end if she were patient with him.
-
-“I only say what the American thinks,” she explained. “If he already
-thinks that of you, you do not damage yourself. And what a joke! A joke
-that will save us! General Kirsakoff telling how cruel Governor
-Kirsakoff was! Would you not fool this stranger now, to laugh at him
-after we have lost him in Harbin where we are safe?”
-
-Wassili sneaked away into a corner to laugh discreetly, his shoulders
-heaving with suppressed merriment over the wrath of Michael.
-
-“Be still, you, Wassili,” growled the old man, turning to look after the
-_moujik_. “By the Saints!” he cried to Katerin. “You see how it is? Am I
-to be made into a buffoon for my servants in my old age? Am I to be
-turned into an actor in a play, a silly clown of a fellow to make the
-country folk giggle into their drink? Am I to forget what figure of a
-man I was——”
-
-“You forget my danger,” she chided gently.
-
-“I forget nothing!” he retorted. “It is I who am remembering that I once
-was Governor here!”
-
-“Do you remember the Ataman Zorogoff?” she asked, with sober face.
-
-“Yes, and I’ll dance on his grave—but I’ll not have my head wrapped up
-like an old woman doing a penance.”
-
-“Very well, then we shall do nothing more, but wait till the Ataman
-comes. Then we can take the poison of honor.”
-
-Katerin sat down by the table and threw the loops of the bandage from
-her.
-
-Michael looked at her, and an expression of infinite tenderness and love
-came over his face. His lips quivered, and he struck several matches
-violently without getting a flame. He threw the last one to the floor,
-and held out his hands to her.
-
-“Forgive me, Katerin Stephanovna—I did forget. But now I remember, and I
-see what you are striving to do. It is true, what you say, and we must
-play with this American. And if we take good care, it may all come out
-as you say—it will be a way out of our danger and our troubles. Come,
-please! Put on the rags, and I shall be the best old exile ever was
-seen, one who is fleeing from the wicked Governor—from Kirsakoff!
-Please! Again the bandage, and I’ll be good.”
-
-“Ah, little father, there is another way to fight without using swords
-and guns. There is a way to gain your ends without your enemy’s
-suspecting that he is pushing your cart.”
-
-She gave her attention to putting the bandage back.
-
-“I grant the truth of what you say,” said Michael. “But what will
-Slipitsky say to this? He is a shrewd fox, and there is many a twist in
-a game of this sort that he knows—he has helped many a man to escape
-from me, for all his friendship for me in the old days. Never did I
-dream that we should have to resort to his cleverness—but the fox takes
-his wisdom where he finds it, and that is why we say that he is wise.”
-
-“It does not matter what Slipitsky thinks of it. We cannot leave all the
-tricks to our enemies. And you must have faith in me, if I am to work
-this out so that good will come of it, and we get away from the soldiers
-of the Ataman.”
-
-“I’ll trust you, my daughter. By the Saints! You should have been a man,
-Katerin Stephanovna!”
-
-“And perhaps if I were a man, we should both be dead by now,” said
-Katerin. “This is a war of wits, and we women have had to use our wits
-for many years. And if those in the high places had heeded the women,
-Russia might not have come to what she has.”
-
-“It is good that there are wits between the two of us, for mine are
-gone, my daughter. I am a hindrance. I am but a millstone about your
-neck, else you would have escaped from Chita long before this.”
-
-“You won’t be a millstone if you will obey what I advise in this affair
-with the American officer. If we cannot go through with this thing, it
-is better not to try our hands at it.”
-
-“Have no fear—I’ll say black is white if it does you any good,” said
-Michael, now once more with his face trussed in the bandages.
-
-“Listen well to what I say,” cautioned Katerin. “And you, too, Wassili.
-For if we fail, we have not one enemy, but two—this stranger as well as
-the Ataman. And if we succeed, we have none, for one will save us from
-the other. What better can we ask than that a man who is an enemy should
-deliver us from danger?”
-
-“Give me two enemies, if that can be done,” said Michael.
-
-“Mind what must be done. Our name shall be Natsavaloff. You were
-banished for plotting against the government of the Czar. First, we must
-learn why the American seeks Kirsakoff—for he may not be alone in his
-reasons, but have others who are equally dangerous. We must get to the
-bottom of why he seeks you, though the reason does not matter for our
-purpose. We shall have Slipitsky’s advice, too, before we bring the
-American to this room to learn where Kirsakoff may be found. And we are
-not to tell the American where Kirsakoff may be found unless he takes us
-to the city where we shall say Kirsakoff is hidden—anywhere, it does not
-matter, so long as we get away from Chita.”
-
-“And how is Wassili to help in all this?” asked Michael. “Where lies his
-task?”
-
-“When we bring the American here, Wassili shall stand behind his chair.
-We must be on our guard against the stranger every second, and if the
-American should recognize—or make a move to draw a weapon——”
-
-Wassili finished the sentence for her in pantomime with a quick and
-eloquent gesture—a short thrust, done quickly, and an explanatory grunt.
-
-“And you, my father, shall have your little pistol in your hand, and the
-blanket thrown over your knees to hide it—so that you shall be able to
-defend yourself. But do nothing rashly—unless he should know you, we
-must not do him harm.”
-
-Wassili was sent for Slipitsky, and the Jew came. The four of them went
-over the whole plan of escape in case Peter should not recognize
-Michael. They spent the afternoon in taking up every possible angle of
-the situation. And on one thing they agreed—if Peter really proved to be
-a deadly enemy, and should recognize Michael—then the American officer
-must die.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- THE TRAIL GROWS HOT
-
-
-PETER spent the afternoon walking the floor of his room, his whole being
-in a glow from the fever of revenge which had flamed up brightly within
-him while he listened to “Vashka”—the name by which he knew Katerin.
-
-And Peter’s inner fury was directed against his own mental image of
-Kirsakoff—a picture revivified and given new clarity in Peter’s brain by
-Katerin’s description of her father as he had been in the old days.
-Peter killed that man over and over again in imagination. He knew that
-it might take weeks before he could so shuffle the combination of
-circumstances that Kirsakoff might be slain with the greatest margin of
-safety for himself.
-
-Through the years, Peter’s hope for vengeance had become to him a holy
-mission. There had been times during his life in the United States when
-he realized that he might never return to Siberia in time to carry out
-his dream of vengeance. But the old hatred had smoldered. Now it was
-burning at white heat.
-
-What had been his own selfish desire was now transformed into a
-patriotic fervor to help his own people. The old tribal spirit of the
-Slav had come to life again within him when he encountered the mad
-ecstasy of liberty among the people in Vladivostok. He longed to have
-some hand in the great emancipation which had been brought about by
-those of his race. He was determined to join the orgy of destruction.
-And now he saw his own personal revenge coupled with the troubles of the
-old exile and his daughter. Not only would Peter become the savior of
-the beautiful Vashka and strike a blow to thwart the new tyranny of
-Zorogoff, but his own father would be avenged. Katerin personified for
-him the Russia which must be saved, just as Kirsakoff personified the
-Russia which must be destroyed. For Kirsakoff, a survivor of the old
-autocracy, was plotting with the Mongol, Zorogoff, to defeat the
-purposes of the revolution and once more bind the people to the wheel of
-slavery. The old system was evil, and no vestige of it must remain. That
-was the aim of the people, and Peter believed in it. His mind had never
-grasped the thought that in the background of events there might be a
-new autocracy throwing sand in the eyes of the people to enslave them
-with new fetters which were not yet visible. “Destroy! Destroy all who
-do not work!” was the cry. And as work was defined for the mass of the
-people, it meant common labor—and the laborer lacked the ability to
-think about the consequences of killing all who might be able to divine
-the purpose behind the cry for destruction. And Peter was trapped into
-thinking only of the past and its evils, without looking into the future
-of a race which allowed only its serfs to live.
-
-He thought only of the fact that he had been rescued from Siberia and
-sent back with the power of avenging his own wrongs. And as he prayed
-for success, he crossed himself with both hands, in the way of the
-people of old. The deep well of mysticism and emotionalism which so
-often had swept the Slav into action without the cooler previsions of
-those races which had gained the beginning of their freedom in the Dark
-Ages, now shook Peter’s soul. He was living again in the stark horrors
-of his boyhood—living over again the bitter morning when his father had
-been struck down in the street. These memories he hoped to blot out by
-slaying with his own hand one dragon of the old autocracy—Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff.
-
-Michael would be well guarded, and wary. But his vigilance might be
-relaxed by artifice. Peter had not yet formulated his plan, but there
-would be many pretexts for getting closely in touch with Kirsakoff.
-Peter might even represent that he had come to enter into secret
-negotiations with Kirsakoff on behalf of the American government. That
-was one of the many possible plans which flitted through Peter’s brain.
-But the business would require care in preparation and good judgment in
-its execution. All impulses toward prompt decision must be put aside—it
-would be a patient waiting for the minute which promised success without
-attaching the slightest suspicion to Lieutenant Peter Gordon of the
-American army.
-
-That could be done only after a period of slowly acquiring the
-confidence of Michael. Peter would have to build up a pretended sympathy
-with the old régime and its adherents, and show a willingness to aid
-Zorogoff and Kirsakoff in gaining the friendship of the American
-forces—even plan to aid in betraying the people of Russia in their
-aspirations for freedom.
-
-Peter saw himself dining with Kirsakoff as a guest of the general; he
-built in his imagination a succession of secret conferences with
-Kirsakoff, and then, perhaps during an evening over wine and cigarettes,
-a whisper to Michael, “Do you know who I am in truth? Peter Petrovitch,
-son of Gorekin the bootmaker——!” and then the bullet and the escape.
-
-Peter could see Michael turn his horrified eyes upon the smiling
-American officer who was really the son of an exile. Gorekin the
-bootmaker! Michael might not remember at first. How could a Governor be
-expected to carry in his memory a poor unfortunate, and a boy of twenty
-years before? But Peter would make Michael remember. There must be time
-for that so that Michael should know by whose hand he died. That would
-be necessary if Peter was to have his complete joy in his vengeance.
-
-When the sun had dropped over the crest of the hills, and the frost was
-gradually creeping upward on the panes, etching a thick tropical foliage
-upon the glass, Peter went to the window and looked out over the Valley
-of Despair. The little hut of his boyhood was merging slowly into the
-shadows of the taller buildings about it. Tiny sparks appeared in the
-white smoke rising from the hut’s stone chimney—Rimsky was evidently
-feeding the fire-pit for the night.
-
-Peter stood by the window musing on the bitter days and nights of the
-exiles long dead and forgotten—on the staggering columns coming in afoot
-over the Czar’s road to a living death, on the clanking of chains and
-fetters, on the screams in the nights as some cabal of exiles “roofed”
-one who had betrayed some breaking of the rules to the guards, on the
-barking of rifles as fugitives were hunted out of the hills.
-
-Chita had become a city. It was built of the tears and anguish, of
-bodies destroyed and minds wrecked, of hates and cruelties, all mixed
-with the bricks and logs of its walls. And limitless legions of human
-beings had been poured into the wilderness and their bodies used as
-fertilizer to build up a new empire for the rulers of Russia.
-
-“Oh, you cry for justice!” he said to the spirits of those who had
-suffered. “The time has come for justice—you have waited long, but
-to-morrow will not be as yesterday!”
-
-He turned from the window and took his belt and pistol from the writing
-table and strapped them about him. Then he turned on the shaded
-droplight. It threw down upon the cloth of the writing table a yellow
-cone of radiance. It was now five by his watch. He rang the bell
-thrice—the signal for Vashka, as Katerin called herself.
-
-He sat down by the table and waited. The sound of people walking about
-in the hall furtively, came to his ears, with the careful opening and
-closing of doors and snatches of conversation. He heard the strains of
-an old Russian air played on a violin by some one on the floor above,
-and the regular pounding of feet as if the steps of a Cossack dance were
-being tried intermittently.
-
-It was the hour of the evening when the people in the hotel began to
-bestir themselves for the gay times of the night. They kept hidden
-during the day, and went abroad under cover of darkness to the
-restaurants of the city, to return to their rooms in the early morning.
-
-The men who lived in the hotel were mostly officers who were attached to
-the Ataman’s army, judging from those Peter had seen about the halls.
-The women were a flashy lot—women who had drifted up the railroad from
-Vladivostok or Harbin, and women of the sort that has the best of
-everything in times of famine and disorder. They were the parasites who
-seem to thrive best in times of disaster, and who get the most out of
-life when there are no laws of restraint. When they have acquired some
-amount of treasure, they are robbed and abandoned.
-
-Katerin was at the door in response to the signal by bell with amazing
-promptitude. She entered without knocking, and closed the door behind
-her softly. She stood for a minute, a vague shadow in the gloom outside
-the zone of the shaded lamp.
-
-Peter rose and moved toward her. “Thank you for coming,” he said in a
-low voice in keeping with her secretive entrance. “Have you persuaded
-your father to tell me what I wish to know? Will he help me in my
-quest?”
-
-“If you still wish it,” she replied. “Please! Take the shade from the
-lamp—the darkness is not pleasant.”
-
-Peter caught a note of melancholy in her voice. She seemed to be
-discouraged, and his own hopeful attitude was somewhat chilled.
-
-“Has anything gone wrong?” he asked.
-
-“No, not unless it is wrong for us to involve you in the same dangers
-which face us. My father appears reluctant to put you into a situation
-the full danger of which may not be apparent to you, a stranger.”
-
-Peter laughed merrily to cover the sudden fear which he had felt that
-she might recede from her promise to help him find Michael Kirsakoff.
-
-“I have no fear,” he said. “There may be danger, but I am glad to help
-you. I shall attempt to find Kirsakoff in any event—and may well run
-into more danger than if your father should tell me how to go about the
-job. So when it comes to that, my danger is only increased if you do not
-help.”
-
-“Perhaps you are right,” she said.
-
-He went and lifted the shade off the lamp, and stood revealed in his
-uniform in the flood of light. The silver bars on his shoulders
-glittered as he leaned over the lamp, but Katerin’s eyes rested upon the
-brown boxlike holster at his hip.
-
-He swung round upon her, smiling. Now he saw that her gay mood of her
-former visit had vanished—her eyes seemed sadder and the light revealed
-the pinched pallor of her face. She was suffering from strain long
-endured, he saw, and a twinge of pity tugged at his heart.
-
-He went and pulled down the decrepit window shades, and then slapped his
-pistol. “Here we have the power of America!” he said. “Behind me is an
-army. Come! It is not a time to be sad! America is here, and that means
-justice to the oppressed!”
-
-She sat down in a chair, and smiled at him, in a brave attempt to be
-merry with him.
-
-“America must be a wonderful land,” she said. “I have heard much about
-it, and read much about it. But there are many who say it is no better
-than our own Russia.”
-
-“What!” cried Peter. “You must not be misled. America is a land of
-magic! Look at me, a poor Russian boy who was the son of an unfortunate
-here in the Valley of Despair, and in a few years it transformed me into
-an officer, and sent me back to help my own people—and to help you,
-Vashka.”
-
-“And in time you will go back to America,” she said. “Like all Russians
-who have been there and return to their own land, you will once more go
-to America.”
-
-“Oh, yes. I shall go back when Russia has her freedom. But what did your
-father say? Have you persuaded him to help me about Kirsakoff? You have
-not told me that.”
-
-“My father is discouraged. You must not be annoyed if he is slow and
-cautious with you, who are a stranger. He has said that he doubts if one
-American officer can fight the army of Zorogoff.”
-
-“But he must remember also that I am a Russian. Does he think I will
-hide behind my American coat, and allow Kirsakoff and Zorogoff to
-destroy you? I may be only one, but behind me is the American army, and
-Zorogoff must give heed to that.”
-
-“But if Zorogoff’s men should kill you? We have seen terrible things
-here—men are shot down crossing the street if they are opposed to
-Zorogoff. And who is to know who fired the shot if you should meet such
-a fate? Then, if it were known to Zorogoff that we had helped you, it
-would be the worse for us, with no one to protect us.”
-
-“True,” said Peter, “but it is one thing for Zorogoff to terrorize a
-girl and a helpless old man, and quite another for him to frighten or
-kill an American officer—or defy the American army. He is aware of that,
-and he will be careful with me.”
-
-“But your soldiers are in Vladivostok.”
-
-“That is near enough to make Zorogoff think twice. In time he would have
-to pay the shot. And once we have found Kirsakoff and I have attended to
-my business, we shall leave the city.”
-
-“You are brave,” she said simply, with a look of admiration.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. “It is you have been brave. It is easy for me
-to talk, with an army at my back. Please—tell me one thing—are you
-expecting an American officer to come here and meet you and your
-father?”
-
-She looked at him in surprise, as if trying to understand what meaning
-might be behind his question. She locked her fingers together, and took
-her time before replying.
-
-“No, we are not expecting an American officer. Our friends may send help
-to us. That is why I came to you—any newcomer in the city might bring
-word from friends—might be seeking to get news to us from friends.”
-
-She laughed suddenly in comprehension of his meaning, and went on
-hastily. “We who are beset clutch at any straw—and you were a straw. Yet
-was I not wise? For you have said you will save us—you would even take
-us away, or——”
-
-Katerin stopped abruptly, and looked into the light of the lamp. Her
-eyes showed more animation now, and Peter found himself admiring the
-patrician poise of her head. She turned away from his gaze, and shivered
-slightly.
-
-“Or what?” he prompted.
-
-“Or you would even kill Kirsakoff for us—rid us of one of our enemies.”
-
-Peter’s eyes narrowed, and he smiled.
-
-“What makes you think I would kill Kirsakoff?” he asked. “Have I said
-anything to make you believe that?”
-
-“No,” she admitted, returning his gaze for an instant. “You have not
-said that. But if my father is to help you find Kirsakoff, you must
-first convince us that you are an enemy of Kirsakoff. It will be a
-secret for a secret, in the old way of bargaining among the exiles. We
-have trusted you much, but how do we know what your purpose is in
-finding Kirsakoff?”
-
-Peter frowned at the floor and considered what she had said. He had not
-counted on having to take any one into his confidence. He did not doubt
-that he would be able to find Kirsakoff on his own account, if he had
-plenty of time. But his time in Chita was not at his own disposal. An
-American officer might come through the city and report that he had seen
-Peter; before very long, Peter would be compelled to go on to Irkutsk
-and report himself from there, or go down the line of the railroad. And
-once in touch with Vladivostok, he knew that orders might come from
-headquarters which would compel him to appear in some other city without
-delay.
-
-And what damage could be done by telling this girl and her father his
-reasons for wanting Kirsakoff? They, themselves, feared and hated the
-Governor, who was again in power. They could be trusted not to betray
-him.
-
-“What you say is fair enough,” he said finally. “I think I can convince
-your father that I am the friend of anybody who was an exile, and
-that——” He was about to add, “I am an enemy of Michael Kirsakoff.” But
-he refrained. There would be time enough for that when he talked with
-her father, and he was determined that before he told his story, he
-should meet and judge for himself the measure of confidence to be given
-to the old man who had been an exile.
-
-“I should like to know your full reasons—for wanting to find Kirsakoff,”
-suggested Katerin. She, too, was wary.
-
-“You shall hear,” he said, “when I talk with your father.” And he spoke
-with finality, as if there were no use in going further with the
-subject.
-
-She went to the wardrobe against the wall, and turning to Peter, said,
-“Move this away from the door which leads to our rooms—I got the Jew to
-bring us near to you. Now we can pass from our rooms to yours without
-going into the hall. It will be safer, for we cannot tell who will see
-us if we have to use the hall.”
-
-“That was wise,” he said, and going to the wardrobe, he put his shoulder
-against it, and steadying it with his hand, shoved it aside far enough
-to clear the door which it concealed. When he had finished, she picked
-up the shade of the lamp and slipped it back over the globe.
-
-“We are not known to the servants,” she said. “You must be careful with
-our names—which are—Natsavaloff.”
-
-“Perhaps it will be well to avoid using any names,” said Peter. “It
-might increase your danger.”
-
-“It would, indeed,” she agreed. “Now, I shall go round and free the bolt
-on our side—and take you to my father.”
-
-Katerin slipped into the hall, and Peter snapped out the light on the
-table and waited in darkness. In a minute he heard the rattle of the
-bolt on the far side of the door, and then it swung open slowly.
-
-Katerin stood before him, outlined against the dim light seeping in from
-a farther room through curtains hanging in a doorway.
-
-“Come!” she directed in a whisper. “My father is eager to talk with you.
-But remember—he is very old, and he is still in some pain from his
-wounds. And if he is querulous, I trust that you will be patient with
-him.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- FACE TO FACE
-
-
-PETER stepped across the threshold of the open door, and into the shaft
-of light spilling through the partly curtained doorway of the room
-beyond. Looking to the end of this vista of light, he saw the figure of
-a man sitting in a chair by a table. The head and upper part of this
-man’s body were only vaguely visible and merged against the dark
-background of the far wall. But his boots were silhouetted in the
-radiance of the beams of the lamp which shot downward under the
-shade—boots that looked grotesquely large and misshapen, for their
-shadows were cast upon the floor in elongated outline.
-
-Katerin stopped at the curtained doorway, and by a gesture, bade Peter
-enter before her. He went on, and as he neared the lamp on the table, he
-saw that the figure in the chair was a frail old man with his head tied
-up in a bandage. And behind the chair, better hidden by the gloom, was a
-man standing, whom Peter took for a servant hovering over his master
-with watchful care. Only the face of the _moujik_ was plainly visible to
-Peter, and his eyes shining with the reflected light of the lamp, like
-two luminous pin-pricks, were boring across the room at Peter. The tense
-alertness of the _moujik’s_ posture suggested an animal crouching for a
-spring.
-
-Katerin passed Peter, and approached her father. She said, “Our friend
-has come to us,” and to Peter, “This is my father.”
-
-Peter’s heels came together, and he bowed low. When he looked at the old
-man again, the withered head, wrapped in the encircling bandage, was
-nodding gently as if with a palsy. And the bent shoulders leaned forward
-under a gray blanket, to peer at the visitor. The right hand, hidden
-beneath the blanket over his legs, seemed to be trembling, while his
-left hand lifted from his knee made a motion toward a chair—it was a
-thin, bony hand, more like a claw than a hand.
-
-“I bid you welcome, sir,” piped Michael, hoarsely. “But I have little
-hospitality to offer a guest under this roof.”
-
-“May God’s blessings fall upon you, sir,” replied Peter, his heart
-quickened by sympathy with this pathetic old ruin of a man—a man who,
-like his own father as Peter thought, had suffered the life of an exile
-under the cruel rule of the Governor, Michael Kirsakoff. Here, Peter
-supposed, was another victim, in feeble senility, still pursued and
-threatened by Zorogoff and the same Governor Kirsakoff who had brought
-about the death of Peter’s father, and thrown the boy Peter into a big
-prison. And these thoughts fed the inward flame of hatred which burned
-through Peter’s being against Michael Kirsakoff—the very man before him,
-and on whom he had just called for the blessing of God! Here was his
-enemy of old, and he looked upon him, yet knew him not.
-
-For a time the two men peered at each other, one knowing that an enemy
-was before him, and one thinking that he was in the presence of a
-friend. But Peter saw nothing in the old man which brought to mind
-anything of Michael Kirsakoff. Katerin, as Vashka, the samovar girl, had
-so arranged the shaded lamp, and the chairs, that her father’s face
-should not stand out clearly in light against a dark background. Also
-the bandage hid the jaws and cheeks of Michael in such a way that the
-old man’s facial contour was blurred. Age had done much to hide Michael,
-and Peter’s memory was clinging to his own picture of Kirsakoff of
-twenty years before. And Peter had adjusted his mind to the finding of
-Kirsakoff as a result of this interview, and somewhere beyond it, so it
-would have been hard to convince him that Kirsakoff was now before him.
-
-“You come as an American officer, yet my daughter tells me that you are
-one of us—a Russian who has come back to help Russia,” said Michael.
-
-“Yes, and it is twenty years since I saw my native land,” said Peter, as
-he sat down.
-
-“Ah, it is a sad home-coming for one of the motherland’s children,”
-sighed Michael. “They say now that the people will rule at last.”
-
-Katerin stepped to the table to draw hot water from the samovar, which
-was so placed that she stood almost between Peter and her father, though
-without preventing them from seeing each other. She did not trust to her
-precautions against Peter’s recognizing her father, knowing that there
-were elements in the situation which might bring on some mischance on
-the side of tragedy.
-
-And Wassili acted according to his instructions. As Peter sat down, the
-_moujik_ left Michael’s chair, and offered the guest a cigarette from a
-tin box, lighted a match—and remained behind Peter’s chair. Thus it
-appeared to Peter that he was being tendered the usual courtesies.
-
-“It is true that times have changed, sir,” said Peter.
-
-“Ay, they have, truly,” said Michael. “And some say for the better.
-Perhaps. But I’ll not live to see it all finished. I shall get no good
-from it. But we must remember those who have died dreaming dreams for
-the future.”
-
-“True,” said Peter. “And this ground is full of such—we must remember
-them, and it is our duty to see that they did not sacrifice themselves
-for nothing.”
-
-“My daughter tells me that you know our story—that I was a political
-here.”
-
-“In the time of Kirsakoff, the Governor,” said Peter.
-
-“Kirsakoff!” said Michael. “Ah, yes, I had good reason to know
-Kirsakoff. There are many waiting their chance to settle with him, and
-he has but a short time for this world. But one of the lessons we
-learned here, my friend, was to bide our time—and I am waiting.”
-
-“And Kirsakoff is in with Zorogoff?”
-
-“That Mongol dog!” said Michael. “Have you heard that he has visited
-upon my daughter and me the silent torture? And that even now we hide
-from him? Yes. Well, he has buried people to their necks by the dozen,
-and then sent horsemen galloping over the ground. But if God is good I
-shall live to see his head carried about on the end of a pole!”
-
-“And Kirsakoff stands behind him, I hear,” said Peter.
-
-Michael exchanged glances with Katerin. “True, it is Kirsakoff who helps
-him hold his power.”
-
-“But it is dangerous to talk of Kirsakoff,” said Katerin, as she handed
-Peter a glass of tea. “That is whisper talk, and I warn you.”
-
-“No,” grumbled Michael. “Your life would be worth little if you let it
-be known that you are in possession of that secret. You are playing a
-dangerous game if you wish to get close to Kirsakoff.”
-
-“But if he only knows me as an American,” suggested Peter.
-
-“What! You, who speak the real Russian!” exclaimed Michael. “Do not be
-fooled—he will know you for a Russian!”
-
-“I can arrange that,” said Peter, with a smile. “If I can find him, that
-is a matter easy enough to be handled as the business needs.”
-
-Michael shook his head energetically.
-
-“No, no, my friend! Kirsakoff’s hand is hidden. Your life would be in
-danger at once if you gave a hint that you even know that Kirsakoff is
-in the city. Be sure of that.”
-
-“Then I can pretend I do not know him,” pressed Peter. He was somewhat
-disappointed by the resistance offered by the old man.
-
-“You must remember, my father, that our friend has reasons of his own
-for wanting to find the Governor. And danger may not be a matter of
-concern.”
-
-Peter gave her a grateful glance for thus allying herself with him.
-
-“If I were to tell you my reason for wanting Kirsakoff, I am sure that
-you would say that it is good, sir. I have waited many years to come
-back—and now I must not fail. I shall find Kirsakoff.”
-
-“But I should not like to be the one who puts your life in danger,” said
-Michael. “You may not be aware of all it means—this business of the
-Governor is not a light subject. You will do well not to cross his
-tracks, for he will strike at you through Zorogoff’s spies, and you will
-never know who struck. One cannot fight an army—and Zorogoff will not
-brook any interference. He will destroy you like a fly upon his bread.”
-
-“I court the danger,” said Peter, sipping his tea, and willing to wait
-till the old man was in a humor to be more communicative.
-
-“The Governor has five thousand rifles at his back,” said Michael. “You
-cannot know yet the full danger.”
-
-“I shall go gladly to meet it,” persisted Peter. “It cannot be any
-greater than my desire to find Kirsakoff.”
-
-“You would risk death?” asked Michael.
-
-“Even death.”
-
-“What! Twenty years in America, and you would risk death to find
-Kirsakoff?”
-
-“What you say is true, sir.”
-
-The old man studied Peter carefully for a minute. “You speak,” he said
-finally, “as if you had spent twenty years in the Governor’s prison,
-instead of twenty years in America.”
-
-“I spent time enough in his prison,” said Peter.
-
-Katerin uttered an involuntary exclamation of surprise.
-
-“Here! You were in the old prison here?” she asked.
-
-“I was,” said Peter, with a grim tightening of his lips.
-
-“But you are too young to have been an exile!” gasped Michael. “If you
-had been one of—us, I can well understand. There are many who have been
-here for long years—they have known the chains, they have known a
-lifetime in cells. And still, they have no stomach for meeting the
-Governor face to face. That is because they know Kirsakoff—and that he
-is not a man who can be hunted like a rabbit.”
-
-“I also knew him,” said Peter. “I doubt if I will fear him, even if I
-come face to face with him—and he knows me for a Russian, and by my true
-name.”
-
-“Oh! So you knew Kirsakoff?” asked Katerin. “Then it will not be so
-difficult for you to find him.”
-
-“I knew him too well,” said Peter, now beginning to fear they would
-settle themselves against helping him to find Kirsakoff, and seeing that
-he would have to take them into his confidence if they were to be of any
-help to him. “I knew him when I was a boy here—and I have an old score
-to pay off. I have come to pay it, and I shall not be kept from finding
-Kirsakoff, even though he were the new Czar.”
-
-“You must have been an unfortunate to have been in the prison,” said
-Katerin. She was still gazing at him with curious eyes, as if she could
-not believe that he was really telling the truth about himself—as if she
-thought he was making his story fit his necessity for finding Kirsakoff
-and was making it as serious as possible to induce them to help him.
-
-“My father was an unfortunate—a political—here in the Valley of
-Despair.”
-
-“Indeed, was he?” asked Michael, with renewed interest. “You mean that
-he was here in the time that Kirsakoff was Governor?”
-
-“In the same time—when I was a boy,” said Peter, and looked at Katerin.
-Her face was full of shocked surprise. She seemed horror-stricken at the
-idea, and he wondered why she should think it so strange and so
-terrible. He rather expected that she would see that they would all be
-drawn together in common trouble, and have a common hatred for
-Kirsakoff.
-
-“How strange,” she said, turning to the lamp. “Then you are one of us—no
-wonder you seek Kirsakoff.”
-
-“Ay, that is a new string to the fiddle,” agreed Michael. “I can
-understand now that you should want to find the Governor. Perhaps you
-are right in this matter after all—and I must think it over. You have
-reason enough, yet it is a serious thing for me to put you in danger.”
-
-Peter felt better at this new attitude of the old man, and thought that
-now they regarded him with a more friendly eye. He was, in truth, one of
-them, and there is a strong bond of sympathy between exiles and the
-children of exiles.
-
-“And we might have known—could we have known your father?”
-
-“You could not have known my father. He died here twenty years
-ago—before I went to America,” said Peter.
-
-“Twenty years! That is a long time to wait for vengeance,” said Michael.
-“Many things are forgotten in twenty years, and time cures many things.”
-
-“Ay, so it is a long time, in one way, and in another a short time. It
-seems but yesterday that I was a boy here in Chita. You, sir, have
-worked all your life to see Russia a free land. And like you, I have
-learned to bide my time.”
-
-“Things must look strange to you here,” said Katerin. “The city has
-grown in twenty years.”
-
-“Yes, outwardly things look different. But the hills, the old prison,
-the streets—I see them as they were. During my years in America I never
-forgot, though I confess I had little hope of ever coming back. But the
-war gave me my chance. I was going to France, but when the government
-decided to send troops here, I volunteered for service in Siberia. Was
-it not God-given that I should be allowed to come back to my native
-land—and to come to Chita?”
-
-“True,” said Katerin, “if the debt, as you call it, which you owe to the
-Governor, is such that God would have it paid.” She moved her chair in
-such way that she was nearer the table, and so that she was closer to
-her father. Also, she managed so that she cut more light from her
-father’s face.
-
-“And what is the debt?” asked Michael. “If it is not a secret—if I am to
-tell you where you may find the Governor, perhaps you will see it in
-such way that you can trust me with the secret.”
-
-“It was Kirsakoff’s orders which brought about my father’s death.”
-
-Katerin’s teeth shut down upon her lower lip, and her fingers closed
-slowly upon the sides of her chair. She sat rigid, staring at Peter, and
-her face became paler. Michael did not move, but his breath began to
-come faster, and he wheezed, as if his chest had tightened and he was
-about to cough.
-
-“Killed your father?” asked Katerin, in low tones.
-
-“No, Kirsakoff did not strike with his own hand,” went on Peter, still
-gazing fixedly at the lamp. “But he ordered my father back to the
-prison, and when my father ran after the Governor to beg for mercy, a
-Cossack soldier cut my father down with a sword. And I was thrown into
-the big prison on the hill—I, a poor helpless boy who had done nothing.”
-
-Wassili moved uneasily behind the chair of Peter, and Katerin gave the
-_moujik_ a glance of disapproval.
-
-“Then you do know,” said Katerin to Peter, “how cruel the Governor was
-to the poor unfortunates. And that is why you seek him.”
-
-“What was done to my father and me—what was it? Only the ordinary thing
-of the old days, as you know. Yes, that is why I seek Kirsakoff, and why
-I ask your help to find him.”
-
-“And how long were you in the prison?” asked Michael. “There must have
-been a charge against you?”
-
-“I was in prison three months, as near as I can tell,” replied Peter.
-“Three months of hell on earth and in darkness, forgotten to the world!
-It might have been three years, or three hundred, measured in my
-suffering—the terrible sounds by day and by night, the rats—and I might
-have been there till now, or dead, so far as Kirsakoff cared.” His
-bitterness was growing, and his face was getting livid with rage.
-
-“And for nothing?” asked Katerin. “Had you done nothing against the
-Governor—or the laws of the Czar?”
-
-“Ay, even Kirsakoff would have mercy on a boy,” said Michael.
-
-“I did nothing, I swear,” went on Peter. “It was the orders of Kirsakoff
-which sent me to prison. It was this way—an officer knocked me down in
-front of the post-house. And when my father came to pick me up, the
-Governor ordered both of us taken away to the prison.
-
-“You see, my father belonged to the free gang—he was a political, as
-were you. My mother died here, in the Street of the Dames. I never knew
-her. But my father was good and kind to me. He was all I had in the
-world, he was all I loved, though in those days (and Peter smiled
-wistfully) I was taught to love the Little Father, the Czar.
-
-“My father was struck down before my eyes, and when I was taken to the
-prison, the officer in charge of the books was drunk—and he put my name
-down in the book wrong—put my name down as my father’s—gave my father’s
-name to me, so that the records appeared to show that it was my father
-and not me, the boy, back in prison. I did not know what they were
-doing, and for three months it was supposed that it was my father, the
-political, who was in the cell by order of the Governor.”
-
-“Then no doubt the Governor freed you—gave you the pardon,” said
-Michael.
-
-“No,” said Peter. “It was God’s hand that set me free. Some convicts
-escaped one night, and were recaptured by the cordons in the _taiga_.
-But before the soldiers took them, they had waylaid a sledge carrying an
-American fur-buyer to Irkutsk. His name was Gordon. The convicts robbed
-him. When Gordon got back here to Chita, he was taken to the prison and
-the convicts were brought out to be identified by him as the robbers. It
-happened that one of these men, named Grassi, had been put in the cell
-with me. When he was taken out into the prison yard, I was taken with
-him. Then it was discovered that I was the son of my father, and that
-there was no charge against me. Mr. Gordon, the American, asked to take
-me as his servant. I was released, the prison commandant corrected the
-records, and Mr. Gordon took me with him to America.”
-
-Peter paused, and looked at Michael, to see what effect the story had
-had on the old man. But Michael’s head was nodding gently, and he seemed
-to be turning the matter over in his mind, his lips moving as if he were
-shaping words which he did not speak aloud.
-
-Katerin stood up suddenly, and tested the fire in the samovar. She
-seemed agitated, and Peter assumed that she suffered with indignation at
-hearing his sufferings at the hands of the Governor. Then she turned to
-him swiftly.
-
-“What will you do—when you find the old—Kirsakoff?” she demanded.
-
-“I shall kill him,” said Peter simply, and was aware of a quivering hand
-upon the back of his chair. He turned and looked at Wassili. The
-_moujik’s_ eyes were shining like a cat’s before a fire, and there was
-the look of murder in his face.
-
-“Kill him!” cried Michael. “But he did not kill your father!”
-
-Peter was startled for an instant by the old man’s horror, and Katerin’s
-face revealed the fact that she had never dreamed that the American
-officer was bent on murder—she seemed actually to be in terror of him.
-Peter suffered a moment of abashment, and gulped down what was left of
-the tea in his glass. He understood that these people did not yet fully
-appreciate how wantonly his father had been killed, nor how little
-provocation there was for the killing. He was determined to convince
-them of the justice of his designs.
-
-“My father and I,” he began anew, “lived in a little hut down the
-Sofistkaya—it is there yet—I can see it from the windows of my room. An
-old man lives in it now, a queer old patriarch, who sells cigarettes——”
-
-“That is Rimsky!” exclaimed Wassili to Katerin. She nodded, and looked
-at him so that she checked him.
-
-“Yes, Rimsky,” said Peter. “That is his name. That is where I lived with
-my father, and where he taught me the almanacs. We were happy, for we
-had a samovar, and the ladies of the Street of the Dames came to us
-often. They gave me cakes, and my father money. Of course, I know now
-that he was an underground to the prison—he carried messages back and
-forth between wives and their husbands in the prison.”
-
-“Yes, they had many ways of getting news in and out in the old days,”
-said Michael, with a smile. “But go on with your story, my friend.”
-
-Peter struck a match to light a fresh cigarette, and the flame showed
-his face to be flushed by his emotions.
-
-“The year of which I speak,” resumed Peter, “the almanacs from Moscow
-were late. The mail-sledges came in from Irkutsk one morning. I ran down
-to the post-house to learn if the almanacs had come. There were
-Excellencies in the sledge. As I remember, the Governor’s
-daughter—Katerin was her name, I think, and——”
-
-“Yes, yes,” cried Katerin, striking her hands together. “Katerin
-Stephanovna! She was the Governor’s daughter—I have heard of her! It is
-said now that she is dead!” and Katerin turned to her father, as if to
-verify what she had said.
-
-“It has been said that she is dead this long time,” assented Michael.
-“Some say that Zorogoff——” He checked himself.
-
-Peter continued with his tale, warmed to it again by the evident
-interest of his listeners.
-
-“Yes, that was the Governor’s daughter. Her coming was his reason for
-meeting the sledge that morning. Well, I was eager to be sure that the
-almanacs had come—and a Cossack knocked me down because I called to the
-Governor’s daughter for news of the almanacs. And when Michael
-Alexandrovitch, the Governor, came to the sledge he found my father
-picking me up. I was bleeding and stunned from the blow. And the
-Governor was in a rage at us—that my father should be making trouble—and
-ordered him to be stricken from the free gang and put back in the prison
-once more—and me with him.”
-
-“But you said your father was killed,” said Katerin.
-
-“Yes, as I say,” replied Peter. “My father”—and Peter inclined his head
-toward the icon in the corner over Michael’s head—“my father was so
-broken in spirit at knowing he was no longer of the free gang and that I
-was to go to prison, that he ran after Kirsakoff. It was then that a
-Cossack ran my father through with a saber—and swore that my father had
-struck at the Governor with a knife—a leather knife which he pulled from
-my father’s pocket.”
-
-“But did the Governor know—could he know—of this terrible happening?”
-asked Katerin.
-
-“Ay, did the Governor know?” echoed Michael.
-
-“Know!” cried Peter. “What would he have cared if he did know? He had
-just ordered us both to prison for nothing! And did he care enough to
-investigate the case during the three months I was inside a black
-cell—to give me my freedom? No! He forgot all about it and me, even if
-he did know what had happened? Does he care now what the fate of you and
-your daughter may be? I tell you, sir, I must find Michael Kirsakoff!
-And you must be the one who puts me on the right road!”
-
-“True, you must find him,” said Katerin. “Now we know that you have good
-reason for wanting him.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Peter fervently. “I knew that when you saw my story as
-I could tell it, you would realize that above all things, I must find
-Kirsakoff.”
-
-“What was the name of your father?” asked Michael.
-
-“Gorekin—Peter Pavlovitch—a bootmaker.”
-
-“Gorekin!” gasped Michael, his head snapping back in his amazement.
-“Gorekin!”
-
-“Have you heard of him?” asked Peter, with a quick look at the old
-general.
-
-“I thought for a moment I knew the name,” said Michael. “But if you say
-he was a bootmaker, it must have been another. No, not if he was a
-bootmaker—and this man I knew less than ten years ago.”
-
-Michael looked at Wassili, and put a hand upon the table beside him,
-keeping the other under the blanket. He began to drum with his fingers,
-deep in reflection. No word was spoken for several minutes. Peter could
-hear Wassili breathing behind the chair.
-
-“You have our sympathy,” said Katerin. “And you must find the Governor.
-If you will give me time to talk it over with my father——” She gave
-Peter a significant look, which he interpreted to mean that it would be
-wiser not to press now for information about Kirsakoff, but to leave it
-in her hands.
-
-“Thank you,” said Peter, and he rose, and bowed.
-
-“You shall find Kirsakoff,” said Michael, staring at his hand on the
-table. “By morning I shall know where he may be found—perhaps. We must
-not act hastily.” The palsied head was shaking gently, and the old man
-was lost again in thought.
-
-“Yes, yes,” Katerin put in hastily. Peter saw tears in her eyes. She
-followed after him as he turned to go back through the rooms, and they
-left Michael and Wassili alone.
-
-Peter stopped at his own door, and looking back over Katerin’s shoulder,
-saw against the light of the room he had just left, a shadow cross—and
-then the figure of Wassili peering after them.
-
-“Good-night,” said Katerin. She seemed nervous and worried. She also had
-caught a glimpse of the old _moujik_ outlined against the glow of her
-father’s lamp.
-
-Peter seized her hands in sudden impulse and pressed them heartily. “I
-cannot tell you of my gratitude, Vashka,” he whispered. “It was you who
-helped me in this—and I have waited long! You are going to persuade your
-father to tell me where I shall find Kirsakoff!”
-
-She gently drew away from him, and he released her hands.
-
-“I shall do what I can,” she whispered. “But take care—this house is
-full of enemies. If we are to defeat the Ataman, be wary. Bolt both your
-doors to-night!”
-
-Then she slipped away to her father.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XX
-
- THE BLOW
-
-
-PETER, alone once more in his room, found that a strange calmness had
-come to him once the secret of his purpose in returning to the Valley of
-Despair was in the keeping of two other persons. There was for him in
-that fact something of the relief of the confessional. For twenty years
-he had nursed in his soul the grievance of his father’s death, and his
-own imprisonment—nursed it most secretly, pent it up within his
-consciousness, till it seemed that his body had become a kind of culture
-tube of germinating hate.
-
-For the first time since he had left Chita as a boy, he found an
-easement of his soul burden. These people to whom he had told his story,
-understood his deepest emotions regarding his father. No American could
-ever have understood fully, Peter was well aware. Prison to an American
-implies disgrace, some sort of stain upon the character which is never
-fully lived down. But to this old exile, as Peter supposed Kirsakoff to
-be, Peter’s story was an honor to him. For the old man had suffered the
-horrors of the exile system, mixing, as it did, the highest type of
-Russian with the lowest—the thinker with the cutthroat.
-
-Peter knew he stood better in Katerin’s regard than before, now that she
-knew his story. He had seen in her face a deep and profound pity for
-him. What he mistook for pity was her alarmed concern when she
-discovered that Peter sought to slay her father. Peter could not know
-that she had suffered torture while he had sat looking into the
-lamp—that she knew how a look, a word or some turn of the head might
-betray her father.
-
-Peter had always thought that the first assurance of a successful end to
-his quest for Kirsakoff would mean a delirious joy. Yet here he was
-coldly calm, a calm which was a steadiness that he ascribed to his own
-efforts to control all outward indications of his grim satisfaction. His
-brain was singing, over and over, in an endless refrain—“I shall find
-Kirsakoff.”
-
-He turned the light in such way that he could see himself in the big
-mirror between the windows, and smiled at himself. His face was slightly
-flushed from the emotions and memories roused by telling how his father
-had been killed before the post-house, and how he himself had endured
-and escaped from the prison on the hill.
-
-His eyes burned with a feverish light. In fact, he was drugged with
-elation, strangely soothed, much as a man is lulled with wine till his
-senses are subdued by the poison and his reasoning faculties are
-benumbed. Yet his alertness was in no whit deadened. On the contrary, he
-was well aware of what was before him, and he was alive to the
-necessities of the situation. He was approaching his long-waited moment
-of triumph, and he knew that he must hold himself against the slightest
-rashness in thoughts or actions. He must, he thought as he surveyed
-himself in the mirror, avoid the look of craftiness which was coming
-into his face—he must feign a bland innocence, and dispel everything
-which savored of eagerness, impatience, impulsive haste. He had days,
-weeks, in which to carry out his purpose, and at last he was on the
-right track. Besides, it would avail nothing unless he could accomplish
-the destruction of Kirsakoff without leaving the hint of a clew to the
-identity of the slayer.
-
-He left off studying himself in the mirror, and began pacing the floor,
-head down and hands behind his back. There was a strange sense of
-satisfaction in the knowledge that Vashka knew his secret. He felt that
-it constituted a bond between them, a mutual sympathy such as is known
-only among exiles, or the children of exiles.
-
-In fact, Peter had created in his own mind a vision of Vashka that went
-beyond the time when he would have killed Kirsakoff. It was sort of an
-unformed, inchoate dream which consisted of nothing more tenuous than
-mental flits into the future in which he always saw Vashka. As she knew
-the secret of his coming back to Chita, she would also hold his secret
-about who had killed Kirsakoff. She would always understand, as she
-understood now. Only a Russian, a Russian girl who knew as Vashka knew
-the terrors of the Valley of Despair, fitted his idea of a confidant in
-this affair. Katerin, as “Vashka,” had done her work well!
-
-Peter was now sure that Fate had a hand in everything which had brought
-him back to the place of his boyhood. The whole thing had come about
-with an inevitableness which revealed a divinely directed plan. If some
-force had shaped events for him with such unerring accuracy, he saw no
-reason why the final result should not be brought about with the same
-ease with which he had come thus far on the way to his revenge.
-
-He had a feeling that the task he had set himself was now
-accomplished—the finding of Kirsakoff. His mind was at rest, and he felt
-the need of relaxation from the strain of wavering hopes and doubts.
-Also, he suddenly felt hungry with that voracious appetite which comes
-to people who pass the crisis of a severe illness and know without
-reservation that they are on the way to complete recovery.
-
-The fiddler he had heard on the floor above before going to talk with
-Katerin and her father, had now descended to the hotel dining room, and
-was playing merrily. There were other instruments, too—an orchestra. The
-music was a novelty for the hotel. It lifted Peter’s spirits, and
-dispelled the gloom of the place. For the first time since he had
-arrived in Chita Peter wished to move about among other people.
-
-He washed at the little sink, and combed his hair. Then he went down the
-hall to the dining room. There were but a few people in the place—young
-men in Cossack uniform, with flashily dressed women, sitting by twos at
-the little tables along the wall under the frosty windows. The
-gloominess of the room was apparent even under the lights and the music,
-but it was the merriest scene Peter had seen in the city.
-
-There were four musicians on a raised platform at the far end of the
-room close to the red-painted buffet-bar with the smashed mirrors. And
-the quartet was clad in poor and ill-fitting gray suits—the men were
-German prisoners of war.
-
-Peter clicked his heels in the doorway and bowed before he entered. The
-officers at the table looked up with startled eyes, but inclined their
-heads slightly in response to the courtesy. But it was plain that his
-American uniform had attracted special attention, for the women
-companions of the Cossacks stared at him. Peter wondered if there was
-any resentment because he wore his belt and pistol, though he could not
-understand how he had committed any breach of etiquette by being armed,
-for the young Cossacks were all wearing their pistols and their sabers.
-
-The musicians played a German air, sadly, and with good evidence that
-some of the strings were missing. There were two violins, a ’cello, and
-a clarinet.
-
-A waiter came to Peter. The man was clad in the same bluish-gray as the
-musicians. He also was a war prisoner, and clicked his heels and was
-quite military in his manner.
-
-“Have you a ticket, sir?” he asked, speaking in English.
-
-“Is a ticket necessary?” asked Peter in surprise. “I am staying at the
-hotel.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” said the waiter. “This is an officers’ mess—officers of the
-Ataman’s army.”
-
-“Then I am sorry,” said Peter, reverting to Russian for the benefit of
-the Cossacks. “I thought this was the hotel restaurant. I had no
-intention of intruding,” and he pushed back his chair to rise from the
-table.
-
-“You speak Russian, sir,” said the waiter, in Russian.
-
-“Yes,” said Peter. “And you speak English surprisingly well—also
-Russian.”
-
-“Hans!” A young Cossack who sat two tables beyond Peter, and faced him,
-called the waiter away and handed him something. The waiter was back to
-Peter by the time he had risen to leave the room.
-
-“Here is a ticket for you, sir. The Cossack gentleman—the
-lieutenant—wishes you to have your supper here,” said the waiter.
-
-Peter bowed to the young officer, who smiled across the shoulders of the
-woman with him. He was a thin-faced chap, with heavy black hair down on
-his forehead after the Cossack fashion. Gold straps covered his
-shoulders, and a great saber lay outside the table legs, where it swung
-down to the floor from his belt.
-
-Peter sat down again. It would be in the nature of an affront not to
-accept the proffered hospitality. And the waiter brought thick cabbage
-soup with a yellowish scum of fat floating on its surface, black bread,
-a plate of chopped meat, with a mound of boiled grains of wheat, and a
-glass of tea.
-
-During the meal the orchestra continued to play. The Cossacks and their
-women talked in low tones. Finally, they began to drift away gradually
-till none was left but the young officer who had sent Peter the supper
-ticket. And in time his companion disappeared also. Then the young
-officer approached Peter’s table, and bowed.
-
-“You are an American officer, but you speak Russian,” said the Cossack.
-He smiled and clicked his spurred heels.
-
-“Yes,” said Peter, rising and saluting. They shook hands formally.
-
-“I am Lutoff, a lieutenant in the army of the Ataman Zorogoff,” went on
-the Cossack with pride. “I heard that there was an American officer in
-the hotel—and I was about to call upon you this very evening.”
-
-“That is very kind of you,” said Peter, seeing that there was some
-purpose after all in the matter of the supper ticket beyond the
-characteristic hospitality of all Cossacks. He saw that he would have to
-play the game, whatever it might be. “My name is Gordon, and I also am a
-lieutenant.”
-
-Lutoff bowed again.
-
-“Please sit down with me,” invited Peter, and they both sat down facing
-each other across the small table. Peter did not like Lutoff any too
-well—there was a craftiness in his eyes, an insincere suavity in his
-manner, an affability about him that was forced. His friendliness lacked
-a frankness which he did his best to simulate, but behind his smiles and
-his politeness there was a promise of lurking menace.
-
-“You have not called upon the Ataman,” said Lutoff lightly, half in
-question, yet half in the nature of a statement of fact—perhaps a
-challenge.
-
-“No,” said Peter. “I was three weeks coming up on the train, and my
-health was hurt—I have been resting.”
-
-“I trust you will feel better soon,” said Lutoff. He uttered the words
-as if he meant more than that—Peter caught an implication that it would
-be well for him not to neglect calling upon the Ataman.
-
-“Were you intending to pay an official call this evening?” asked Peter.
-He thought it advisable to probe a bit after Lutoff’s obscure
-inferences.
-
-“No, just for a friendly chat. You speak Russian well for an American.
-You must have been in the country before.” Lutoff offered his cigarette
-case, a ponderous silver box covered with semiprecious stones of various
-kinds and studded with raised metal initials—mostly gold—of friends who
-had added to its ornate embellishments.
-
-“My father was in business in Moscow. I was born and grew up there,”
-lied Peter glibly, as he took a cigarette. He had no intention of taking
-Lutoff into confidence about his early life. He considered that none of
-the Cossack’s business, and the personal prying a trifle impertinent.
-
-“Are American soldiers coming to Chita?” pressed Lutoff. It was obvious
-now that he sought information for the Ataman.
-
-“Oh, yes,” said Peter easily. “I understand a battalion will be coming
-up the line. That is something I intend to take up with the Ataman—how
-many barracks are available in this vicinity.”
-
-Lutoff gave this consideration for several minutes, but made no comment.
-Then he looked over his shoulder toward the orchestra to make sure that
-no waiters were within hearing.
-
-“As a friend, I wish to tell you something,” he said in a low tone.
-
-“Thank you,” said Peter, but to all intents he was indifferent and
-smoked his cigarette with complacency.
-
-“While I belong to the Ataman’s staff, I am not speaking officially,”
-said Lutoff. “It is merely as one friend to another. You understand my
-attitude, of course.”
-
-“Of course. Have no hesitation in speaking.”
-
-“Then what I wish to say to you is that if I were you, I would not trust
-civilians who live in this hotel.” Lutoff looked squarely at Peter, as
-if to gauge the effect of the advice on him.
-
-“Civilians!” exclaimed Peter. “Why, I did not think of that. I supposed
-that nearly everybody in the hotel was in the Ataman’s service.”
-
-“There are many who are not,” said Lutoff, a trifle annoyed by Peter’s
-coolness. “Surely, you do not think that all civilians quartered here
-are in the service of Zorogoff?”
-
-“I am not so sure,” returned Peter. “But why shouldn’t I trust them?
-What is there wrong—or dangerous about the civilians?”
-
-“There are spies among them.”
-
-“You mean they are spies for the Ataman?” asked Peter, not taking his
-eyes from Lutoff’s. Peter was somewhat amused by Lutoff, and was taking
-considerable delight in beating him about the bush. The whole incident
-was so Cossack-like, so childishly dramatic.
-
-Lutoff shrugged his shoulders. “The Ataman has his spies, of course.”
-
-“And perhaps I have talked with some of them,” suggested Peter.
-
-“Perhaps. But that is not what I mean. I only warn you to be careful.”
-
-“You are very kind,” said Peter. “But have you any particular person in
-mind?” He wondered if Lutoff could be working along a definite line.
-
-“You would be wise to avoid those people you have been talking with,”
-said Lutoff, and leaned back in his chair to blow smoke rings toward the
-ceiling, thoughtfully.
-
-Peter laughed quietly. “Rather a vague warning,” he said. “I have talked
-with several persons in the city—just as I am talking with you.”
-
-“You know the people I mean,” said Lutoff with some tartness, still
-gazing at the ceiling.
-
-“I appreciate your consideration for me, sir. I assure you I would be
-glad to follow your advice if you will limit it to the people you
-evidently have in mind. But so far, what you have said might refer to
-anybody.”
-
-Lutoff looked at the table, twisted a bit of black bread off a slice
-which lay on a plate, and kneaded the bread into a ball of dough on the
-cloth.
-
-“You have been talking with people in this hotel,” he said presently.
-
-“Not many,” said Peter. He was sure now that Lutoff was referring to
-Vashka and her father, and began to be disquieted. Did Lutoff know
-anything, or was he merely guessing? Was it possible that a spy of the
-Ataman had heard the conversations with Vashka and her father? If so,
-had the spy heard Peter tell his story and his reason for wanting to
-find Kirsakoff? If the latter was true, it was likely that Kirsakoff
-already knew of Peter and his purpose, for according to Vashka,
-Kirsakoff was hand in glove with Zorogoff. Peter was really alarmed now.
-He wondered if Wassili was to be trusted. He wondered if Vashka was
-really a spy. He doubted that, for if Lutoff were in the service of
-Zorogoff, Lutoff would scarcely be warning Peter against Vashka. But the
-situation was dangerous, Peter knew well.
-
-“True, you have not been talking with many,” said Lutoff. “But those
-with whom you have been talking—they are not safe for you.”
-
-“That is quite possible,” said Peter, smiling. “Almost any one here is
-dangerous to a stranger. You see, when it comes to that, I am most
-discreet with you, Mr. Lutoff.”
-
-Lutoff bowed his head slightly. “You compliment me. But I am not trying
-to mystify you or to frighten you. When a man comes and warns you, you
-cannot very well say he is a menace to you.”
-
-“No,” said Peter. “But your warning is vague. If it is to be of any
-value to me—who are the people you warn me against?”
-
-“I speak of the old man—and the girl,” said Lutoff abruptly, and lifted
-his eyes to Peter’s.
-
-“The old man and the girl!” repeated Peter, with an amazement which was
-well feigned. “Here in the hotel? I am not sure that I know whom you
-mean.”
-
-“And I am sure that you do,” shot back Lutoff. He had dropped his polite
-indirectness and was ready to argue with Peter—almost ready, it
-appeared, to dictate to Peter on whom he should talk with in the hotel
-or the city.
-
-“Then you know what you know,” said Peter calmly. “But I cannot be sure
-what you know, unless you tell me, thus I cannot be sure that you speak
-as a friend. First, if I am to consider your advice, you must give me
-some assurance that you have knowledge of whom I have been talking
-with—otherwise, my friend, you are seeking information rather than
-giving it.” He had no intention of being trapped into admitting that he
-had been talking with Vashka and her father. The Ataman and Kirsakoff
-might suspect what they liked, but Peter was not going to tell Lutoff
-anything.
-
-“These people are hiding here in the hotel,” said Lutoff, resuming his
-kneading of the brown dough on the tablecloth.
-
-“Hiding?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“From the Ataman?” asked Peter.
-
-Lutoff looked up with an angry grimace, and Peter knew that he had put
-one shot home. He had revealed some knowledge of the Ataman’s tactics,
-and he had satisfied himself that Vashka and her father were telling the
-truth. He had put Lutoff into something of a hole, which the Cossack
-might find it difficult to get clear of again.
-
-“You had better keep your hands off this matter,” warned Lutoff.
-
-“Oh, is that it?” asked Peter. “Then this is a warning about listening
-to people who have something to say about the Ataman, is it?”
-
-“You may judge for yourself,” replied Lutoff.
-
-“I already have,” said Peter, suavely. “I judge that you are not warning
-me so much against certain people, as that you are warning me to beware
-of the Ataman Zorogoff.”
-
-“If I were you, I would not mix in political matters in this city, Mr.
-Gordon.”
-
-“You must remember that you are talking to an American officer,” said
-Peter. “Am I to understand that an officer of the Ataman Zorogoff tells
-me what I should do or should not do in Chita?”
-
-“I think the Americans wish to avoid trouble with the Ataman,” said
-Lutoff, with a bland smile.
-
-“That remains to be seen—and is somewhat dependent upon how the Ataman
-Zorogoff conducts what he is pleased to call his government,” said
-Peter.
-
-“Do the Americans intend to tell Zorogoff how he shall govern?” Lutoff
-showed in his face that this was a most important question to the
-Ataman—it was what Lutoff was seeking for Zorogoff, and Peter knew it.
-
-“They might even do that,” replied Peter. “But it might depend upon the
-wishes of the bulk of the Russian people in this district.”
-
-Lutoff grinned. “The bulk of the Russian people are behind Zorogoff,” he
-said.
-
-“According to Zorogoff,” retorted Peter.
-
-Lutoff rose. “I am not speaking officially,” he said. “Is that
-understood?”
-
-“It is if you say so,” said Peter, also rising. “But I am speaking
-officially. And I wish to thank you for sending me the supper ticket,
-and for your advice. But I cannot limit myself regarding the people with
-whom I talk in Chita, even to please the Ataman.”
-
-“Am I to tell the Ataman that?” asked Lutoff.
-
-“You may tell the Ataman what you please of what I have said, or I am
-ready to tell him the same myself.”
-
-“Very good, sir,” said Lutoff, and clicked his spurs again most
-formally. “But I can tell you now, sir, that you will come into conflict
-with the Ataman Zorogoff if you interfere—if you take any further action
-with these people to whom I have referred. And——”
-
-“I cannot consider your warning unless you make clear to me just whom
-you are talking about,” interrupted Peter.
-
-“You still pretend not to know?” asked Lutoff in surprise.
-
-“I want names, not assumptions,” said Peter.
-
-“Very good, then,” said Lutoff. “Let us not have any doubt about it, and
-then you cannot plead that you were not warned by the Ataman. I tell you
-not to mix yourself in this affair of the Kirsakoffs—old General
-Kirsakoff and his daughter Katerin Stephanovna!”
-
-And Lutoff bowed again and walked directly out of the dining room,
-leaving Peter clutching at the table as he swayed before he sank back
-into his chair.
-
-“Kirsakoff!” he whispered. “Kirsakoff—and his daughter Katerin
-Stephanovna!” and then his voice rose in a hysterical wailing burst of
-laughter above the playing of the orchestra.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXI
-
- THE CAT’S PAW HAS CLAWS
-
-
-THE electric lamp on Peter’s writing table was still glowing under its
-shade, but it gradually waned as morning whitened the frost-bound
-windows.
-
-Peter sat by the table near the door. He was fully dressed, just as he
-had come from the dining room after Lutoff had warned him to have no
-more dealings with the Kirsakoffs. Peter’s left arm lay limply on the
-dingy cloth, his automatic pistol close at hand lying on its side. He
-was wide-eyed awake and staring at the door into the hall, as if he were
-waiting for some one to enter. His jaw was set grimly, and at the right
-side of his mouth his upper lip was askew, as if he had spent the night
-in thoughts which resulted in nothing but a cynical smile. His face was
-pale under the night’s growth of beardy stubble. The soles of both his
-boots rested flatly on the floor, and were pulled back slightly under
-his knees as he had gradually slipped down into the chair. His shoulders
-were bent forward in a crouching attitude, and his chin rested upon the
-front of his tunic.
-
-When full daylight finally vanquished the darkness of his side of the
-room, he lifted his head and pulled up the sleeve of his left arm to
-look at his wrist-watch. He thought a moment, as if in doubt what to do
-next, and wound the watch. He turned and looked at the windows behind
-him, rubbed his jaw reflectively with the tips of his fingers, and got
-up wearily to look for his shaving kit on the shelf under the mirror
-between the windows.
-
-He studied himself in the mirror, smoothed his rumpled hair with his
-hand, and went about the business of getting out his razors. But he
-pushed the kit away irritably, and returned to the table. He picked up
-his pistol, took a cautionary glance at the catch which was so arranged
-that it revealed the weapon to be ready for firing, and slipped the
-pistol into its holster on his hip. Yet he did not button down the flap
-of the holster, but sprung the stiff leather flap back and tucked it in
-behind the belt. This left the butt of the pistol ready to his hand for
-instant use—he could draw and fire it without the trouble of unbuttoning
-the flap.
-
-He went to the little wall sink near the wardrobe and dashed water in
-his face. Drying himself with a handkerchief, he went once more to the
-mirror and combed his hair with infinite pains. This done to his
-satisfaction, he stood before the door leading into Katerin’s room, in
-an attitude of listening.
-
-He looked at his watch again after a time, and as if he had made a
-decision, walked to the door and rapped gently upon it. He waited,
-listening. He heard nothing. Finally he went to the push-button near the
-door to the hall and pressed it three times in the usual signal for a
-samovar. Then he fell to pacing the floor, head down, and his hands
-clasped behind his back.
-
-After a considerable delay, the peasant girl who had served him when he
-first came to the hotel brought the samovar. She seemed to be still half
-asleep, and having set the samovar upon the table, departed promptly
-without so much as a look at Peter.
-
-He took a few more turns up and down the room till the hissing of the
-samovar drew his attention. He put the tea to brewing and waited
-listlessly till it should be ready. He drank several glasses of the
-steaming tea without any apparent relish of it or stimulation from it.
-He seemed in a stupor, as he sat staring at the floor, haggard and
-hollow-eyed. His face was drawn, and reflected the bitterness in his
-soul. He hunted his pockets for cigarettes, but found none. He looked
-under the table. There he saw a litter of flattened mouthpieces and
-matches, the remains of his night-long smoking.
-
-There came a gentle tapping at Katerin’s door. He sprang toward it and
-threw off the bolt. The door came open under his hand, and Katerin stood
-smiling at him. She did not look any too well, he thought—as if she had
-not slept herself. His eyes met hers, and he forced a smile. He bowed,
-and with a gesture invited her to enter. He did not look past her, but
-he was conscious of some one moving in the room beyond—her father’s
-room.
-
-“Good-morning,” she said. “I did not bring the samovar because I did not
-want to risk being seen in the hall.” Her voice was low, and there was a
-note of worry in it, as if she had already sensed something inimical in
-his manner, or in the close stale air of the room which reeked with the
-fumes of dead tobacco smoke.
-
-Peter turned toward the window to pull a chair from the writing table.
-
-“You—you are ill!” she exclaimed suddenly, giving him a look of concern.
-“And you have not slept!” She took in the undisturbed blankets on his
-bed.
-
-“Yes,” said Peter dully. “I have a cold—a headache. But it is
-nothing—see—I have already had my morning tea and feel better.”
-
-“I am sorry. You look as if you had suffered much,” and she sat down,
-still observing him with troubled doubt. She saw the exposed pistol in
-the holster, but refrained from anything which would indicate that she
-had noticed it.
-
-“What about Kirsakoff?” he asked, as if they should get to business.
-
-His words startled her, but she concealed from him any indication of her
-inner alarm.
-
-“I came to tell you,” she answered. “We sent Wassili out through the
-city last night, to people who have underground information. And he came
-back early with his report.” She affected a quiet complacence, as if
-seeking news of her father’s whereabouts was a trivial detail of
-everyday life.
-
-“And what did he learn?” asked Peter, sitting down by the writing table
-with his back to the window. He was calmer now, resolved to play his
-part of utter ignorance of the truth about Kirsakoff.
-
-“The last word that has come to Chita is that—Kirsakoff is in Harbin.”
-She looked straight at Peter to gauge the effect of her story upon him.
-
-“In Manchuria,” he said, without surprise. “In that case, we should go
-to Harbin. Could you and your father get away to Harbin with me?”
-
-“It might be possible—with your help.” Her face took on a trace of color
-as her heart began to respond to her rising hope that what she planned
-with Peter could be carried through. At least, he had interposed no
-objection to going to Harbin to find Kirsakoff, and actually had in mind
-a willingness to take her and her father along.
-
-“But could we find him when we got there?” he asked.
-
-“We have friends there who know where he could be found. It should not
-be difficult—there are not so many Russians in Harbin, after all.”
-
-“You are a brave woman,” he said quietly. “You must know that this whole
-plan holds naked menace for your father—and yourself.”
-
-“There is greater menace here,” she replied, looking steadily into his
-eyes.
-
-He wondered if she could mean that he was part of the menace. It was
-possible that she knew Lutoff had been talking—and that what Lutoff had
-said was already known to her. If the latter were true, she must realize
-that it would be impossible to manipulate Peter so that he would save
-them from Zorogoff. He dismissed the thought—she was bent now on leading
-him on a fool’s errand to Harbin, and once safe from the Ataman,
-disappear in the Manchurian city.
-
-It now struck Peter that it might be wise to get away from the Valley of
-Despair with the Kirsakoffs. Harbin offered possibility not only to the
-Kirsakoffs, but to himself. He could hardly expect to kill Kirsakoff in
-Chita and cover his own tracks.
-
-“Have you a plan for escape from the city?” he asked.
-
-“We have talked it over with Slipitsky—the Jew. But my father is averse
-to having any hand in putting you into danger.”
-
-Peter smiled. “Your father need not worry about that,” he said lightly.
-“Did we not arrange last night?”
-
-“True, but——” She hesitated to go on, and turned her face from him.
-
-“Has your father changed his mind since last night?” asked Peter, alert
-at once.
-
-“Oh, no,” she said, looking at the floor. “We—we thought you might
-change yours. You have not been sleeping—and perhaps you gave thought
-to——”
-
-“I have not changed my mind about Kirsakoff,” he said when it was plain
-that she was not going to finish her sentence. “I am still determined
-to—find him.”
-
-“We thought you might have changed your mind about helping us.” She
-lifted her head, and smiled at him.
-
-He saw at once that her reluctance to avail herself of his help was only
-feigned. She was too subtle to be over-eager in a matter which concerned
-her own safety and the safety of her father. She intended that Peter
-should be the insistent one, so that any suspicions he might have that
-they sought their own safety rather than Kirsakoff, would be allayed.
-She wished the trip to Harbin to be made on his wishes instead of out of
-their own selfish, if natural, desire to escape the Ataman.
-
-Peter laughed without mirth.
-
-“We might not be able to find Kirsakoff in Harbin,” he suggested.
-
-“True,” she admitted at once. “He spends his time between Harbin and
-Chita. By the time we got there, he might be on his way back here.”
-
-“Would you advise waiting?” he asked.
-
-“That is for you to decide.”
-
-“Then we shall go to Harbin,” he announced. “This is a serious thing to
-me. As I told you last night, I have waited twenty years to find
-Kirsakoff.”
-
-“It should not be difficult,” she said casually.
-
-“Not with your help,” he said, with a play at enthusiasm. “If I find
-him, it will be because——” He stopped short. What he was about to say
-was that if he found Kirsakoff, it would be due to her. But that was not
-true—she was concealing Kirsakoff. Peter felt he owed her nothing there.
-
-“Perhaps you would prefer to wait till you feel better,” suggested
-Katerin. She was still worried about his constrained manner, and not
-quite sure that the change which she detected in him was due to his
-feeling badly, as he claimed. She sensed an undercurrent of agitation,
-and though the reason of it was far beyond her intuitions, she knew he
-had undergone some change during the night—there was something hostile
-in his eye, something in the slow turning of his head which revealed to
-her the brooding rage which burned in his brain.
-
-“I feel well enough,” he said, putting his hand to his ruffled brow.
-“The pain has gone, but I feel dull and stupid. I hope you will forgive
-my—stolidity.” He forced a smile, and threw back his head and shook it
-as if to dispel a heaviness.
-
-“When should we attempt to get away?” she asked.
-
-“We should not delay, I think. Is it not likely that the Ataman will be
-down upon the hotel at any time?”
-
-She shivered slightly. “Every minute is precious.”
-
-“The sooner away, the sooner we shall come up to Kirsakoff,” he said,
-and rose to take a turn about the room. Then he came and stood over her,
-looking down into her face.
-
-“Take some more tea,” she said. “If we are to go away, you must feel as
-well as possible.”
-
-“True, I must. Suppose you bring your father here—and the three of us
-talk over the plan of going—to Harbin.”
-
-Katerin gave him a quick glance. Once more she had caught in Peter’s
-manner a glimmer of the fact that he was holding himself in leash
-against an impulse to action which he found it painfully difficult to
-restrain. He frightened her a little, for there was that about his
-mouth, about his eyes, and in his voice which told her that this man was
-ready to slay.
-
-“My father is still asleep, I am afraid,” she said. “But I know all the
-plans that have been made. We are to leave by droshky—and Slipitsky will
-forge passports for us. The old Jew is very shrewd about such things. He
-helped many a man escape from—the old prison.”
-
-Peter wondered if her reluctance to let him see her father could be due
-to a suspicion that Peter already knew that her father was Kirsakoff.
-
-“Droshky to Harbin! It sounds impossible! By droshky more than a
-thousand versts in this time of the year?”
-
-She laughed lightly. “Not all the way, of course,” she said. “Just far
-enough to get away from the city—down the railway far enough to get a
-train beyond where Zorogoff’s men are on guard.”
-
-“But how are we to get through the cordons of Cossacks?”
-
-“An American officer should be able to pass—if my father and myself have
-forged passports. They would not stop you—an American.”
-
-He saw the cleverness of her plan. It was a bold move. And the
-Kirsakoffs would not have to risk having their identity revealed to
-Peter during any quizzing at the railway station in Chita. Zorogoff’s
-passport officers would undoubtedly hold Katerin and her father if they
-attempted to board a train at the station with Peter—and the worst of it
-would be, the old general would most likely be addressed by his name in
-the hearing of Peter. But the sentries of the cordon around the city
-would be more easily fooled. In the first place, they might not
-recognize Kirsakoff at all if he were well wrapped in furs, and had his
-bandage about his face. Besides, they might be deceived by the false
-passports.
-
-“Is it intended that we should go by night?” asked Peter.
-
-“No, by day. The soldiers will not be so careful by day. By night, they
-might fire upon us, or hold us till morning in some guardroom while our
-papers were sent back to the city for examination. That is the advice
-Slipitsky gives. He says the best escapes are made by daylight, and the
-proper plan carefully worked out.”
-
-Katerin waited till Peter thought it over. He considered the plan,
-looking thoughtfully at the window.
-
-“You, as an American, can be liberal with the soldiers. Give them enough
-rubles to make them feel they want to please you, but not enough to
-rouse their suspicions. We will give you the money.”
-
-Peter found it hard to choke down the bitterness which rose anew within
-him as he listened to her elaborating her plan for his deception. He was
-tempted for an instant to laugh at her, and tell her now that he knew
-all he needed to know. Yet there was a queer comfort for him in
-listening to Katerin go on with her intricate scheme to save herself and
-her father by means of the enemy of her father. And Peter realized also
-that they probably did not contemplate going on to Harbin with him at
-all—they would slip away from him on the train, at some station—anywhere
-once they were clear of the district in which Zorogoff’s army held any
-power.
-
-“Does Wassili go with us?” he asked, thinking that perhaps the servant
-would be taken for the purpose of killing Peter once they had used him
-to get them free through the cordons.
-
-“No, Wassili will remain here.”
-
-“What is the first thing to be done?” he asked, as if anxious to get
-about the business.
-
-“Send Wassili for the droshky and the driver who is in the plan—a man
-who can be trusted. That can be done as soon as Slipitsky has the
-passports ready. He was drying the ink this morning, over a smoky lamp
-to make the signatures fast and soften the wax of the seals so that the
-counterfeit seal could be pressed in. Then we drive straight toward
-Zorogoff’s headquarters, to make it appear first that we are going
-there. But we go around the building, so that it will appear to the
-first line of sentries on the other side that we have just left
-headquarters. That will make the first cordon willing to let us pass
-with scarcely any questioning. The next cordon will take it for granted
-that we are all right because we have passed the first—and if there is
-any trouble, the passports will let us through. The earlier we start,
-the better.”
-
-She rose, flushed with hope, which was engendered by the very telling of
-how they were to escape.
-
-“I am ready when you are,” said Peter. “Let us not lose any time.”
-
-Tears came into her eyes. “We put our lives in your hands,” she said.
-“God will bless you if you aid us in our escape.”
-
-“The road to Harbin is before us yet,” he said with a smile. “You and
-your father are not yet out of danger.”
-
-“True,” she said, moving toward the door of her room. “I shall have him
-get ready at once, and see Slipitsky about the passports.”
-
-Peter opened the door for her, and bowed as she passed out. He closed
-the door after her, and stood looking at the windows of his room, the
-same queer twisted smile of the morning at the corner of his mouth.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXII
-
- THE OFFICER FROM THE ATAMAN
-
-
-PETER paced the floor of his room, his head bent in thought, after
-Katerin left him. He considered the possibilities of the proposed trip
-to Harbin in relation to himself and Michael. An escape from Chita, he
-saw now, would be most desirable for his own purpose, providing he was
-not being walked into a trap in Harbin. It was quite possible that
-Katerin and Michael would try to elude him in Harbin. It was
-inconceivable that they were not quite as anxious to escape from Peter
-as they were from the Ataman, for they were in full possession of his
-secret. And once clear of the cordon of Cossack guards surrounding
-Chita, they might be able to give him the slip.
-
-He had a desire to play out the intricate game in which he found himself
-enmeshed. He knew he would find it amusing to watch Katerin and Michael
-play at being fugitives from the Ataman with him, and then play at
-stalking Michael himself in Harbin—to see a man pretend to seek himself.
-And at any time, Peter could turn to Michael, and say, “Thou art the man
-I seek.”
-
-The sheer chicanery of it had an irresistible appeal to Peter. Like all
-Slavs, he loved the dramatic for the sake of itself, and he enjoyed
-proceeding by devious ways. Besides, the fact that Katerin and Michael
-were deliberately deceiving him, justified his own deception. Peter had
-actually been sorry, as he sat thinking through the night, that the
-identity of Michael had been made known so abruptly. It had all come
-with such amazing clarity and finality that he had found himself rather
-helpless when he realized that the whole business could be settled by
-the simple expedient of killing Michael without any more delay. He
-shrank from so hasty a conclusion to an affair which he had been
-dreaming about for twenty years. He thought that perhaps the Russian
-people had been caught in just such a staggering position by the easy
-success of their revolution. A whole nation thrown back upon its
-haunches, so to speak, and asking itself what it was to do now! Their
-minds had been so occupied for years in planning and plotting to
-overthrow the Czar and his government that they had neglected entirely
-to think of what might face them once they were successful. Their plans
-had not gone beyond the destruction of the Czar, and when he was
-destroyed, they needed more years to give thought to what was necessary
-for the good of the country and the people. It did not seem quite fair
-to them that the Czar had allowed himself to be overthrown so easily—he
-had destroyed their game, their one interest in life. So they began to
-sulk, and intrigue against each other.
-
-In the same way, Peter rather resented Lutoff’s directness in revealing
-the fact that the “old exile” was Michael Kirsakoff. It made the matter
-of killing Michael so absurdly easy! And the Slav insists upon making
-all things difficult—life, war, government—before he can enjoy them. He
-demands that Life shall be a puzzle, and examines its hidden purposes to
-discover why the Creator has tricked him into being a living being. He
-seeks a sinister motive behind his birth, and not being able to find one
-or to construct one out of his fancy, he kills himself because life is
-not worth living unless it can be proved to be a sort of divine
-persecution. The Slav needs a lot of trouble to keep himself happy.
-Convince him that the purpose of Life is to make him miserable and he is
-content.
-
-But Peter had become almost wholly Russian again, so he could not fully
-consider himself in the proper light. He had no intention of letting
-Michael escape. But he had the bothersome idea that he had to begin all
-over again to run Michael into a snare—a snare of Peter’s own devising,
-and built so leisurely that the joy of vengeance would have a
-satisfactory accretion of mental torture for Michael.
-
-The old general knew that Peter lusted for his life, and this knowledge
-must in itself fill Kirsakoff with terror. Did not Kirsakoff live in
-dread of a look, a word, an intonation of the voice, which would betray
-him to Peter? And Peter knew that he had the power to precipitate the
-dreaded catastrophe for Michael at any instant. All Peter waited for now
-was the moment which would intensify the terror for Michael—that moment,
-perhaps, when Michael would consider himself safest. It might come at
-the instant when Michael would be ready to slip away from Peter in
-Harbin, exulting in the thought that he was about to escape from the man
-who sought to slay him. Safe at last! And then Peter could smile, and
-instead of saying, “Good-by, my friend,” could say instead, “Now,
-Michael Alexandrovitch, you die!”
-
-And so utterly Russian such a moment would be! And how fitting, thought
-Peter. Was not Michael Kirsakoff living in a fool’s paradise and
-thinking that he could use his enemy to save his life from the Ataman?
-When he saw it from this angle, Peter was glad that he knew the old man
-was Michael. Now he could build Michael’s hopes, only to shatter them at
-the end.
-
-Once again Peter was master of himself and of the situation. He would
-play the covert game with the Kirsakoffs—and Michael could not escape.
-Harbin would be better than Chita after all, for it offered a better
-chance for Peter to cover his tracks.
-
-He had come to this decision when he heard the rattle of boots on the
-other side of the door which led into Michael’s room. Then the door
-opened slowly, cautiously, and presently Michael, the blanket over his
-shoulders and clutching the loose ends of the covering to his breast,
-looked in. The old man was crouched forward and he was visibly
-trembling.
-
-Peter thought at first that Michael had come sneaking in during the
-absence of Katerin below, to attack him. But he saw at once that Michael
-was alarmed—he stood hesitating in the door, looking back over his
-shoulder, listening. He had a blanket over his shoulders, and his hair
-stood up stiffly on the back of his head behind the bandages about his
-face, like the crest of an angry cockatoo.
-
-Peter stood still. He half expected that Michael had come to the
-attack—that beneath the blanket Michael had a weapon. And there was no
-longer any doubt that the old man was Kirsakoff. Peter recognized him
-for the Governor at once, though the years had changed so much and the
-bandages which covered his cheeks hid his predominant features. The nose
-was still strong and arrogant, the black eyes now deeply set with age,
-the white mustaches which had once been black, though sparse, changed
-his appearance but little.
-
-This was the moment for which Peter had waited so long—but he knew at
-once that it was not the moment to strike. He wanted more time to deal
-with Michael, and the old man was worried about something which seemed
-to threaten from the hall.
-
-“What is wrong?” asked Peter.
-
-Michael threw up his hand in a gesture for silence, and did not turn his
-head, but continued to look back over his shoulder into the two rooms
-behind him.
-
-“Some one outside my door,” he whispered.
-
-Peter listened but heard nothing.
-
-“Wassili has gone for a droshky, and my daughter has gone down to
-Slipitsky—I did not want to lock the door against her. But—the Cossacks
-have come—I heard them talking outside.”
-
-“Come in here, sir,” said Peter. “And we will leave this door open, so
-that we may watch if anybody enters and see who they are before they
-discover that you have come to me.”
-
-The old man obeyed, and Peter stood in the doorway looking into the
-Kirsakoffs’ rooms. The curtain between them was caught aside by a cord,
-so that both rooms were visible to Peter, the farther one by the width
-of the passage between them which was enough to reveal to Peter any one
-who might enter and pass it.
-
-There were a few minutes of silence except for the quick breathing of
-Michael crouched beside Peter and standing to one side of him so that he
-was hidden from the other rooms. And during this time Peter began to
-suspect that it was all a ruse of Michael. The old general was probably
-trying to catch Peter off his guard, and attack him. It was quite
-likely, so Peter thought, that Michael in some way had come to knowledge
-of the fact that Lutoff had apprised Peter of the identity of the
-Kirsakoffs.
-
-But Peter abandoned his suspicion when he heard a rattling of the door
-in the far room. Some one was rattling the knob in place of knocking, a
-practice customary when one wanted to enter without attracting the
-attention of those in other rooms opening into the hall. The rattling
-ceased. The next instant Peter saw in the gloom of the far room a high
-white cap of wool, and a gray sheepskin coat, and a Cossack stood
-looking in the direction of Peter, head bent forward against the sharper
-light from Peter’s windows.
-
-The Cossack hesitated but a moment, then he advanced toward Peter, one
-hand behind him as if he held a weapon in concealment.
-
-“What do you want?” asked Peter.
-
-The Cossack did not reply, but came on till he was close to Peter.
-
-“Who are you?” asked the Cossack. He moved slightly to the right and
-looked past Peter, his eyes upon Michael.
-
-“I am an American officer,” said Peter coldly. “These are my rooms.”
-
-“An American officer! You speak Russian well, for an American.”
-
-“You are intruding,” said Peter. “Or have you come on a mission?”
-
-“I am Captain Shimilin of the Ataman’s staff,” said the Cossack, and put
-his hand on the hilt of his saber as he clicked his heels and bowed,
-formally polite.
-
-“And I am Lieutenant Gordon of the American army,” said Peter. “This is
-my room. Please! Come in!” There was no other thing for Peter to do,
-unless he wished to bring on hostilities with Shimilin. It was very
-likely that the Cossack captain had soldiers within call. And now it
-looked very much as if an escape to Harbin would be out of the question.
-
-Shimilin entered as Peter stepped aside. The Cossack looked at Michael,
-who had retreated to the low writing table under the window, clutching
-the blanket about him.
-
-“Have you business of the Ataman with me?” asked Peter.
-
-“No, not with you,” said Shimilin. “I did not call upon you, but I thank
-you for your politeness.”
-
-Peter considered what he should do next. He had no wish to see Michael
-wrested from his control in this fashion, and he had no doubt but that
-Shimilin had come for Michael. It was quite likely that Katerin had been
-seized when she went down to arrange matters with Slipitsky. Peter
-frowned at the thought that Michael would escape him, even though the
-old general met death at the hands of the Ataman’s soldiers. It came to
-him that the limit of his vengeance now would be but to surrender
-Michael and taunt him with the fact that the Cossacks—his own
-Cossacks—could now deal with a Kirsakoff as they had dealt in the old
-days with a Gorekin. But Peter hoped to delay with Shimilin. It might be
-possible to get the Cossack away for a time, when Peter would have
-things in his own hands again, if only for a brief space. He began to
-see that his hand was being forced—if he was to kill Michael he would
-have to do it in Chita—probably on the spot, and that in the next few
-minutes.
-
-“Could you tell me why you have come to my room?” asked Peter.
-
-“Oh, yes,” said Shimilin easily, as he faced Michael. “I have come to
-arrest this old man.”
-
-“Arrest him? For what?” asked Peter, feigning a mild surprise. Shimilin
-seemed so casual, so light-hearted, so jaunty that he appeared to regard
-the whole matter as in the nature of a joke. He smiled good-naturedly at
-Michael.
-
-Shimilin lifted his shoulders inside the sheepskin coat, put out both
-hands with the palms upward, and jerked his head. “It is a business of
-the Ataman. You speak Russian well. Are you a Russian?”
-
-“Yes,” said Peter.
-
-“Of course,” said Shimilin. “Only a Russian could speak so. Have you
-called upon the Ataman Zorogoff? What do you think of—our Ataman?” He
-regarded Peter with questioning eyes.
-
-“I have not yet called,” replied Peter. “I know little about the
-Ataman.”
-
-“You have heard about him here in Chita. Surely, you must have formed
-some opinion.”
-
-“No,” said Peter dryly. “If I had, I doubt if I would discuss it.”
-
-“Now, now,” said Shimilin, not in the least offended by Peter’s
-reluctance to discuss the Ataman, “I know all that. But what do the
-Americans—the American army in Vladivostok—think of Zorogoff?”
-
-Shimilin’s curiosity on that score seemed without limit.
-
-“I doubt if they have given him much thought,” said Peter. “But about
-this gentleman here—I am sorry that you want to arrest him. And in my
-room.”
-
-“What does that matter?” asked the Cossack.
-
-“But little,” agreed Peter, who felt that he could have his way with
-Shimilin if the Cossack believed that Peter was not seriously opposed to
-having Michael taken. For Peter knew that a Cossack can be cajoled when
-open antagonism only strengthens his resistance.
-
-“True,” said Shimilin, with a smile. “We need have no quarrel. And being
-a soldier, you know what duty means—I must obey my orders at all cost. I
-am glad that you have sensible ideas.”
-
-Captain Shimilin evidently took it for granted that Peter had decided
-not to interfere, but would allow Michael to go with the Cossack. Still,
-Shimilin took no action. It appeared that he wished to prolong his
-conversation with Peter, and his eyes when he looked at Peter were
-frankly curious.
-
-Michael leaned back against the table, his back to the window, watching
-Peter closely. The old general’s head nodded gently with the palsy,
-suggestive of being moved by the beating of his heart. He divined in
-Peter some sudden change of manner, and suspected that Peter was not
-going to protect him against the Cossack. But he said nothing.
-
-“I would advise you to call later,” suggested Peter suddenly, affecting
-a serious mien with Shimilin.
-
-The Cossack was visibly surprised at this.
-
-“What! Come later? What difference can it make?”
-
-“It might make some difference to your Ataman,” said Peter, purposely
-putting a dash of mystery into the sentence. “I do not demand, captain,
-that you come later. I merely advise it—for your own benefit. I can’t
-explain now—but if you will come back in an hour——”
-
-“Oh, no,” said Shimilin, though not quite sure of himself. “I am not to
-be prevented from carrying out my orders.”
-
-“I also have my orders,” said Peter significantly.
-
-“Oh,” said Shimilin. “It would be unfortunate if your orders conflicted
-with mine.” He drew his lips tightly across his teeth, and his eyes
-looked squarely into Peter’s.
-
-“True!” retorted Peter. “It would be unfortunate. But I have been
-talking with this old gentleman here—and we have not finished our
-conversation.”
-
-“What have you been talking about?”
-
-“That is a private matter between ourselves.”
-
-“Ah! Something about the Ataman, I presume,” said Shimilin, giving
-Michael a suspicious look. Then to Peter, “You would hardly believe a
-man who is sought by the Ataman to have anything good to say about
-him—if you could trust such a report by such a man.”
-
-“What this old gentleman has to say about the Ataman—good or bad—is
-likely to be borne out by the actions of the Ataman. You can see,
-Captain Shimilin, that if your Ataman did something which did not meet
-my approval—such as an arrest without sufficient warrant—I might be able
-to form my own opinion of the Ataman.”
-
-“Hmm!” sniffed Shimilin, and walked round slowly in a small circle,
-looking at the floor while he considered Peter’s words. He stopped
-abruptly and faced Peter, one eye partly closed. “Perhaps you have an
-idea that the Ataman Zorogoff has no rights to consider?”
-
-“I have never questioned any rights that Zorogoff may claim,” said
-Peter. He saw that he had Shimilin worried.
-
-“But the Americans have not officially recognized Zorogoff as a ruler,”
-went on Shimilin. “You have been here several days, yet you have not
-called upon the Ataman.”
-
-Peter saw in this an attempt to draw from him some hint as to the
-American attitude toward Zorogoff, and had no intention of committing
-himself on the subject.
-
-“I do not feel accountable to any person for my actions here, other than
-my superiors,” said Peter. “If Zorogoff seeks information as to the
-attitude of the Americans, let him send some one to Vladivostok.”
-
-“Would you defy an officer of the Ataman?” asked Shimilin. “Would you
-tell me that I cannot arrest a Russian subject here in your rooms?”
-
-“This man is under my protection while he is in my room. I have not
-defied you—but I suggest delay. I shall not attempt to control your
-actions.”
-
-“You don’t want him arrested? Is that what you are saying?”
-
-“I don’t want him arrested now.”
-
-“My Ataman will not like that. It is interference,” snapped Shimilin.
-
-“I cannot help what the Ataman thinks.”
-
-Shimilin smiled and bowed. “Suppose I report your attitude to the Ataman
-himself?”
-
-“I would consider that wisdom on your part,” said Peter. “There are some
-aspects to this case which I cannot discuss now. That is why I suggested
-delay.”
-
-Shimilin clicked his heels and walked straight to the hall door. He
-opened it, and turned. “I will submit your proposal to the Ataman—if you
-are willing to take the consequence.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Peter, bowing in dismissal. “You are very kind.”
-
-“And,” continued Shimilin, “I shall hold you responsible that Michael
-Kirsakoff is here when I return.”
-
-Shimilin shut the door with a quick jerk, suggestive of the closing of
-the jaws of a great trap.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXIII
-
- A LIFE FOR A LIFE
-
-
-WHEN he heard his own name uttered by Shimilin as the Cossack captain
-departed, Michael locked his grip upon the ends of the blanket as if
-against a blow. A startled moan broke from his lips, an expression of
-horror that at last Peter would know him.
-
-Peter turned upon the old man swiftly, alert at once and his own hand
-dropping to the butt of his pistol.
-
-“I—I am revealed to you!” whispered Michael, thrusting his head forward
-toward Peter.
-
-“And before you were ready, eh?” said Peter. “But you thought you could
-fool me, Michael Alexandrovitch, before——”
-
-Kirsakoff made a quick flick of his right hand, and there dropped down
-from the sleeve of his shirt a small derringer. The weapon fell into his
-hand, and he made a movement to adjust it for use. But Peter was too
-quick for him, and before Michael could get proper hold of it, much less
-aim it, Peter had leaped upon the old man and pinioned his arms against
-his sides.
-
-“So the old wolf has a snap left in him yet,” taunted Peter, as he bore
-the frail Michael back against the table and wrested the derringer from
-his fingers. Michael made no struggle, but relaxed in Peter’s hands, and
-when released, sank weakly to his knees.
-
-Peter pocketed the derringer, and then leaned down to Michael.
-
-“You would kill me, would you? You have not forgotten your tricks,
-Michael! Perhaps you came prepared to kill me! So the escape to Harbin
-was all pretty talk, to throw me off my guard that you might——”
-
-“Mercy!” gasped Michael. “Mercy for my daughter’s sake—I ask none for
-myself!”
-
-“You have discovered mercy. Who called for mercy for Peter Petrovitch
-twenty years ago when you ordered him and his father sent to prison—and
-then his father was cut down by your Cossacks? Answer me that?”
-
-“If my daughter were safe from the Ataman, you could take your
-vengeance,” said Michael simply. “I have lived beyond——”
-
-“Oh, hush!” cried Peter angrily, clapping his hand over Michael’s mouth.
-He slipped his fingers under the folds of the bandage about Michael’s
-face, and slipped it back over his head, pulling it upward from the
-chin.
-
-“Let me see your face, Michael! It has been a long time since we looked
-at one another—and each knew the other. On that day you were the bold,
-brave Governor, surrounded by your soldiers. Life was cheap then—to you.
-Come! Stand upon your feet like a man!” And Peter lifted him up against
-the table.
-
-“I have no fear of death,” said Michael proudly.
-
-“No,” said Peter, laughing. “You are so ready to meet death that you tie
-your face up in rags. But you look like yourself, Michael! Yes, I would
-have known you but for the rags. Life is not so strong in you, now, it
-is true, but you are the same, yes.”
-
-Peter stood before him, with folded arms, and scanned Michael’s face
-with reflective memory. He spoke quietly, almost soothingly, and his
-face was lighted by his joyful exultation. He thought of nothing but
-that his triumph had come, and he cared for nothing but that he should
-drink his fill of the wine of revenge.
-
-“I am helpless now—an old man,” said Michael. “But I can die—Gorekin.”
-
-“I suppose you can,” said Peter, “much as you would throw away a lemon
-that had been sucked dry. But I am thinking now of my father, twenty
-years ago. You were brave with his life, too—and mine! I was a helpless
-boy and you left me in your filthy prison. I might be there now for all
-you cared.”
-
-“Do your will with me,” said Michael wearily.
-
-Peter put a hand upon his shoulder, and bent his body back, so that he
-might peer into the old man’s eyes in better light.
-
-“You have not lost your cunning, Michael. I can see it still in your
-eyes, faded as they are. You thought that I, Peter Petrovitch, would
-save your life—I, who have come half way round the world to take it, I,
-who have waited twenty years to see the breath leave your body!”
-
-“To save my daughter, yes,” said Michael.
-
-“Ha! Do you not see the divinity behind all this? You run squealing to
-an American officer to save you from your Cossacks—and the American is
-Peter Petrovitch! And now that your own skin is threatened, you plead
-for life because of your daughter! Did you give my father a chance to
-plead for his son? Michael, _I am the boy_ who saw his father die in the
-snow before the post-house—and you come now seeking my protection from
-the Ataman——”
-
-“A half-blood Mongol,” put in Michael. “I would save my daughter from a
-Mongol—for myself I ask nothing. And I would kill you if I had the
-power——”
-
-“Stop! I shall do the talking!” Peter’s body trembled with his rage. All
-the hatred which he had built up in twenty years, all the concentrated
-venom in his soul against Kirsakoff was now diffusing through his body
-and poisoning his brain. He lunged at Michael, and took the frail old
-body in his arms, swinging him upward from the floor as a child might be
-lifted in play by its father.
-
-“Come!” commanded Peter, looking down into the white face of Michael. “I
-will show you your Valley of Despair! I will show you the spot before
-the old post-house where I watched my father pour out his blood into the
-snow! I will show you where Peter Petrovitch, who now holds you in his
-arms, could but scream in terror against you and your Cossacks—and vow
-to have your life!”
-
-He turned with Michael, and thrust the old man’s face against the pane
-of the window, holding him high enough so that he could see over the
-stratum of frost on the lower part of the glass.
-
-“Look, Michael Alexandrovitch! Up the Sofistkaya! The post-house where
-the mail-sledges stopped when they came in from Irkutsk! That is the
-spot! And I cannot even find the bones of my beloved father in the old
-cemetery by the prison on the hill. And below—the little hut where
-Gorekin the bootmaker lived! See it? The chimney and a part of the old
-roof. It has taken twenty years for God to put you in my hands—twenty
-years, before He has let you, a leaf which is ready to fall, come into
-my power. Can you doubt that He let you live that I might show you where
-you stood one cold morning, master of lives in the Valley of Despair and
-death waiting the snap of your finger? Times have changed, Michael. The
-light has come to Russia—a new day, and for such as you who gave us but
-black despair, black night has come. And justice without mercy!”
-
-Peter swung round from the window and threw Michael upon his feet. The
-old general swayed dizzily and saved himself from falling by grasping at
-the table. Peter stood glowering, arms hanging out from his sides with
-fingers widespread as if he were about to seize Michael again.
-
-“You shall have your vengeance!” cried Michael, and held up an arm to
-restrain Peter for a time.
-
-“Oh, shall I?” asked Peter sneeringly, a crooked smile playing at the
-side of his mouth. “Perhaps you covered your face that I might have my
-vengeance! Did you plan to take me to Harbin to find Kirsakoff? Did you
-put Wassili behind my chair with a knife to——?”
-
-“Give heed to my words!” pleaded Michael in a passionate outburst. “I
-will bargain with you!”
-
-Peter laughed at him.
-
-“Bargain! Why should I buy what I already have?”
-
-“Look!” Michael held forth his hand to Peter. Between the fingers was a
-small white pellet.
-
-“And what is that?” asked Peter.
-
-“I could still defeat you, Gorekin. This is a poison tablet—quick as a
-bullet or a blade.”
-
-“For me, Michael? Is it for me?” sneered Peter.
-
-“No, for myself. I can die by my own hand quicker than you can fire your
-pistol—and you must shoot quickly, or even the Ataman will defeat your
-purpose with me. But I would bargain with you, Gorekin.”
-
-“To what end?” asked Peter, somewhat amused, and curious as to the old
-man’s intent. “What have you to sell, Michael?”
-
-“I will sell you my life,” said Kirsakoff.
-
-“I can have your life for the taking.”
-
-“No. Look! I hold the tablet six inches from my mouth. I could be dead
-before your bullet would reach me.”
-
-“I like to hear your voice, Michael—speaking of your own death. Well,
-have your say out.”
-
-“You are a Russian, and you must have your blood amend, Gorekin. You
-shall have it—I shall not destroy myself—but I ask you to save Katerin
-from the Ataman. That is my bargain.”
-
-“My father and I could not bargain, twenty years ago out there in the
-Sofistkaya.”
-
-“True. But I offer you now a life for a life—and a clean slate between
-the two of us. My blood for your father’s blood—and go your way in
-peace.”
-
-Michael leaned forward eagerly. Peter’s expression had changed so that
-the old man had hope, but Peter was merely astounded by Michael’s
-proposal. This was something he had not looked for in the old man—a calm
-willingness to take death as part of a trade, an exchange of favors.
-
-“The old wolf has not lost his craft,” said Peter.
-
-“The lion returns to the lair where he was whelped,” said Michael. “What
-I was, I was, and done is done. What I offer is nothing, true—but you
-may fail in your vengeance. Rather I would make it sure for you—and go
-to meet the dead with no debt to living man.”
-
-“And how is it to be done?” asked Peter. He still suspected that Michael
-sought to escape him by a stratagem.
-
-“With this!” exclaimed Michael, and with his left hand he drew from the
-breast of his shirt a small slender object, one part red and one part
-white, and held it forth to Peter. “Take this, Gorekin—I put vengeance
-into your hand—if you will save Katerin from the Mongol.”
-
-Peter drew near and looked at what Michael held. It was a cased dagger—a
-leather case of red, surmounted by a hilt of yellowed old ivory and a
-steel hand guard at the base of the hilt. It was the weapon of Chinese
-assassins, an instrument made for but a single crime for it was cupped
-under the hilt guard in such a way that it sealed the very wound it
-made. Peter knew at once what it was and what it would do.
-
-“Give me the promise—and take the knife!” entreated Michael. “One
-Russian to another—to save Katerin from the Mongol!”
-
-“And what should I do with it?” asked Peter, seeking to draw out the old
-general.
-
-“What should you do? What else, but thrust it into my heart—and take my
-daughter away from the city? Come! Your word! Give it and strike
-quickly, or the Ataman will defeat you!”
-
-“You know well I could not escape, leaving you dead in my room,” jeered
-Peter. “What would I gain? If I strike now—here—my vengeance will be a
-short joy. It is so much simpler to turn you over to Shimilin.”
-
-“By the Holy Saints!” cried Michael in disgust. “Has the blood of a
-Russian turned to water so that he will not kill on his own honor’s
-account? Please! Take this blade!”
-
-Michael drew the hilt away from the leather case and exposed a polished
-shaft of steel, white and glittering in the light from the windows—a
-weapon of exquisite daintiness, with a round blade, slightly curved.
-
-“Look at it!” urged Michael. “It is cupped at the hilt, and if you do
-not draw it once you have struck, it will let away no blood. What more
-could you desire?”
-
-Peter regarded him with thoughtful eyes.
-
-Michael threw aside the leathern case, and pulled his shirt open at the
-neck, exposing his withered chest.
-
-“Say the promise—and strike quickly while I pray,” he begged. “See! It
-is a gentle weapon—so sharp and smooth that it will cause me little
-discomfort. And then you may say I did it, which will leave you without
-blame.”
-
-For an instant Peter thought Michael to be mad. But it was plain enough
-that the simplicity of the old man in his appeal for death was but his
-surrender to the inevitable.
-
-Peter knew the lucidity of mind which comes with the agony of spirit. He
-knew how Michael’s mind was working. The old man was in the grip of that
-clarity of mental vision which comes to the drowning man, or to the man
-who walks to execution. Peter had experienced the same phenomenon as he
-watched his father die twenty years before. The trivial things of every
-day, things never noticed before, had stood out with amazing
-distinctness and had registered in his brain a picture which had never
-vanished.
-
-Peter remembered now the tiny stone he had seen in the snow near his
-dying father; the Cossack’s boot which had been deeply scratched; the
-odor of raw fur from the sledges—even now the pungent scent was in his
-nostrils. The scene recurred to him now with overpowering intensity, and
-once more his old rage against Michael mounted. He reached forward and
-snatched the dagger from Michael’s fingers.
-
-“Good!” cried Michael. “You will promise—and strike!”
-
-Then the old general began to whisper a prayer, and stretched out his
-arms, like a great bat preparing for flight.
-
-Peter held the dagger in his hand, palm upward, and slightly extended
-before him, so that his elbow was a right angle with his upper arm, a
-pose somewhat similar to a man who holds a rapier in low carte ready to
-thrust forward the point. And he was close enough to Michael, so that if
-the arm was extended, the dagger would reach the old man.
-
-While the two of them were thus confronting each other, a low scream
-broke upon the room—a full-throated cry of sudden and complete horror.
-
-Peter turned to see Katerin in the door which led to the Kirsakoffs’
-rooms. Her hands were thrown up and pressed against her cheeks, her
-staring eyes fastened upon the dagger in Peter’s hands, her mouth still
-open with the horror of her cry, and her body transfixed into rigidity
-by the astounding situation in which she found her father and Peter. The
-catastrophe which she had planned so carefully to avert, had come now,
-she knew. The delicate structure she had devised had crashed down during
-her absence, and she saw that Peter and her father were at each other’s
-throats, or so it appeared to her in the first glance she had of the
-interior of the room.
-
-She had returned from making the final arrangements for their escape, in
-happy confidence that Peter would never discover their identity—and here
-was Peter about to slay her father. She saw an end to everything—the man
-she looked to for safety was now to destroy them.
-
-She screamed again. It was a scream of utter hopelessness, a scream of
-black despair.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
-
- A NEW TUNE ON AN OLD FIDDLE
-
-
-PETER stood staring at Katerin, still holding the tiny dagger in his
-hand. A puzzled look had come into his face, as if he could not
-understand why she should scream. The mental shock which he had
-sustained in his discovery that the old man was Michael Kirsakoff,
-seemed to have closed some compartment of Peter’s consciousness which
-included Katerin in her relationship to Michael. Now the full fact of
-her personality intruded itself upon him in relation to what had
-happened and Peter’s brain needed time to readjust itself to a state of
-affairs in which Katerin must be considered.
-
-He lifted his empty hand to his face and drew his fingers across his
-eyes in a motion that suggested brushing something away which interfered
-with his vision. He threw back his head and shook it slightly, as if to
-clear his brain of a vapor which befogged it. An infinite weariness
-gripped him, and his eyes regarded Katerin as if she were some specter
-which had formed out of thin air and now stood between him and his
-vengeance, possessed of a supernatural power to thwart him in his
-desires.
-
-The first of the three to move was Michael. He slumped down into a
-chair, and, lifting a warning hand to Katerin, said weakly, “He has
-found us out!”
-
-Her father’s voice seemed to release Katerin from the grip of her
-terror, and she began to move forward toward Peter, with slow, even
-steps, her eyes upon the dagger in Peter’s hand. There was no wariness
-about her, yet she had a quiet deliberation, as if she knew that it
-would be safer to make no sudden movement and so startle Peter into
-resistance.
-
-Katerin approached Peter, and reaching for the dagger, put her hand upon
-its blade and drew it out of his fingers with the same gentle motion
-that a mother might use in taking a dangerous object from the hand of a
-child. And Peter relinquished the weapon, not so much in surrender as in
-a state of mind which was willing to forego for the present anything or
-any action in exchange for time to consider a new phase of the
-situation.
-
-Katerin recognized the dagger, more by the quick sidewise glance she
-gave her father than by looking at the ivory hilt which stuck up between
-her thumb. She suspected that her father had drawn the weapon against
-Peter when he had discovered her father’s identity, and that Peter had
-disarmed him. But she knew that just what had happened during her
-absence from the room did not matter now—the danger lay before her. She
-mistrusted Peter’s temporary mood, and sought for an angle by which she
-might draw from him his attitude, or deflect him from any murderous
-intent. She knew that her father’s life hung in the balance—and her
-own—while Peter stood there silently staring at her, grim and forbidding
-and gathering impetus for whatever form his next impulse would take.
-
-“I trusted you!” she said quietly, and after she had uttered the words
-her mouth remained half open and her breath came gustily, like the
-breath of a runner who is spent at the end of an effort. She had been
-holding her breath since she had screamed in the doorway. She looked
-into his eyes.
-
-Peter’s lids flickered. His eyes were half closed, and still shot with
-red in the tiny blood-engorged veins at the sides. He looked at her
-dreamily, questioningly, and she thought with something of insolent
-defiance.
-
-Peter did not answer, but he moved his head slightly and looked past her
-at Michael, lips compressed, and the lids flickering.
-
-“Peter Petrovitch—I love my father.” Her voice was low, entreating,
-consoling, and carried an infinite desire that he understand her
-suffering.
-
-“This is the end for us!” piped up Michael shrilly. “To the dead it does
-not matter how death has come—we shall take the poison!”
-
-Michael lifted one hand before him, and with the other tore open a seam
-in the cuff of his shirt. Between his thumb and finger appeared a small
-white pellet.
-
-Katerin was upon him instantly and took away the pellet.
-
-“Not yet—by your own hand,” she said gently, and putting one arm about
-his neck, bent and kissed him. She turned to Peter once more, her
-courage stronger, a vague hope growing within her. But her eyes were
-filled with tears.
-
-“Would you kill my father? Would you do the work of Zorogoff, the
-Mongol? And see me surrendered to this half-blood Ataman? You! Peter
-Petrovitch—a Russian—a Russian from America!”
-
-She was not so much asking him these things, as she was asking herself
-if he could do them. She was not afraid—she was hurt. It all seemed
-incomprehensible to her—that any Russian could ally himself with
-Zorogoff, could commit a murder such as he had planned. She understood
-now that she had not been brave in her dealings with him, but that she
-had never allowed herself to believe he could be dangerous even though
-her dexterous manipulation of him were exposed.
-
-“Katerin Stephanovna!” said Peter, gazing at her with a trace of
-surprised awe in his tone and his look. “You—are Katerin Stephanovna!”
-
-She divined something of what was passing through his mind—he was
-thinking of her as a little girl, in the old days in Chita. A look of
-hope flashed across her face, though she took care that she did not
-betray to him that she saw an advantage.
-
-“I am Katerin Stephanovna,” she said, with a lift of her chin. She stood
-beside her father, one hand upon his shoulder to restrain him against
-any action, and yet in a posture which suggested defense.
-
-“The same little girl—who was in the sledge—that morning of the almanacs
-and——” went on Peter.
-
-Her mind leaped ahead of him as he paused—she knew now that he was
-mentally reconstructing the scene of his father’s death, and that from
-it would accrue a new burst of hate, a fresh impetus which might compel
-him to action against the restraint which her presence had interposed
-between him and her father. She left her father and moved toward Peter,
-seeking to distract his thoughts by drawing his attention to her.
-
-“Are you a true Russian?” she demanded passionately, as she approached
-him. “Are you a man of my race?”
-
-He seemed startled by the question, and once more his hand brushed his
-brow.
-
-“Russian?” he repeated simply, almost helplessly, as if it were
-something that it had never occurred to him before to question. He
-looked down at his uniform, and then lifted a khaki sleeve to study the
-brown band of tape at the cuff, the band of an officer’s sleeves.
-
-“Why, yes—I am Peter Petrovitch,” he said finally.
-
-He stepped to the window and looked out upon the Sofistkaya, and at the
-flattened gable-end of the little hut below which had been his and his
-father’s. Katerin drew close to him, and putting her hand softly upon
-his arm, looked into his face. Her own was drawn with suffering, and
-glistened with fresh tears.
-
-“Peter Petrovitch,” she whispered, “you look upon a new Russia—the one
-you knew has gone. The old prison on the hill is empty! Empty! Thank God
-for it! What more can you do?”
-
-He looked directly at her, and studied her face for a minute, his own
-face still reamed with the lines of the hatred which held his nerves
-taut.
-
-“You trusted me?” he asked.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“You deceived me,” he retorted, once more himself and completely
-readjusted to the meaning of her return.
-
-“Yes. To save my father. But I trusted you, too, else I could have
-avoided you. I would give my life to save my father, but it is too late
-now—I can neither save him nor myself. We live only so long as Zorogoff
-delays in coming.”
-
-“You speak to thwart me,” he said bitterly.
-
-She turned her palms upward in a gesture of submission and the slightest
-shrug of her shoulders, as if she had lost all interest in what the
-final result of what she said might be, and as if what he might do was a
-matter of little moment to her.
-
-“I speak to save your soul,” she said softly. “But we shall not quarrel
-about it—either what you are to decide about us, or about your soul.”
-
-“No?” he demanded, surprised that he should be nettled by her
-carelessness. “But you are pleading with me now.”
-
-She gave him a look of surprise and laughed harshly.
-
-“Pleading? For what? A few hours of life?”
-
-“You might both escape,” he suggested, “by the droshky which you have so
-cleverly planned. That is, if I should let you go.”
-
-“We could not get through without you. And what does it matter whether
-the Ataman Zorogoff kills my father in the morning, or you kill him now.
-No, Peter Petrovitch, I plead only to save you from blood upon your
-hands—and to save your own life—the life of an American officer.”
-
-At this, he thought of Wassili and smiled.
-
-“I mean Zorogoff,” she hastened to say. “He would not let you escape, if
-you gave him reason to destroy you—if you killed my father.”
-
-“You can argue for Zorogoff, who will destroy you both?” he asked,
-making no attempt to mask his incredulity.
-
-She lifted her shoulders again in that same almost imperceptible shrug,
-and looked casually out of the window.
-
-“You can help America help our people,” she said. “As for Zorogoff, I
-have death ready at my bidding for myself before he could take me to his
-palace—I can defeat the dog of a Mongol. But what do you gain by your
-vengeance upon my father? A few hours of his life! Is that the measure
-of the value of your vengeance?”
-
-“You think that I am too late—that I am already defeated in my purpose,”
-he said.
-
-“Yes. You are, Peter Petrovitch. Time has defeated you.”
-
-“No,” he insisted. “I have waited twenty years——”
-
-“And after twenty years, you come back to what? Michael Kirsakoff and
-his daughter hiding from his Cossacks! The old governor, worse off than
-peasants, with death lurking at the door! The general of the Czar’s
-army, in flight and hiding like one of his own escapes in the old days!
-What sweeter vengeance would you ask, Peter Petrovitch?”
-
-She spoke of her father and herself in the third person as if she were
-already separated from life and saw herself in the detachment of death,
-looking back upon her father’s and her own end.
-
-“True, times have changed,” said Peter grimly.
-
-“Yet you had no hand in it,” she said daringly, conscious that what she
-said might lift his wrath again. “The tree of hate has borne its own
-bitter fruit, and a gale of death sweeps the land——”
-
-“Ay, the wheel has turned!” cried Michael from his chair. “And the water
-has returned to the sea! My sins are my own, and judgment is before me.
-But I have offered my life to you, Peter Gorekin, for——”
-
-“Do not heed him!” said Katerin to Peter hastily, as she saw his eyes
-flame with sudden anger.
-
-“I have come all the way from America to hear him,” said Peter. “Am I to
-be cheated——”
-
-“America!” cried Katerin with fervor, clapping her hands together. “You,
-a Russian! Have come from America! And what are you to do with what
-America has given you?”
-
-“And what has it given me?” he demanded in surprise.
-
-“America has given you its trust—you, the poor son of an exile, by the
-coat you wear, are an officer—a gentleman! Ah, Peter Petrovitch, I had
-hoped that America had changed your heart as well as your coat—and taken
-something from you.”
-
-“And what should it take?”
-
-He scanned her face, seeking her purpose in holding his attention away
-from Michael. Her eyes held infinite sadness, and seemed to have lost
-any sense of terror. Her face had softened in final resignation, and he
-saw her for the first time in her own nature—the serene calmness which
-belongs to the Russian aristocrat, who is essentially a fatalist.
-
-“I have heard much of America,” she said dreamily, her eyes on the
-window but her vision not extending beyond the glass. “I hoped that you,
-who are of my own race, should learn a new lesson in America—that the
-spirit of America should take from you that love of destruction, that
-love for vengeance which is so strong in our people. Countless millions
-have been willing to die, and have died for Holy Russia. When is the
-Slav to learn that he must live for Holy Russia?”
-
-“Ah, those who have ruled Russia have just begun to learn how precious
-is life,” said Peter. “I learned the lesson out there in the Sofistkaya
-twenty years ago—it is you who are learning now—from me—and your
-Cossacks!”
-
-“Yes, I know Shimilin has been here,” she said wearily. “We have come to
-the end. I cannot ask you to save us, even if you could or would. That
-is done.”
-
-“You were willing—when you went down to arrange for the droshky. You
-could smile when you thought I was deceived.” His manner with her was
-easier now, and he seemed to be toying with the situation, testing her
-bravery.
-
-“Yes, it was all a woman has against a man—a smile for a shield. And you
-thought you were deceiving me—you would tell to Rimsky what you would
-not tell to Vashka the samovar girl.”
-
-“Vashka the samovar girl!” he repeated. “Vashka, telling me of
-Kirsakoff—a tall man in uniform, with black mustaches—a man in his full
-strength, stalwart—the cruel Governor who was behind the government of
-Zorogoff!”
-
-“You were secretly seeking my father. It was my duty to learn your
-secret before you learned ours—a fair game.”
-
-“True!” he admitted.
-
-“I would save you now from the Ataman.” She gave him a quick and eager
-look. He misread her intent, when he thought she was turning his mind
-into new channels.
-
-“Save me!” He was incredulous, and once more on the alert against some
-new plan to entrap him.
-
-“Yes, to save you, Peter Petrovitch! If Zorogoff knows that you had our
-story, when we are dead, he will fear your knowledge against him—and
-destroy you.”
-
-“You should think of my safety at this time! Why?”
-
-She bent her head and turned from him, but he took both her arms and
-swung her so that she had to look into his face. But she evaded his
-glance, though she did not resist his grasp.
-
-“I can tell you now because of the barrier between us,” she said.
-
-“Barrier?” He was frankly puzzled.
-
-“The blood of your father and your desire for vengeance stands between
-us—that is why I can tell you, Peter Petrovitch, that—I loved you——”
-
-His hands loosened upon her arms, and a flood of tears was upon
-her—silent tears, which shook her frame. And Peter seized her again and
-threw his arms about her with crushing ferocity.
-
-“Katerin! Katerin!” he cried, and the next instant released her as
-suddenly as he had swept her to him.
-
-“Oh, God!” he cried, throwing up his clenched fists in a gust of fury.
-“Have I been brought to my enemy, only to be tormented? What am I to do,
-my father, what——?”
-
-Michael had leaped from his chair with a cry, and faced Peter.
-
-“What? What?” demanded the old general. “There is love—love between you
-two—my daughter——!” He was too shaken to frame more words, and his voice
-wavered and broke and lost itself in the depths of his throat. He stood
-with his frail legs bending under him, his mouth wide open and his chin
-quivering, gulping for breath to give him energy to express the emotions
-which shook his body and rendered him powerless to express himself.
-
-Katerin flung herself at him to sustain and calm him, still fearful that
-Peter might attack under the slightest provocation—and she was in terror
-lest her father would give vent to an outburst of anger.
-
-“I shall speak!” he said gently to Katerin, and at once he was strong
-again, as if he had rallied the last bit of his energy for his new
-venture of resistance. Katerin let him go on toward Peter, who stood
-waiting to see what the old man might have to say.
-
-Michael sank to his knees before Peter, and held up his arms
-imploringly, while words began flowing from his agitated lips in a
-torrent.
-
-“Give heed to what I say,” he cried beseechingly. “You, too, are a
-Russian! Look upon me, who once was your Governor! Have compassion upon
-me who am now but a bit of dried mud cast upon the road by the wheel of
-Time! Have mercy——”
-
-“So you have learned what it is to ask for mercy, Michael
-Alexandrovitch! But you have yet to learn what it means to have mercy
-denied,” taunted Peter.
-
-“It is not mercy that I ask for myself, Gorekin,” went on Michael. “But
-you love my daughter—and I stand between you! Save her! Save her from
-the Mongol. And leave me, who am but some of the wreckage of Holy
-Russia, to suffer the wrath of this Zorogoff!”
-
-“We two shall die together, my father—your fate shall be mine,” said
-Katerin, “or I shall die by my own hand.”
-
-“You saw me in the old days, Gorekin,” went on Michael in disregard of
-Katerin. “Were those days worse than these? I obeyed my orders. I held
-my power by the word of the Czar, and I bore his sword. Now I have lived
-beyond my time. My day is done. I am not of these days. How does it
-matter the manner of my end? I shall soon be with your father—I,
-Kirsakoff the Governor, with Gorekin the bootmaker and the political—in
-the hills above us. Then let God judge my sins, as will yours be judged!
-Take my daughter—she is all I have to give for the debt that is due you,
-yes, overdue! I am old, but my eyes still see, and I see that you two
-love! Take my Katerin Stephanovna to America, Peter Petrovitch! Flee,
-both of you——”
-
-Katerin gave a warning cry and sprang toward the door leading into her
-room. She had caught the sound of running feet from the hall—feet in
-panic flight.
-
-“Hush!” she warned. “Some one comes!”
-
-Slipitsky, his black cap missing from the top of his head, and his eyes
-telling of his dread for something which pursued him, burst into the
-room. He clapped his hands to his temples in frantic despair in a
-gesture of hopelessness, too short of breath still from running to tell
-what he feared.
-
-“The Ataman!” he gasped. “God’s doom is upon us!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXV
-
- THE FINAL RECKONING
-
-
-THE door leading to the hall was flung open. Shimilin, the Cossack
-captain, stood on the threshold, and behind him was a group of his
-wild-looking soldiers, their heads hooded with wrappings of furs, and
-the points of their shining bayonets bristling about their shoulders.
-
-Shimilin did not advance, but remained in the doorway, coldly surveying
-those inside the room. He gave each of them a casual glance—Michael,
-Katerin, Peter, and even the shivering Slipitsky who stood cowering
-against the wall and whispering to himself through trembling lips and
-fingering his beard in nervous terror.
-
-“The Ataman Zorogoff!” announced Shimilin, and the soldiers behind him
-opened a narrow lane, as Shimilin stepped aside and into the room.
-
-The Ataman pushed through the guards, and strode into the room, looking
-straight at Peter, stern and challenging. The Mongol chieftain’s
-greatcoat was off, and his somewhat fantastic costume betrayed his
-childish love for personal display. Rising from the swarthy forehead was
-the towering white cap of long hairy wool, studded in the center of its
-flat front by a wide slab of crudely hammered gold half the size of a
-man’s hand, and in it set a diamond. At his left side hung a tremendous
-scimitar with a hilt-knot of gold fiber swinging from the guard. He wore
-a snuff-brown tunic with big brass buttons, blue riding breeches with
-double stripes of gold braid down the sides, and heavy black boots
-fitted with wheel-like spurs of silver. His shoulders were covered with
-broad straps of gold cloth. In his belt were a pair of pistols, the
-butts sticking up from the tops of uncovered holsters. An order of the
-Czar hung from the top of a tunic pocket, an odd link between the
-shattered empire and this usurper, who was crafty enough to display upon
-his person something which still had a meaning to many of his followers
-and reflected a trace of the vanished glory of the throne.
-
-A pair of gold devices gleamed upon the standing collar of the tunic of
-the Ataman, and his long black hair which fringed his ears, was all the
-blacker for the whiteness of the woolly cap.
-
-Zorogoff marched toward Peter, his boots pounding the floor
-belligerently, his small black eyes burning with a glittering menace.
-But he stopped when he could have put out his hand and touched
-Peter—stopped with an abrupt and final thump of the heel of his left
-boot as he planted it close beside the right boot.
-
-“There is the American officer,” said Shimilin, still standing by the
-door. “That is the man, sir, who sent the message.”
-
-Some of the soldiers edged into the room and grounded their rifles with
-jarring thuds, and the others outside in the hall pressed forward,
-thrusting their heads in.
-
-Peter bowed. “I am Lieutenant Gordon of the American army,” he said with
-cold formality, and returned the Ataman’s angry stare.
-
-“I have come to hear you oppose my will,” growled Zorogoff, a wicked
-twist to the corner of his lips, and venom in his eyes.
-
-“And what is your will, sir?” demanded Peter, putting enough deference
-into his words and manner to prevent Zorogoff from having any complaint
-on the ground of lack of civility or respect.
-
-“My officers report that you have been in my city several days. You come
-here as an American and ignore me and my government.”
-
-“I can assure you that you will not be ignored by the American army,
-sir,” said Peter.
-
-“Do you, representing the American army, dare tell my officers what they
-may not do?”
-
-“I requested your officer not to arrest General Kirsakoff and his
-daughter in my room. They came here to talk with me, and till I have
-finished talking with them, your officers must not interfere, sir.”
-
-Zorogoff’s breathing became audible to Peter, and he saw the flat
-nostrils of the Ataman twitch, and growing anger flashing in his eyes.
-But he did not take his eyes from Peter’s, nor was there the slightest
-change of expression in the Mongol’s immobile face after that lifting of
-the nostrils. Behind the Ataman stood Shimilin, smiling sneeringly over
-the shoulder of his chief, in an obvious attempt to break through
-Peter’s armor of stolid patience.
-
-“My officers must not interfere!” echoed the Ataman. “Is it that I take
-orders from the Americans?”
-
-“No, it is not an order, but——”
-
-“Good!” blustered the Ataman. “It is not an order!”
-
-“It is not an order,” went on Peter, in the same even tones. “But you
-must take care that you do not interfere with American officers. I tell
-you now, sir, that if these people are arrested in my room, I shall
-demand to know the reason for their arrest, that they are properly
-charged and tried, and given the right to a proper defense. Otherwise it
-may appear to the Russian people that an American officer has betrayed
-this old man and his daughter to you, and delivered them into your
-hands. I cannot prevent you from arresting them, from executing them if
-you wish, but I can reveal to the commander of the American army and to
-the people of America, the methods of your rule, sir.”
-
-“I rule here, and in my own way. I ask no help in ruling from the
-Americans,” grunted Zorogoff.
-
-“And the Americans are vitally interested in _how_ you rule, sir,”
-retorted Peter.
-
-“I rule as I please, with account to no one!” raged Zorogoff. “Captain
-Shimilin! Take the old man and the woman!”
-
-“Wait!” cried Peter, throwing up his hand to Shimilin. “You are invading
-my room! I claim the only right to give orders here!”
-
-“I take Russian subjects where I find them, and I do with them as I see
-fit!” thundered Zorogoff, his face seeming to swell with rage at Peter’s
-words.
-
-Captain Shimilin turned as if to obey the Ataman’s order, but he
-hesitated, the same sneering smile upon his lips. He appeared much
-amused at Peter’s defiance, and only too willing to let him further
-enrage the Ataman.
-
-“You speak of subjects of Russia, sir,” said Peter, addressing Zorogoff.
-“Am I to have the honor of reporting that the Ataman Zorogoff occupies
-the throne of all the Russias? And perhaps part of Mongolia?”
-
-Zorogoff made a grimace, and the flesh about his eyes crinkled tightly.
-Peter saw that he had struck a vital spot in the pride of Zorogoff, and
-had touched upon a matter which revealed some of Zorogoff’s power as a
-pretender—his strength came from his affinity with Asiatic people
-through his Asiatic blood. His leadership was racial, for he was
-exploiting his Mongol heritage and behind him were princes of ancient
-Tartary whispering against white ascendancy in their own land.
-
-“That is the Russian speaking,” said Zorogoff, “not the American! You
-turned your back on your own people, and come now in a strange coat to
-give orders with——”
-
-“I came to give you warning that America will not allow you to persecute
-and kill a helpless old man and a defenseless woman! To keep your hands
-off helpless——” Peter checked himself in sheer wonderment at his own
-words—he who had come to kill the helpless old father of Katerin,
-suddenly found himself defending the very man he had waited twenty years
-to slay! “America will not allow you to persecute and kill,” he repeated
-weakly, as if it were an idea which he had just discovered! And he had!
-For the first time in his life he had been able to express the
-Americanism which he had acquired in twenty years. It was something that
-had overgrown his spirit and had smothered all unknowingly to him the
-smoldering fires within him which impelled him finally to seek the blood
-vengeance of the Slav!
-
-“Take the Kirsakoffs away!” ordered Zorogoff, turning to Shimilin in the
-instant of what seemed to him Peter’s indecision. “No Russian, even in
-an American uniform, can oppose my will here, or——”
-
-A small object came hurtling through the air past Peter, and struck the
-Ataman in the face. It was a heavy pocket-knife, with the blades closed,
-and its end, capped with curved grooves, left three short gashes
-parallel in the cheek of Zorogoff, before it ricocheted against the wall
-and clattered to the floor.
-
-Michael sprang forward closely after the missile which he had hurled at
-the Ataman, and thrust forward his fists, past Peter.
-
-“God’s curse upon you!” screamed Michael, his voice rising to a shrill
-shriek. The Ataman stepped back, and put his hands to his face, and then
-looked at the tips of his fingers covered with blood. He regarded them
-thoughtfully for the fraction of a second, a look of surprise in his
-eyes.
-
-Shimilin spoke in restraint to his soldiers, for they had started
-forward into the room, their bayonets coming up aslant.
-
-Michael pushed forward and thrust his fists into the Ataman’s face, the
-body of the old general coming between Peter and Zorogoff, so that
-Peter’s view of Zorogoff was temporarily cut off. And in that time
-Zorogoff drew a pistol, and fired, the crash of its report booming out
-above the startled cries of Katerin and Slipitsky and the high-pitched
-shrilling of Michael at his enemy. Zorogoff’s bullet almost lifted
-Michael from his feet, being fired from the hip and upward into
-Michael’s breast. The old general swung half round and then staggered
-backward and fell with startling impact across the low writing table.
-
-Peter turned to look after Michael, just as Katerin came plunging toward
-the Ataman, who stood partly hidden in a cloud of gray smoke. Peter
-caught the flash of the naked blade—the blade of the small dagger which
-Michael had handed to Peter and which had been taken from Peter’s hand
-by Katerin.
-
-Peter clutched after her, fearful of the consequences of another attack
-upon Zorogoff. But she eluded his grasp, and lunged straight forward
-into the smoke about Zorogoff, to bury the dagger to its hilt in the
-Ataman’s neck at the base of the standing collar of his tunic.
-
-Zorogoff gave a gurgling cry and the heavy pistol fell from his hand. He
-threw up his arms and then clawed at his throat as his knees gave
-beneath him—and pitched forward at Peter’s feet to the ringing clatter
-of the great scimitar against the floor.
-
-Peter caught Katerin in his arms as she reeled back, and held her, his
-left hand flying to his own pistol to be ready against the expected
-attack from Shimilin and the soldiers. But Shimilin stood with his arm
-raised to hold the soldiers in check, his eyes upon the dying Ataman.
-
-Peter stood thus holding Katerin for a minute, as she cried
-incoherently. Slipitsky had run to Michael and had lifted the old
-general down into a chair and the moans of the stricken general came
-above the wailing of the Jew. Peter gave no heed to them but held his
-pistol with the barrel half downward and watched the soldiers pressed
-about the door, fearing that Shimilin would not prevent them from using
-their rifles. Peter knew well that there was no hope of coming out of a
-fight alive, but he knew that a weapon had a restraining effect if not
-aimed at any particular person.
-
-The Ataman lay face down upon the floor, his back hunching up
-spasmodically, as if he were struggling to get to his feet. At times he
-drew his knees up, and then his toes would slip back and he would fall
-upon the scimitar with a musical clang, his life gurgling out through
-his lips in a crimson stream. Presently he lay still, stretched out at
-full length, his spurs sticking up from the heels of his boots, the gold
-knot of the scimitar hilt at his left side, and the toe of the scabbard
-showing at the right, and his great white cap near his head on the
-floor.
-
-Shimilin spoke first. “Go and tell Bouran that the Ataman is dead,” he
-ordered one of his men. “But let no one else know. You others stand
-outside and let no one enter or have knowledge of what has happened
-here.”
-
-Katerin recovered herself and slipped from Peter’s arm. She looked round
-wildly, and then went to her father. He lay back against the chair, held
-upright by Slipitsky, though the old general’s body swayed from side to
-side as he was gripped by the tremors of his agony. His hands were
-clutched to his breast, holding the old peasant’s coat against his
-wound.
-
-Peter followed after Katerin, for he felt now that whatever Shimilin
-intended against them in retaliation for the killing of the Ataman would
-not come in the form of summary action. Katerin was on her knees before
-her father, speaking to him tenderly in her anguish for him, and at
-times sobbing out prayers.
-
-Michael opened his eyes and stared up at Peter, and let his hands fall
-upon Katerin’s head. A spasm of pain crossed his graying face, and he
-opened his mouth several times before he could speak.
-
-“Save her!” he gasped to Peter. “Now I—no longer stand between
-you—forgive—forgive——” His breath failed him, and his breast heaved as
-he was shook by a mighty convulsion.
-
-“Die in peace, Michael Kirsakoff,” said Peter. “I forgive.”
-
-Michael recovered himself for a brief space.
-
-“Good!” he whispered. “Every man has his wolf to kill, but it is
-better—I was but a millstone hanging from her neck—but now you can save
-her—you forgive——”
-
-“As I hope to be forgiven, I forgive,” said Peter, putting his face down
-close to Michael. “Do you hear me, Michael Alexandrovitch?”
-
-A smile came into Michael’s pain-tortured face—a smile of helpless
-assent, with which was mingled his joy at Peter’s words. But still he
-was troubled, and his head shook with his effort to express his further
-wishes.
-
-“Save her—from the Ataman!” he pleaded.
-
-“The Ataman is dead,” said Peter. “Look! There upon the floor!”
-
-Michael’s eyes roved as Peter stepped aside, and finally rested upon the
-prone body of Zorogoff.
-
-“A-h-h!” cried Michael. “The Ataman submits to the general of his
-Emperor! My Katerin, do not be sad for me—let the birds sing for both of
-you—I go happy—God’s blessing upon you both—Gorekin—I, who go to meet
-the dead, sal—ute——”
-
-Shimilin came and stood beside Peter. The Cossack captain drew off his
-cap, crossed himself, and uttered a few words of prayer. Michael’s
-dimming eyes saw him—and revealed a new terror.
-
-“Shimilin!” he gasped.
-
-“Have no fear of me, Michael Alexandrovitch,” said Shimilin. “You, nor
-your daughter need have no fear of me.”
-
-Peter glanced at Shimilin in surprise, for the Cossack captain was
-strangely gentle and sympathetic for a man who might be expected to take
-vengeance for the slaying of his chief.
-
-“I saved you both from Zorogoff, the time at the house,” said Shimilin.
-“It was I who prevented an execution because you would not give up your
-money. If you had trusted me and given me the money, I would have
-protected you, for I could have been Ataman then—as I am the Ataman
-now.”
-
-“You have succeeded Zorogoff?” asked Peter, in startled amazement.
-
-“I am the new Ataman,” repeated Shimilin. “We Cossacks had a plot, but
-all was not ready——”
-
-“God’s blessing—on—my little——”
-
-Michael’s head fell forward upon his chest, and he was dead.
-
-Katerin gave a wailing cry and put her hands tenderly upon the cheeks of
-her father. Peter and Shimilin turned away to leave her with her dead,
-while Slipitsky stole out into the other room to return with the icon
-from the corner in which stood Michael’s bed. The Jew put the sacred
-image into the wasted hands of him who had been Michael Alexandrovitch
-Kirsakoff, governor and general of the Czars in the Valley of Despair.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXVI
-
- FAREWELL
-
-
-THE morning was cold and foggy. Through the gray and frozen haze came
-the sounds of voices, the creaking of boots, the jangle of a distant
-bell from the horses of a troika—a ghostly world filled with ghostly
-shapes, hidden, yet full of unseen life. It was just such a morning as
-that one in the past when Peter Petrovitch waited for the Czar’s mail,
-and the column of unfortunates went clanking out into the wilderness to
-cut wood under a guard of Cossack soldiers.
-
-And he who had been Peter Petrovitch sat this morning by the window of
-his room in the Dauria Hotel and gazed out over the world of floating
-mists—Lieutenant Peter Gordon of the United States Army. In the hall,
-outside his door, were two tall Cossack soldiers with their rifles, on
-guard.
-
-A week had passed since the killing of the Ataman Zorogoff and the death
-of Kirsakoff. There had been a mutiny and an attempt by partisans of
-Zorogoff to kill Shimilin, the new Ataman. But the Cossacks were behind
-Shimilin, and the Mongols and other bandits who had stood with Zorogoff
-found their power broken, their intrigues betrayed and their leaders
-dead after firing squads. The survivors fled up and down the railroad.
-The régime of Zorogoff was at an end, with its looting, its terrorism,
-its mailed fist which demanded tribute in exchange for protection.
-
-The body of Zorogoff was not buried in Chita. The second day after his
-death, there appeared in the city, from down Urga way, a lama from Outer
-Mongolia with frosty whiskers, a pinnacle cap and a greatcoat of fine
-fur with sleeves which reached to the ground. He came with a retinue
-mounted on camels, and the leading man held aloft a small purple banner
-which caused many men to submit their necks when they saw it pass. For
-somewhere down in the mountains to the south in the khanates of the
-Kalkas tribes, there was a Prince, and when he spoke, it was an order—an
-order to be obeyed.
-
-And this lama of grave face and the tall cap summoned the Ataman
-Shimilin and bartered for the body of Zorogoff, who was half Mongol by
-blood, and that half of interest to the holy men of Forbidden Tibet.
-Shimilin, being wise in such things, knew how much he could ask to the
-ultimate jewel—and got it. And as the lama traded with Shimilin, there
-were hints of many more men from Mongolia lurking outside the city,
-hidden by the fog. A line of tiny fires gleamed at the edge of the
-plain, the Cossack outposts heard the grunting of baggage camels, and
-the murmur of countless voices drifted in through the fog.
-
-So Zorogoff’s body was slung up between the humps of a Bactrian camel,
-and the animal went swaying off through the mist, with Zorogoff’s head
-nodding at the ground of ancient Tartary in his last farewell.
-
-Of these things Peter knew little. He was still in danger, as was
-Katerin, for there were many in Chita who sought a way to avenge
-Zorogoff. There were few persons who knew Katerin had killed him, but
-such knowledge spreads easily in Asia, where there are so many ears
-listening, so many eyes watching, so many tongues whispering in strange
-tongues. So Shimilin kept a guard over the hotel, and in it, to see that
-Peter and Katerin were well protected.
-
-And Peter had seen little of Katerin during the week. He had attended
-the military funeral at daybreak which Shimilin had granted the old
-general. Katerin was there, hidden and hemmed in among the Cossacks who
-had served under her father. Few knew who was being buried in the
-cemetery on the hillside above the ruin of the old prison. So it was
-that General Kirsakoff became a part of the Valley of Despair which he
-had ruled.
-
-Katerin seemed to avoid Peter after the funeral. She kept to her own
-rooms, with Wassili, except the night they went with Shimilin and his
-soldiers to the old log house and retrieved the fortune in rubles which
-was hidden in the stove.
-
-Peter waited till the days had softened her sorrow. He knew she wanted
-to be alone with her thoughts, as he did with his own. He had no way of
-knowing how her thoughts would turn in relation to him, but one fact
-made him happy—Katerin was safe for the time being. He did not know that
-she possessed a fortune, and he supposed that she would want to remain
-in Chita. He did not want her to feel any debt toward him for having
-helped her against the Ataman Zorogoff, and he did not want to presume
-upon the fact that while she was under the stress of death she had
-admitted her love for him. There was a barrier between them he well
-knew—the barrier of the circumstance that Peter would never have been in
-Chita if he had not sought to kill her father; and behind that, the
-circumstance that Peter had held her father responsible for the killing
-of his own father, and his own imprisonment. Peter knew there was
-nothing which could wipe out those accursed facts, and that they would
-hover over all thoughts Katerin might have for him. He saw himself
-fettered by bonds of his own making—and in the gyves of his love for
-her.
-
-And how much he loved Katerin was just beginning to break upon him with
-the full fury of an emotion which had long been pent within his heart.
-He had loved Russia and his own kind; not the machinery of government
-which had been known as Russia, but the land, the very soil—hills,
-plains, and valleys. This love of his homeland was now centered upon
-Katerin, for she had become to him a personification of his own Russia,
-stricken and deserted by the rest of the world. And he was possessed of
-a passion to make amends for the vengeance which he nursed against her
-father. He longed to cherish and protect Katerin, to show her the land
-which had done so much for him, to take her by the hand and walk with
-her in the streets of the city where he learned that every man may work
-out his own destiny without the handicap of a system of government which
-measures what each man may do and not do according to the rank of his
-father—the land where the boy from a cabin may become a Lincoln!
-
-In his soul, Peter felt that he had betrayed America. Though he had not
-killed Kirsakoff, Peter suffered torment that Katerin knew how madly he
-had sought to kill. And he feared that she would blame America, and not
-him, for keeping alive that love for vengeance.
-
-He passed the days pacing the floor of his room, or sitting by the
-window. At times he was tempted to quit the city and never see Katerin
-again. But he could not do it. He preferred to take his punishment by
-having her tell him to go—at least, he could fill that place in his
-consciousness which had harbored hatred for Michael Kirsakoff with the
-sorrow that Kirsakoff’s daughter loved him yet would not face life with
-him. He felt that it would all be easier to bear if he carried with him
-a memory of his parting from her which would always lash him for the
-dreadful plan which he had devised and all but carried out.
-
-As he sat there by the window this morning, there came a knock at the
-door. He admitted a messenger from Ataman Shimilin—a tall young Cossack
-with boyish face and filled with pride at the thought that once more his
-own people controlled the city. He saluted and clicked his polished
-steel spurs quite as if he were in the presence of royalty.
-
-“From the Ataman!” he announced, and bowed as he handed a letter to
-Peter. It read:
-
- I send two officers of my staff to-day to Vladivostok to make
- report to the American commander that I, Shimilin, am now
- Ataman, and that my government shall be just. I have taken the
- private car of Zorogoff, and knowing that you intend to return
- to Vladivostok soon, perhaps you would like to travel by this
- wagon. It is advisable to go aboard the car, which now stands in
- the station yards, while the fog still holds, and be picked up
- by the next train. If you have any friends to go with you, the
- station commandant is at your orders. The Irkutsk train for
- Vladivostok will be here within an hour, and it will pick up one
- of my armored cars for safety. Perhaps you will be able to
- report to your superiors that all Cossacks are not robbers and
- that we desire only the salvation of our Russia. I salute you
- and America.
-
- SHIMILIN, Ataman.
-
-Peter stepped to the writing table, picked up a pen, and wrote on a slip
-of paper:
-
- I shall go at once. Thank you for the kindness. I hope to see
- the Ataman before I depart from his city.
-
- PETER GORDON, Lieutenant.
-
-The messenger bowed, clicked, and left the room, and Peter gathered his
-blankets and made them into a roll. Then he paused a minute,
-thoughtfully—and finally knocked upon the door leading to Katerin’s
-rooms.
-
-The old serving woman who had been at the log house opened the door just
-enough to peep through.
-
-“Tell your mistress that the American officer wishes to say good-by,
-please,” said Peter, and the door closed at once.
-
-Peter was stricken with chagrin and disappointment. He thought that
-Katerin might not see him and had given her orders to that effect to her
-servant. He had expected that the door would open for him—and it had
-closed upon his request to see Katerin. He stood for a moment, wondering
-if he should not go down to Slipitsky at once, pay his bill, and go on
-to the car which stood in the station yard.
-
-Then the door opened, and Katerin herself stood before him—a Katerin
-that he had never seen. She wore now, instead of the poor garments in
-which he had seen her as a samovar girl, the beautiful purple velvet
-gown which reached to her slippers. Her hair was high upon her head,
-dressed in the style of a Russian lady so that it suggested a
-crown—lifted from the front and turned back smoothly against the mass,
-and then drawn down tightly across the ears. Tall, slender, and stately
-she was now, such a woman as might be a princess of the blood. Hanging
-from her neck was a gorgeous string of pearls, and from her fingers
-gleamed jeweled rings. And Peter’s heart sank as his eyes rested upon
-her, for once again he realized with a pang that, after all, he was but
-Peter Petrovitch, son of a poor exile, and Katerin Stephanovna was of
-the Russian nobility. He saw a new barrier between them, and one which
-he had forgotten in his recent thoughts of her.
-
-The joy which had come into his face at first glance at her was
-dissipated by his realization that this was the end for them, and he
-bowed a most formal bow.
-
-She held out her hand to him, and he took it, like a man in a trance,
-but conscious of the jewels on her fingers.
-
-“You are going away?” she said, with concern in her eyes—a concern which
-he knew to be politeness. She was still pale, he thought, and wistfully
-sad for her father.
-
-“Yes,” he said. “I am to go—Shimilin sends me word that a private car is
-in the yards and——” He let his eyes wander to the figure of the serving
-woman, who was lurking behind the curtains which led to the far room. He
-wondered what he could say for she seemed so comfortable now with her
-servants—the old woman and Wassili—and so self-sufficient. How could she
-be otherwise than rich, he thought, with such clothes and such jewels?
-He wished that she had kept her clothes as a samovar girl, and then he
-might have found it possible to give utterance to some of the words
-which pressed him to be said. He would have found it much easier to
-blurt out what was in his heart if she had not been so grand and
-disconcerting in that velvet gown. He sensed a hurt within himself that
-she had done this—could it be that she had dressed herself deliberately
-for their meeting so that he should find it easy to keep his place?
-
-“You have called to say good-by,” she said, and drew aside slightly.
-“Then you must come in—and we shall have a glass of tea.” Then, as if
-she divined what was in his mind about her changed appearance, she
-added, “We Kirsakoffs never mourn our dead with garments—an old custom
-of our warrior clan—instead, we wear our best, out of respect for those
-who have gone—and these poor things are the best I have. So please do
-not think it strange. Wassili! Fire the samovar and fetch fresh water
-for a guest of the house!”
-
-“But are you safe?” burst out Peter. “You are in danger enough from
-those who may know you killed the Ataman, without revealing your jewels
-and your good clothes! There may be a rising against Shimilin at any
-time—the Bolsheviki—the bandits from Mongolia! It is too bad that you
-have put on these clothes—for your own safety!”
-
-“You are afraid I shall be killed because I killed Zorogoff?” she asked,
-with the ghost of a smile on her lips.
-
-“Yes, I am afraid,” he went on earnestly. “You should have remained in
-the dress of a samovar girl——”
-
-“Oh, but I have done playing at being a samovar girl,” she laughed. “If
-I am to die, I shall die as a Kirsakoff, and not as a servant. So you
-are leaving the city soon?”
-
-“I am leaving at once. Shimilin has sent me word that a private car is
-in the yards—and I cannot disregard such a hint, for he may mean it as a
-command. And—why don’t you go too?”
-
-“I? Go? Where?” she seemed amazed at the idea.
-
-“To Vladivostok. You would be safe there, and safe on the train. Take
-this chance to escape from the city, while Shimilin has control.”
-
-She sat down and gestured him to a chair before her.
-
-“I, too, have heard from Shimilin—about the car. But I shall not go.”
-
-Peter’s face showed his disappointment. He had hoped that she might be
-induced to leave Chita, and by getting away from the scene of her
-father’s death and her old home, her memory of why Peter had gone to the
-city would be dimmed. Now he saw that she was determined to let him go
-his way—she wanted to see him no more, she wanted to forget him. And
-yet, he remembered, she had told him she loved him! He wondered if it
-were possible that she had admitted a love only because she wanted to
-save her father. Was that what she had meant when she said she had done
-with playing at being a samovar girl? That she had done with duplicity
-because there was no further necessity for duping him?
-
-“It is a pity that you will not go,” he said wearily. He regretted that
-he had asked to see her at all, for he suspected that she was inclined
-to laugh at him now because as a samovar girl she had been able to
-deceive him so thoroughly.
-
-“At least, I shall not go now,” she said. “Perhaps later—for there will
-be nothing to keep me here now.”
-
-“Then come!” he pleaded, leaning forward, and holding out his hand. “I
-know what there is between us—Katerin. I know now how wrong I was about
-your father—I can claim no credit for having helped you the little I
-did—I want no credit—but I was blind with hate for the old régime. Now I
-wish to help you——”
-
-He stopped and shook his head, seeing that he was not giving her help to
-get away from the city—Shimilin had already done that if he had offered
-her the use of the private car. It struck him now that perhaps her
-suggestion that she might leave later had something to do with his going
-now—she did not want to travel with him.
-
-She sat tapping her fingers on the arm of the chair and looking at the
-rings on her hand, reflectively, yet with something that told she had
-already made up her mind as to what she should do and that they were
-talking to no purpose.
-
-“I tell you,” he began again. “I shall not go with the car, if you will
-consent to leave for Vladivostok. If you prefer that I should not——”
-
-“No, you must not stay here,” she said.
-
-“But I shall stay if you do not go!” he cried.
-
-She gave him a startled look. “Stay? Why, you cannot stay here always. I
-thought you came to say good-by.”
-
-He stood up. “If you wish it, it shall be good-by,” he said. “But I am
-not going away.”
-
-“You must not be absurd,” she said, and stood up also, a faint trace of
-color in her cheeks. “Why should you remain here?”
-
-“Because I care for your safety, that’s why! I promised your father that
-I would protect you and——”
-
-She tossed her head back, and regarded him through half-closed lids.
-
-“You may consider yourself released from that promise,” she said. “You
-owe no debt—do not trouble yourself on that score, because——”
-
-“Katerin!” he cried, holding out his hands to her imploringly. “You know
-what I mean—you know that your father desired your safety! Then let us
-forget my promise, but——”
-
-“You do not make your promises to keep them, is that it? Then you are
-not bound by anything, Peter——” She shrugged her shoulders and turned
-her face from him.
-
-“Go on!” he commanded. “You were going to say ‘Peter Petrovitch.’ Why
-have you turned against me? Katerin, I love you, and even if you will
-let what has happened stand between us, I want to see that you escape——”
-
-“You but want to keep your promise to my father, and you think only of
-what he may have desired about me!” she retorted with a show of anger,
-her face aflame. “You have no debt to a Kirsakoff, living or dead, in
-any way! Do I owe you anything? Perhaps I do, but I can pay you! What
-price, I ask? What price, Peter Petrovitch Gorekin?”
-
-He stood dumfounded and gazed at her. She turned abruptly, and opened
-the top of a trunk which he had not seen before.
-
-“What price?” she demanded.
-
-“Price! Price!” he gasped. “Why, you owe me nothing! Please do not
-insult me—I wished to see you again—I wished to say good-by—please,
-mistress——” the word escaped him,—the word of deference to the upper
-class, the word of recognition that she was impossibly above him in the
-Russian social caste.
-
-She let the top of the trunk fall, and putting her hands to her face,
-burst into tears. Just then Wassili stuck his head through the green
-curtains and looked in, startled and angry. Peter was about to reassure
-the _moujik_ that no harm threatened his mistress, but before Peter
-could speak, Wassili burst through the curtains and he held in his hand
-a great knife. The Slavic battle rage took possession of Peter at sight
-of the knife, and all the restraints imposed upon him by civilized life
-left him in one mad instant. He knew but one thing—he loved Katerin, and
-Wassili was going to stand in the way. The blade in the _moujik’s_ hand
-swept away all the fine perplexities which had harassed Peter—these
-points of honor which he saw as a barrier between him and Katerin. He
-snapped out his pistol and pointed it at Wassili.
-
-“Get back through that curtain!” he commanded, and stepped forward
-toward Wassili. The _moujik_ pressed back, but did not leave the room.
-
-“What’s this?” cried Katerin, turning upon Peter angrily.
-
-He made no reply, but shifting his pistol into his left hand, he kept
-Wassili covered with the weapon. Then he paused for an instant. Before
-Katerin or Wassili understood his intent, Peter seized her with his
-right arm and lifted her against his shoulder. With his left elbow under
-his head, he kept the muzzle of the pistol toward Wassili, and backed
-out of the room through the open door into his own room.
-
-Peter put Katerin upon her feet, just as Wassili moved after him—and
-Peter beckoned the _moujik_ on.
-
-“And what may this be about?” demanded Katerin, staring at Peter as
-though she suspected that he was bereft of his senses.
-
-“A marriage by abduction—the old folk custom of our people,” declared
-Peter grimly. “Wassili! You bear witness! I have taken Katerin
-Stephanovna Kirsakoff from her house to mine—and there must be a
-witness. She is now my wife—and she must do as I say. So put away the
-knife—you cannot take from me the woman I have stolen!”
-
-Katerin burst out in laughter.
-
-“You Peter Petrovitch!” she exclaimed. “I thought you were an
-American—and yet you are Russian—stealing a wife by the old custom! Do
-you think I am to take this seriously?”
-
-“You will find it is serious—till you are safe in Vladivostok,” retorted
-Peter. “Then—well, once you are safe, you may do as you wish. But I am
-master till then.”
-
-She laughed again.
-
-“So you are American after all—in Vladivostok I may do as I wish! How
-can you call yourself Russian? Go away, Wassili—it is but a joke!”
-
-Wassili, not quite sure it was such a joke, put away his knife, and went
-back to the far room. Katerin shut the door, and then turned to Peter,
-who stood looking at her, resenting a trifle her taking it as a joke at
-all.
-
-“We shall go aboard the car at once,” he said. “Get ready your baggage,
-please.”
-
-“Ah, he is Russian again!” laughed Katerin.
-
-“What does it matter if I am Russian or not?” said Peter. “When I try to
-consider your feelings, you insult——”
-
-“No, no, Peter,” she begged, and went to him and put her hands gently on
-his sleeves, looking up into his face. “You did not understand—you know
-nothing of a woman’s heart—I told you once that I loved you——”
-
-“Yes!” cried Peter. “You told me that, and then you insist upon staying
-here when I want to protect you—when you know there is a chance to go——”
-
-“Growl—growl like a Russian bear, Peter! But did you not come to say
-good-by?”
-
-“To take you with me if I could.” He seized her hands. “O, Katerin,
-think this over and see what I want you to see—when you get to
-Vladivostok——”
-
-“And what when I get to Vladivostok? What am I to do when I get to
-Vladivostok?”
-
-“Well, you will know what you want to do, then?”
-
-“Do about what?”
-
-“I want you to marry me—to go to America—to——”
-
-She stamped her foot.
-
-“You are a hopeless American!” she cried. “I like you better as a
-Russian, Peter Petrovitch!” She dropped her head, and as he gave a cry
-of joy, she looked up, her face radiant with joy and flushed with color.
-
-“Katerin! You will marry me?”
-
-“How can I help myself—I have been stolen by the old law, and now——”
-
-“Yes, what?”
-
-“I know that you want me—not for a promise—but for myself—Peter——”
-
-“O God!” he cried, “I know now I am forgiven!” and he crushed her to
-him.
-
-Presently there came a knocking at the door of Katerin’s room, and the
-old serving woman came when Katerin called to her to enter.
-
-“Tell Wassili to pack my baggage,” said Katerin. “We are all going to
-Vladivostok—at once.”
-
-“But let Wassili first go for a priest,” said Peter. “And do not cry, my
-love—we shall both say farewell forever to the Valley of Despair, and
-our journey’s end shall be America—our America.”
-
-“America!” she whispered, looking through the window as if her eyes saw
-behind the fog-banks a strange land. “What a wonderful country America
-must be!”
-
-“You cannot know till you have seen,” said Peter.
-
-“I know now,” she replied, smiling through her tears, “I know now, Peter
-Petrovitch.”
-
-“How can you know, my love?”
-
-“Because—I know a Russian who became an American—the son of a
-bootmaker—a bootmaker who was an unfortunate—a poor boy——”
-
-“Hush, hush!” he said, and put his arms about her again, seeing where
-her thoughts were straying—to the fresh brown mound on the bleak
-hillside by the ruin of the old prison. “They are together, your father
-and mine. Because of that, we shall not forget our Holy Russia. Would
-not they both be happy—are they not both happy, knowing what they must
-know now, and seeing what the dead must see? We living think we would do
-one thing, but is it not that the dead guide us, knowing better than we
-what is before us and what we shall do before we have finished? Truly,
-as the wise say, from evil good—my love was here but I did not know
-it—and now I have found her.”
-
-And as the fog shrouded them from the street, there was nothing to
-prevent him from kissing her once more.
-
-
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- APPLETON’S RECENT FICTION
-
-
-=THE VAGRANT DUKE=
-
-By GEORGE GIBBS
-
-The author of “The Splendid Outcast” has here written another smashing
-adventure novel. A Russian Duke, fleeing the Bolsheviki, must work his
-way in America. Mystery and romance are what he finds as superintendent
-of a queer old multi-millionaire’s estate.
-
-
-=THE INNOCENT ADVENTURESS=
-
-By MARY HASTINGS BRADLEY
-
-A family of the Italian nobility are hard up and as a solution send
-their youngest daughter to search for a husband, wealthy, in America.
-She is a brave and attractive little thing, and the author of “The
-Fortieth Door” has known how to make her adventures truly exciting.
-
-
-=THE RAPIDS=
-
-By ALAN SULLIVAN
-
-A novel of the vigorous north, which tells the story of a man who seeks
-to transform a simple village into a mighty city. In the voice of the
-rapids he hears the urging towards his ambition and the great love which
-comes to him.
-
-
-=THE COUNSEL OF THE UNGODLY=
-
-By CHARLES BRACKETT
-
-A diverting comedy of society life. Peter Van Hoeven, an old society man
-who finds himself penniless, takes a position as butler to a very
-new-rich lady. Unusual and dramatic situations ensue.
-
-
-=THE SLEUTH OF ST. JAMES’S SQUARE=
-
-By MELVILLE DAVISSON POST
-
-This master of mystery detective stories has found a new method of
-constructing them that is a big contribution to detective fiction. These
-tales carry one to all parts of the world, to strange crimes and
-mysteries.
-
-
-=THE UNSEEN EAR=
-
-By NATALIE SUMNER LINCOLN
-
-The author of “The Red Seal” and other great successes has never built
-up a more baffling mystery than this. A man is murdered in a Washington
-home; in the room sits a girl who is deaf and does not hear what passes.
-Suspicion points in all directions before the final surprising climax.
-
-
-=PENGARD AWAKE=
-
-By RALPH STRAUS
-
-The most thrilling depiction since “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” of the
-struggle in a man’s soul between the powers of good and evil. Actual
-psychological fact is the basis of this remarkable story of the love of
-two men, one malignant, the other sweet and gentle, for the same woman.
-
-
-=JOHN SENESCHAL’S MARGARET=
-
-By AGNES and EGERTON CASTLE
-
-John Tempest, imprisoned in Turkey, loses all memory of his true
-identity. Returning to England he is believed to be John Seneschal, and
-is welcomed by the true John Seneschal’s parents and even by his
-sweetheart Margaret.
-
-
-=THE AGE OF INNOCENCE=
-
-By EDITH WHARTON
-
-This great popular success marks the pinnacle of Mrs. Wharton’s art thus
-far. It tells an absorbing story of New York Society in its days of
-innocence, about 1880. “One of the best novels of the twentieth
-century”, says William Lyon Phelps in the _New York Times_.
-
-
-=MISS LULU BETT=
-
-By ZONA GALE
-
-A splendid novel that portrays the sudden flowering of happiness in the
-life of the family drudge, Miss Lulu Bett. Every word of the book counts
-and the characters, from Grandma Bett to the child Monona, are
-unsurpassed for living qualities.
-
-
-=CHILDREN IN THE MIST=
-
-By GEORGE MADDEN MARTIN
-
-Stories that depict the virtues, the limitations, the sweetness and the
-humor of the negro, from the emancipation down to the present day. There
-is a true insight into the nature of this people, who after fifty-six
-years of freedom, still see as in a glass, darkly.
-
-
-=LUCINDA=
-
-By ANTHONY HOPE
-
-This is the romance of a missing bride, who disappears on her wedding
-day, leaving the world baffled and her fiancée ready to pursue her to
-the ends of the earth. All of Anthony Hope’s charming ability and
-knowledge of how to construct a truly readable story are found in
-“Lucinda”.
-
-=THE PORTYGEE=
-
-By JOSEPH C. LINCOLN
-
-Rich humor and insight into human nature are in this entertaining novel
-by Joseph C. Lincoln. Everyone enjoys its story of a romantic young
-fellow who goes to live down East with his grandfather, a typical old
-salt. This is a best-seller, by the author of “Shavings”.
-
-
-=THE ADVENTUROUS LADY=
-
-By J. C. SNAITH
-
-“Witty, amusing, as light and sparkling as sun-flecked foam”—_New York
-Times_. The daughter of an English peer changes places with a governess,
-when traveling to the same destination, where each is unknown. The
-results are highly entertaining.
-
-
-=NANCY GOES TO TOWN=
-
-By FRANCES R. STERRETT
-
-Nancy Mary Yates goes to train as a nurse in a hospital. She says she is
-hunting for a “Prince Moneybags”. The reader eagerly follows her career,
-made zestful by her youth and brave spirit. Nancy finds some unique
-characters in her path.
-
-
-=THE PARTS MEN PLAY=
-
-By A. BEVERLEY BAXTER
-
-A vital picture of a young American who finds himself among England’s
-parasite, artistic social set during days of international strife. The
-psychology of nations is interestingly shown, and the unfolding of
-character under stress finely rendered.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that:
- was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_);
- was in bold by is enclosed by “equal” signs (=bold=).
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Samovar Girl, by Frederick F. Moore</p>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Samovar Girl</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Frederick F. Moore</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 18, 2022 [eBook #67865]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
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-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SAMOVAR GIRL ***</div>
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-<div class='ic001'>
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-<p class='c001'>═════════════════════</p>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c002'>THE SAMOVAR GIRL<br />FREDERICK MOORE</h1>
-</div>
-<p class='c003'>═════════════════════</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<p class='c005'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='c006'>THE SAMOVAR GIRL</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>BY</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c007'>FREDERICK MOORE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>“SAILOR GIRL,” “SIBERIA TO-DAY,” “THE DEVIL’S ADMIRAL,”</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>“ISLE O’ DREAMS,” ETC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/publogo.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c009'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='c011'>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</span></div>
- <div>NEW YORK&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;::&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1921&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;::&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c009'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c012' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY</div>
- <div><span class='c011'>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</span></div>
- <div class='c013'>Copyright, 1921, by Frederick Moore</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div>TO</div>
- <div><span class='c014'>ROBERT H. DAVIS</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c010' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='16%' />
-<col width='71%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><span class='xsmall'>CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td class='c017'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c018'><span class='xsmall'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Prologue: The Valley of Despair</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>I.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Twenty Years After</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_17'>17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>II.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Intelligence Officer</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_32'>32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>III.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Firing Squad</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_44'>44</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Place of the Vow</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_60'>60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>V.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Ataman’s Decision</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_69'>69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Prison on the Hill</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_79'>79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Old Rimsky Thinks</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Peter Lays His Plans</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Ilya Uses His Wits</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_111'>111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>X.</td>
- <td class='c017'>“<span class='sc'>An American Has Come!</span>”</td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_121'>121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Flight</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_131'>131</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Hidden Again</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Katerin Plans to Meet the American</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_151'>151</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Samovar Girl</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_160'>160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XV.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Trap Shuts</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_174'>174</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Katerin’s Stratagem</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_182'>182</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XVII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Setting the Snare</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_195'>195</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XVIII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Trail Grows Hot</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_206'>206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XIX.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Face to Face</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_217'>217</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XX.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Blow</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_232'>232</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XXI.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Cat’s Paw Has Claws</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_244'>244</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XXII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Officer from the Ataman</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_254'>254</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XXIII.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>A Life for a Life</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_265'>265</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XXIV.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>A New Tune on an Old Fiddle</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_274'>274</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XXV.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>The Final Reckoning</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_285'>285</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>XXVI.</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='sc'>Farewell</span></td>
- <td class='c018'><a href='#Page_294'>294</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span><span class='c019'>THE SAMOVAR GIRL</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>PROLOGUE<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE VALLEY OF DESPAIR</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c021'><i>Clank! Clank! Clank!</i></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was the music of chains. A column of unfortunates
-from the big prison on the hill swung down the road and
-turned into the wide street between the log houses. They
-were on their way out into the <i>taiga</i> to cut wood and
-hew timbers under a guard of Cossacks. The chains
-hanging from the wrists of the convicts to their ankles,
-crossed in front of them but hidden under the <i>khalats</i>—long
-gray capes worn by exiles—made the doleful music
-as the long line of marchers, gray as the cold fog of the
-morning, moved up the Czar’s road and was lost in the
-frozen mists that masked the edge of the wilderness.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The sun was up, but it was only a patch of weak yellow
-light against the dull sky which roofed the Valley of
-Despair. Lowering wisps of fog still shrouded the hills
-about the exile settlement—fog that had lifted from
-the frozen and desolate reaches of the Ingoda, from the
-smoking huts of the tiny plain, from the snow-streaked
-slopes on which squatted like a hideous monster the great
-low, rambling prison of yellow-painted logs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The morning was bitter cold. The streets were almost
-deserted. The windows of the log buildings still glowed
-with the dim yellow light of guttering candles behind the
-frost-bound panes. White smoke from the chimneys of
-the houses and huts rose straight up into the air, for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>there was not even the ghost of a breeze. And the cold
-still air carried sounds with startling clearness—the tolling
-of a bell at lazy intervals, the barking of a dog, the
-distant cry of a wolf, and now the ringing clatter of axes
-being driven into frost-laden wood by the invisible exiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shadows appeared at the windows frequently. For the
-Czar’s mail was due this morning from Irkutsk, and the
-house-huddled people were waiting for the first tinkle of
-the sledge-bells. The mail! The mail from Moscow,
-from Petersburg, from Tambov, from the Valley of the
-Beloved Volga, so many heartbreaking versts away! The
-mail would bring life and death, joy and sorrow, sentence
-and pardon to Chita, in the Valley of Despair. The mail
-would bring the Czar’s word, the heaven-sent mercy, or the
-curt condemnation. The mail, by the relays of sledges,
-was the reach of the scepter from the throne of majesty to
-the Valley of Despair in Siberia.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>None listened more eagerly for the first jingle of the
-mail-sledges that morning than Peter, son of Peter, in
-the tiny hut of Gorekin the bootmaker, an exile but by
-the gracious compassion of the governor a member of the
-“free gang.” Peter, son of Peter, was only ten years old.
-He worked with his father in the boxlike hut on the Sofistkaya,
-helping to make boots for the officers of the Czar
-and the Cossacks.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s blue eyes were set deeply in his head, for he
-had never had enough to eat—not even enough sticky
-black bread, or enough <i>eèkrah</i> which is the raw, red eggs
-of the big salmon. Peter was a tall boy for his age, but
-not very sturdy. His yellow hair was clipped close to
-his scalp, and his little round head was bent low while
-his hammer <i>tap-tapped</i> at the wooden pegs in the boot
-soles by the candlelight.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s father was a political. He had been sent to
-Siberia for thinking—thinking about government, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>inducing others to think. Which was foolish, for the
-Czar and his ministers settled all affairs of government
-for the good of the people. Yet God was good, for Peter’s
-father had been admitted to the free gang because he
-could make boots, and so did not have to stay in the big
-prison on the hill. And Michael Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff,
-Excellence, and Czar’s Governor, allowed Peter and
-his father to have a tiny hut to themselves—a place of
-one room, one window, a fire-pit with a stone chimney,
-and shelves against the log wall on which to sleep. They
-even had a battered brass samovar in which to boil water
-for their tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s father was not old, though his back was bent
-by years in chains before Peter was born, and then by
-more years of stooping over a stitching-frame sewing
-boots. “Gorekin the old bootmaker,” everybody called
-him, partly because his face was covered with a long and
-heavy beard, and partly because his eyes had such an old
-look in them—eyes which looked past everybody far into
-the future and seemed to be waiting for some strange
-vision to appear.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was proud of his father, and loved him beyond
-expression. For his father knew everything—even
-knew how many versts it was to Moscow, information
-which many people gave money to know, and knowing,
-kept the secret for themselves. There are many things in
-an exile colony which it is forbidden to know, so whisper
-talk is bought and sold, some dealing in secrets of a certain
-kind, and some selling coming news about revolutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s little round head was always being puzzled, and
-his blue eyes were always full of questions. He loved the
-Czar, just as everybody else loved the Czar—only when
-there were no soldiers listening, or no secret police of the
-Third Division, men would swear bitter oaths in whispers
-against majesty. It was not easy to tell who might be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>secret police, for your friend to-day, talking against the
-government of the Czar, might to-morrow prove to be one
-of the Third Division, and then doors of the big prison on
-the hill would open for you, and dawn would meet you
-with an execution squad.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter could not remember his mother. She had followed
-his father into exile, and Peter had been born in
-The Street of the Dames. His mother had died that day.
-Peter’s father said now it was just as well, for life was
-really death in the Valley of Despair. And though
-Peter was only ten, he already knew something of the bitterness
-of life. Had he not seen a man with a back all
-raw from whipping, who had escaped from the prison?
-Yes, he had come crawling to the bootmaker’s hut, too
-weak to go on into the wilderness with the others who
-had escaped, and could only lie all night close to the
-fire-pit, waiting for the soldiers to come in the morning
-and take him away.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But there were pleasant things in life for Peter. There
-were the ladies who came from The Street of the Dames.
-They spoke Czar’s Russian and were grand ladies. They
-came to have boots mended, but they stayed long and whispered
-much with Peter’s father, winking and nodding their
-heads about nothing at all. Sometimes they brought little
-cakes with spices in them, or a handful of dry tea, or
-a bit of sugar from China, or sweetened ginger-root.
-And sometimes they gave Peter as much as a ruble. Their
-husbands were up in the big prison on the hill, and the
-grand ladies had followed to the Valley of Despair and
-had built for themselves with their own hands a whole
-street of log houses.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And for some reason which Peter could never fathom,
-after these ladies from The Street of the Dames came to
-have their shoes mended, Peter’s father always remembered
-that he had to go up to the prison with a pair of new
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>boots for an officer, or to measure feet for a new pair,
-or to get some leather—always an errand. And the
-ladies would wait till he returned, when they cried quietly
-into their handkerchiefs, and after much whispering went
-away to their log houses.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But the greatest puzzle of all to Peter was that his
-father had been exiled for reading books, yet his father
-now read the Bible, which was a book, and told all about
-God and the Czar. But, of course, the Bible was always
-hidden behind the pile of wood close to the fire-pit.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Peter’s father read the almanacs which came every
-year from Moscow, and everybody knows an almanac is
-nothing more nor less than a book. Everybody had a new
-almanac every year, and wonderful books they were too,
-for they told about the sun, moon, and stars, the holy days
-of Holy Russia, the goodness and greatness of the Czar,
-the names and name days of grand dukes and grand
-duchesses and all the wonderful things they had done for
-the poor people, and had pictures of saints, and depictions
-of miracles, pictures of watches which might be purchased
-in Moscow or Petrograd by people who were rich,
-and pictures of skeletons of dead men! Oh, the almanacs
-were wonderful!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter had worn his last year’s one out from much reading
-of it by the fire of nights with his father. And now
-the new one from Moscow was two months late. That was
-why Peter watched so anxiously every morning for the
-mail-sledges from Irkutsk, which was on the Petersburg
-side of Lake Baikal.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>So this morning he was pegging away fast with his
-hammer, his father working near by and whispering to
-himself, a way he had when busy. The candle was still
-guttering between them, the fire in the pit was smoking
-comfortably, and the old brass samovar was singing
-merrily on a shelf.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>Peter leaned over from his bench every few minutes, to
-blow a hole in the frost on the windowpane, and look up
-the Sofistkaya in the direction of the post-house. But
-he could not see far yet, from the fog, though he did see
-the column of unfortunates going out into the wilderness
-with the Cossack soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter rather feared the Cossacks. They were “free
-men”—big swaggering fellows with blue breeches and
-yellow stripes on their tunics and some of them with colored
-tops in their tall <i>shlapkas</i>—round caps of fuzzy
-wool. And though Peter feared the Cossacks, he was
-also proud of them, for they were a part of Holy Russia
-and the power of the Czar flashed from the points of their
-lances as they galloped over the plains. And the Czar
-was Ataman of all the Cossacks, just as he was Emperor
-of all Russians. And there were more Russians in the
-world than all other peoples put together, counting the
-barbarians of far lands across the seas.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter longed for the day when he would be big enough
-to become a soldier of majesty, and wear on his cap the
-little oval button—“The Eye of the Czar.” Then he
-would know all things. His father always smiled sadly
-at such ideas.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Peter Petrovitch Gorekin, a soldier of the Czar!”
-Peter’s father would say. “A soldier against the people,
-a soldier to bind our chains the tighter! Oh, Peter Petrovitch!
-The day will come when your eye will see and understand!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Which was a surprising thing for Peter’s father to say,
-for Peter could see well enough with his eyes, except when
-the smoke from the fire-pit blew down the stone chimney
-and got into his eyes while he was reading from the almanac
-and learning new words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s father was most anxious for Peter to learn to
-read as well as the priest—yes, even as well as Michael
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff, the Colonel Governor. Peter
-could have made many kopecks in the evenings, helping
-to skin sheep for the butcher, but Peter’s father insisted
-upon lessons with the almanac by the fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The labor of a man’s hands can be forced to do the
-will of a master,” his father would say gravely, “but the
-labor of a man’s head is his own, and no man can control
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter could not understand that, because it was impossible
-to drive pegs with one’s head—it could only be
-done with hands and the hammer. And his father worked
-with his hands, too, and never did a thing with his head,
-or so Peter supposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was not long after the column of unfortunates and
-Cossacks had disappeared into the <i>taiga</i> that Peter saw
-two black spots rise on the little hill across the Ingoda
-River, and drop again out of sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ee-yah!” cried Peter joyfully. “The mail comes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>His father lifted his head and looked up from his
-stitching-frame to listen.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I hear nothing but the music of the samovar,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“They have crossed the bend to the river,” insisted
-Peter. “I heard the bells and I saw the sledges! The
-horses are coming fast!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Both sat still and listened, with only the snapping of
-the fire and the song of the samovar in their ears.
-Though they waited in silence, the sound of the bells did
-not come to them down the chimney.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Watch the road,” said his father, and returned to his
-stitching. Peter put his eye to the hole in the frost and
-watched the street up beyond the post-house. But he
-saw only an occasional Buriat, or a Cossack striding
-along, with now and then a Tartar hunter coming in
-from the hills with raw fur thrown over his shoulders, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>soldiers hurrying down from the prison above the settlement.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Then, the bells! The first faint jingle came to Peter’s
-ears, and at the same time he saw the galloping horses
-of the leading sledge come up into the road from the river
-hollow, running free for the post-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Now!” cried Peter. “The post is here! With the
-new almanacs! Please! Give me the kopecks! And
-may I run to see if the new almanac has come for
-sure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s father stopped work and filled his glass from
-the samovar, threw on the fire a fresh chunk of wood and
-dug some kopecks from his pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Go, little son, but dress warmly—it is too cold outside
-for a Tartar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter shoved his rag-bound feet into pink felt boots,
-whirled his long muffler about his neck and got into his
-gray coat. Pulling his cap over his head and ears, he
-took the kopecks from his father and flew out through the
-door in a cloud of white steam made by the warm air
-from inside the hut as it escaped into the frigid atmosphere
-outside.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Already the sledges had arrived in front of the post-house.
-The street was filled with people and there was
-a great to-do and gabbling. Peter could see the Cossack
-guards who had come with the sledges dismounting
-from their horses. The half-frozen drivers of the sledges
-were rolling stiffly out of their blankets, to clump through
-the icicle-fringed door of the post-house for their hot
-bowls of <i>borsht</i> and their drams of vodka.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter ran up to the crowd surrounding the sledges and
-breathlessly pushed in between the legs of the soldiers
-and onlookers. Surely, he thought, this month the almanacs
-must have come! Twice before he had been disappointed
-by the monthly mail and now he was shaking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>with eagerness. He wanted to cry out at once to those
-about the sledges, “Has the new almanac come?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But there were no mail sacks on the first sledge. Instead
-it had five travelers—an old woman, an officer who
-was an aide of the Colonel Governor, two fur-buyers, and
-a little girl—a pretty little girl, who was about the same
-age as Peter. She had pulled back her beautiful cap of
-ermine, and Peter could see the pink of her cheeks, her
-laughing blue eyes and the scarlet silk lining of her coat
-of sables where she had turned the collar away from her
-chin. She was standing up in the sledge and looking
-over the heads of the crowd and chattering with her old
-nurse in delight at having arrived back at her home.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter stared at the little girl. He knew who she was—Katerin
-Stephanovna Kirsakoff, daughter of the Colonel
-Governor. Peter had seen her many times driving through
-the settlement with her Cossack outriders guarding her.
-He knew she was kind to the poor people and to the unfortunates.
-On Butter Weeks she always threw silver
-kopecks from her carriage to the crowds at the fair. It
-was said that she knew even the Czar himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter thought Katerin was as beautiful as a picture in
-a holy icon. He almost forgot about his beloved almanacs
-as he stood and gazed at the beauty of Katerin.
-Her furs were so rich and gorgeous, her skin was so clear
-and rosy, her eyes were so sparkling bright. She had
-plenty of good things to eat, he was sure—and the cold
-did not hurt her, the guards of Cossacks protected her
-from the gaunt tigers in the hills, the officers bowed to
-her, the soldiers worshiped her, and she lived in the great
-and grand house of her father, the Colonel Governor, Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Governor comes!” rose the warning cry from
-those on the outer fringes of the throng about the sledges.
-The soldiers at once began to drive the people back from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>the sledge in which Katerin was standing to clear the way
-for the droshky of the Colonel Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was inside the ring of people about the sledge.
-He was pushed away roughly. His heart sank, for he
-felt that he was to be cheated out of the news for which
-he had run to the post-house—news about the almanacs.
-He could restrain his eagerness no longer, and fearing
-that he would be left in doubt about the almanacs if the
-soldiers hustled him up the street with the other people, he
-ran from a soldier in toward the sledge, and making an
-obeisance to Excellence, raised his arms and cried out
-to Katerin, “Did your Excellence bring the almanacs of
-the new year?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Katerin did not hear him. She was standing up
-and clapping her hands as she saw her father’s droshky
-come whirling down the street toward her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The officer in the sledge got out of the robes wound
-round him, and to the ground. He commanded the
-soldiers to drive the people away farther so the Colonel
-Governor might not be delayed in getting to his daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter turned to run from this officer, but slipped and
-fell. And before he could regain his footing on the hard
-and slippery snow, the officer came hurrying from the
-sledge and tripped and fell over the boy—fell flat in the
-road before the post-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Fool!” cried the officer, glaring at Peter. “Get
-away with you! You dare address Excellence, and now
-you are in my road!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter stood up. The officer struck the boy in the
-face, and Peter fell again, almost stunned by the blow.
-He saw the officer’s boots stride away and recognized
-them as boots which he and his father had made. There
-was a forest of boots in all directions, and the sound of
-voices reached Peter’s ears in a confused medley.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was ashamed. The blood was flowing from his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>nose and making a mess on his chin and muffler. The
-tears which came into his eyes from the pain were freezing
-on his cheeks and his eyelids were freezing together, making
-a film through which he could see but dimly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The crowd had drawn away from the sledge now, leaving
-Peter lying in the dirty snow. Such a sight to make
-of himself, he thought, in view of Katerin! And how
-angry she would be to see that he had gotten in the way
-of the officer and had made him fall down like a clumsy
-bear.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter heard the voice of his father calling to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Little son! Get up quickly and run! The Governor
-comes! Do not let the Excellence see you there!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Peter could not move quickly for his arms and
-legs seemed strangely stiff and numb and helpless. His
-father ran out into the open space just as Governor Kirsakoff
-got out of his carriage to hasten to his little daughter
-in the sledge. He was a tall man, ruddy of face, with
-white teeth showing in a smile under black mustaches.
-He wore a high cap of sable with a badge of the Czar upon
-it. His longskirted coat of black was lined with fur
-which stuck out in fringes at the edges, and he wore a
-belt with silver doubleheaded eagles at the buckle. A
-scarlet strap depended from one shoulder and crossed his
-breast, and he wore a saber at his side—a saber with
-a gold hilt, bearing upon it the initials of his Emperor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Governor Kirsakoff held out his arms toward his daughter
-as he approached the sledge. The officer who struck
-Peter was beside the Governor, with watchful eyes for
-the safety of his chief and the little girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s father lifted him to his feet, and Peter brushed
-the icy film from his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Get away, you and that boy!” the officer growled
-as the Governor strode swiftly to the sledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>“The boy meant no harm, Excellence,” said Peter’s
-father, pulling off his cap and making a deep bow, as he
-tried to push Peter on before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who is this here?” demanded the Governor, catching
-sight of Peter and his father, and seeing that the boy’s
-face was bleeding. Governor Kirsakoff’s smile vanished,
-and he scowled angrily, sensing something in the nature of
-a calamity in the presence of his daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Excellence, this boy yelled at Katerin Stephanovna,”
-explained the officer. “And he tripped my feet when I
-came down from the sledge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s father swept his cap to the ground in an abject
-bow.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Pardon, Excellence—I will take the boy away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What now!” exclaimed Kirsakoff, with a close look
-at the bootmaker. “Is this Gorekin? Is this what I
-put you into the free gang for? to be under the feet of
-your Governor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s father bowed once more.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, Excellence, I am Peter Pavlovitch Gorekin, the
-bootmaker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you should be at your boots and not under my
-feet!” raged Kirsakoff. “Do I give you the liberty of
-the settlement to have you in the way with a bloody-nosed
-youngster when my little daughter comes home?” The
-Governor turned wrathfully to the commander of the
-Cossack guard about the sledges. “Take this Gorekin
-away to the prison!” he commanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Excellence, my son!” cried Peter’s father, stricken
-to his soul by the disaster in the Governor’s order. “Oh,
-Excellence, I beg—if I go to the prison, what is to become
-of my son?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You should have prized your liberty and kept your
-son out of the way,” said the Governor. “You think
-nothing of ruining the happiness of my little daughter!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>So your son must learn his place.——Take them both to
-the prison!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Kirsakoff turned away and hurried to the sledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What has happened to the poor people?” asked
-Katerin, her face troubled as she watched Peter and his
-father. She saw that the boy had been hurt and was
-crying, and that the soldiers now menaced them.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do not look at them, little daughter,” said Kirsakoff.
-“They have disobeyed the rules. Was it cold coming
-from Irkutsk? And did you bring me many kisses?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Governor lifted her out of the sledge and smothered
-her in his arms. At this moment a Cossack interposed
-himself between the bootmaker and the Governor, and two
-soldiers closed in on Peter and his father, their bayonets
-fixed upon their rifles.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Gorekin held up his hand in a plea to speak once more
-to the Governor. The bootmaker had dropped his cap,
-his face showed the agony of his despair, and the tears
-streamed down his face. His mouth was open and his
-lips trembled with the chagrin and horror of what had
-befallen him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Excellence! I submit!” he pleaded. “But by the
-mercy of God, condemn not my son to the prison
-too!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>One of the Cossacks pushed him back violently so that
-he spun round and staggered blindly in an effort to keep
-his footing on the slippery snow. Then he turned with a
-cry and thrust the Cossack aside, to run after the Governor,
-hands stretched out in supplication.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Mercy for my son!” he called after Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A Cossack’s saber flashed, and Gorekin received its point
-in the back—once, twice—and with a scream, fell writhing
-on the snow-packed street before the post-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Kirsakoff ran with little Katerin in his arms toward the
-near-by droshky which was awaiting them. The crowd
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>closed in at once about the stricken bootmaker and his
-son.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Little Peter fell to his knees beside his father, who had
-been rudely rolled upon his back by the Cossack with the
-saber. This Cossack searched hastily through the
-pockets of the greatcoat of Gorekin. Peter, screaming in
-terror, supposed that all this was being done to help his
-father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Cossack found the curved leather-knife of Gorekin
-in a pocket of the dying man’s coat, and flung the knife
-upon the ground. “He held this knife in his hand!”
-cried the Cossack. “It is the knife with which he would
-have killed the Governor!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter could not realize yet the disaster which had come
-to him and his father. He knew only that the one human
-being who loved him, and whom he loved above everything
-in the world, was hurt and bleeding. The slowly reddening
-snow beside his father gave the boy a vague idea of
-a wound which might in time be cured.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And it might not be real at all, this tragic morning,
-but a dream. Peter saw about him the black circle of
-boots like the trees of a forest; he saw the print of nails
-in the hard snow; he noted a small round stone close by
-his father’s head—the world appeared to be full of
-trifling things, yet suddenly all trifles were invested with
-terror. He prayed even as he screamed, that he might
-wake to find his father reading from the new almanac
-beside the fire in their little hut.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Little father! Little father!” he cried in his agony.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The bootmaker coughed harshly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He tried to kill the Governor,” said a voice. “There
-lies the knife—and I ran him through with my saber.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter recognized the voice as that of the Cossack who
-had struck down his father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>“Little son—” gasped Gorekin, his dimming eyes on
-Peter, and his hand moving slowly toward the boy.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thou whom I love!” cried Peter, “come quickly for
-the man who has medicine and can cure you! Come to the
-watch-fixer who has the charms and the herbs!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God’s blessing on you—I go—to meet—the—dead!”
-whispered Gorekin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are not to die!” cried Peter, and flung himself
-down upon his father and kissed him. Then he sat back
-on his heels, moaning wildly as he saw his father’s face
-graying to the color of the trampled snow.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall kill Kirsakoff!” Peter shouted. “I shall kill—the
-Governor——!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Pray!” said his father weakly. “Pray to God for—power
-and—” but he could say no more, and making
-an effort to cross himself with both hands he died, staring
-up into the leaden sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He is dead,” said a voice. “Take the boy to the
-prison. It is the order of the Governor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Peter, sobbing and kicking out against the soldiers
-who grasped him and dragged him away, left his father
-lying in the snow before the post-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The soldiers dragged Peter up the Sofistkaya. His
-eyes clung to the mail bags being carried into the post-house,
-and though he was crying bitterly, he wondered
-if the almanacs had come from Moscow after all.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Next he knew he found himself in the sandy snow of the
-Sofistkaya, passing his own little hut, and saw the white
-smoke rising from the crude stone chimney. He thought
-of the samovar inside singing on a shelf, of the warmth
-and comfort that he would never know again, of his beloved
-father who somehow, by some terrible fate which
-had descended upon him out of the skies, was gone forever
-from the bench and the stitching-frame.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The two soldiers drove Peter on and in time they went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>over the wooden bridge across the frozen Ingoda, and up
-a hill. The tears on his face and frozen in his lids gave
-him great pain from cold. But he brushed his eyes clear
-of the ice particles and looked ahead. Before him were
-the yellow upright logs of the great prison stockade—and
-the great gate waiting to receive him into the Gethsemane
-of the Valley of Despair.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>I<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>TWENTY YEARS AFTER</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>KATERIN was awake before dawn. She lay still,
-listening in the dark for sounds of conflict in the
-city. For months she had been accustomed to
-the rattle of rifle-fire through day and night, and now she
-found it hard to realize that the looting and burning had
-ceased.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The windows of Katerin’s room were hung with heavy
-blankets to conceal the candlelight by night, even though
-in the winter the glass of the panes was always nearly
-covered with heavy frost. She had no way of knowing
-how near it was to dawn, or if the day had come.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin Stephanovna Kirsakoff—that was her full
-name. And she was hiding in an old log house with her
-father, who had been retired from the army of the Czar
-with the rank of general. And her father was Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff, once Governor in the Valley of
-Despair, as it was known in the exile days before the revolution.
-And the log house was in Chita, where Kirsakoff
-had ruled his Cossacks, but Kirsakoff and his daughter
-were now hiding from the Cossacks.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin rose from her bed, and guided by the dim,
-shaded flame burning before the icon in the corner of the
-room, she held out her arms to the image of the Virgin
-Mother, and whispered, “Save us, Mother of God, again
-this day, from those who beset us, and bring to us help
-from our enemies in our time of danger!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She continued to whisper her prayers while she dressed
-in the dark. Then she went to one of the windows and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>pulled aside the blanket. She scraped a tiny hole in the
-frost so that she might look down into the courtyard, to
-the end of the street and out over the plains which
-stretched away from the city toward the border of Manchuria,
-many versts away. In that direction lay safety,
-but Katerin knew that she could not get out of the city,
-much less cross those frozen plains.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The subdued light of morning coming in through the
-white frost on the panes revealed her as a woman of medium
-height, of figure slender and supple, and clad in a
-trailing velvet house-dress of wine-red. Thrown over her
-shoulders, and partly covering the faded velvet of the
-dress, was a sleeveless coat of sable. She had the oval,
-high-bred face of the untitled nobility of Russia. The
-Kirsakoffs were one of the old boyar families who had always
-served their emperors as officers and administrators
-in the empire which spanned half the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin had inherited all the best qualities of her race
-and her class. As the daughter of General Kirsakoff she
-had grown up like an Imperial princess. Educated by
-tutors from Paris and Petersburg, she had also learned to
-ride like a Cossack. And as her mother had died when
-Katerin was a small girl, she had the poise of a woman,
-who, though still young, had presided over her father’s
-table in the Governor’s palace—the Government house.
-So all her life she had been accustomed to a deference
-which was akin to that granted to royalty.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Now Katerin and her father were fugitives. The fighting
-between the various factions in Chita was over; the
-Cossacks were in control of the city—and controlling the
-Cossacks was a Mongol chieftain who had set himself up as
-the ruling prince and ruled with firing squads.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Months of terrorism in the city had made Katerin
-pale and wan. Her blue eyes were sad and deep set, and
-she had an expression of melancholy. The pallor of her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>cheeks was accentuated by her black hair, which was
-drawn down over her ears tightly. Her long neck, with
-its delicate lines, suggested pearls. She had pearls, but
-she did not dare wear them in these days. They were
-buried in the courtyard of the old log house.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When she walked it was with a slow and languorous
-grace. The carriage of her beautiful head was reminiscent
-of the portraits of the members of the Imperial family
-which had once hung on the walls of the home from
-which she had fled. It was now only a charred ruin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin remained at the window, peering out with
-anxious eyes. A trio of Cossack soldiers were huddled
-about the glowing remnants of their night-fire in the
-street. These were men in the army of the Ataman Zorogoff,
-the half-Mongol, half-Cossack <i>hetman</i> who ruled the
-Valley of Despair. The Ataman, in spite of his pretensions
-to leadership, was only a brigand with an army of
-adventurers and conscripts at his back, bent upon enriching
-himself by levying upon the fortunes of all the rich
-people in his territory. And he collected the tribute which
-he exacted from them under threats of death—and by
-executions.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin watched the gray light of the new day grow
-over the frozen and desolate landscape. A thin mantle of
-snow covered the plains below the hills which walled in the
-valley on three sides. There were a few rude peasants’
-huts out on the flats, with white smoke rising up from
-stone chimneys. A long column of staggering telegraph
-poles ran off beyond a spur of hill and marked the line of
-the railroad in this direction.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She saw a small band of Cossacks come galloping in
-toward the city. They were racing to the warmth of the
-barracks after a night spent on patrol. These men belonged
-to the outer cordon—the chain of mounted soldiers
-which Zorogoff kept about the city to make sure no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>one entered without his knowledge, and to insure that none
-escaped. Before he had organized his power, some of the
-wealthy citizens had escaped by the railroad, but now the
-Ataman had his troops on guard at the railroad station.
-And his spies were busy in the city. It was impossible to
-leave if he did not grant permission. The Kirsakoffs did
-not dare to ask for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The room in which Katerin stood looking out of the
-window was filled with a queer mingling of rich furnishings
-and crudely built peasant household goods. The
-floor was covered with a thick blue carpet, thrown down
-hastily after being smuggled by night from her old home
-before the building had been burned. Faithful servants
-had brought it, but there had been no attempt to put it
-down properly—it was merely tucked in at the sides of
-the room in order to make the fabric fit.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The walls were covered with an ancient and faded
-paper. The ceiling had once been covered with colorful
-decorations, but now the plaster was cracked, and leaks in
-the roof had turned the paint of the figures into grotesque
-patterns.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The bed was hidden by a Chinese screen of carved
-leather, also saved from the old home before the looters
-had plied the torch; a great samovar of chased and filigreed
-silver stood upon an old wooden bench brought
-from the kitchen on the floor below; a table of rough
-boards was covered by purple silk, and on it stood an
-ornate candelabra of marble and bronze with the arms
-sadly bent, so that the candles could not stand erect;
-blankets of fur covered chairs rudely cut with an ax and
-fashioned with a primitive hammer; and a monstrous
-black stove built into the wall reached to the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin pulled the blanket away from the window and
-made it fast to the casing with a string. Just then a
-gentle tapping came at one of the doors of the room.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>She laughed cheerily and opened the door. Her father
-stood before her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>General Kirsakoff was tall, but thin and bent with age.
-His face was gaunt, but the bones of his cheeks were
-partly concealed by a white beard which was indifferently
-trimmed to a point at the chin. His gray eyes were dim,
-yet held some of their old fire and the look of an eagle—stern
-eyes looking out from under gray brows and a forehead
-furrowed by worries and his years. His head was
-covered with sparse white hair, which had a tendency to
-stand straight up, and waved when he moved his head
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, the cold is like a wolf!” said Michael, his hands
-clasped together as he shivered. “Has not Wassili come
-up with the fire? My teeth ache from the cold!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin gave him a look of solicitude, and then took
-his hands and rubbed them.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I thought you would sleep longer, so I did not call for
-Wassili. And here you are dressed—but you should
-have a blanket over your shoulders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is only my feet and my hands—and my teeth—that
-are cold. Let us have the samovar singing, and
-something hot. My poor old bones cannot stand the cold
-so well as they did. And this old house is damp—we
-must have a good fire to-day, happen what will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He looked at Katerin closely, searching her face for
-signs of anxiety, but her whole manner had changed at
-his entrance to the room, and now as she went to the door
-to the hallway to call down to Wassili, the servant, she
-hummed a tune. She knew her father well enough to
-understand that his spirit must be kept up. He had been
-giving way recently to long spells of despondency.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael was wearing one of his old uniforms of a general.
-It had been Katerin’s idea that he resume the discarded
-garments of authority, for she knew that he gained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>some comfort from it and that it helped him to forget the
-dark days which had come upon them. But Michael
-was only a shadow of his former self. His knees bent
-under him, his attenuated form did not fill the tunic, his
-hands were white and withered. They shook, as did his
-head at times, with the palsy of his age and feebleness.
-Yet the old general was still a striking figure in the gray
-tunic with the white cross hanging from its collar, the
-wreath and sword of another order of the Czar on his
-breast. A leather strap crossed his shoulder and came
-down athwart the front of the tunic. The heavy gold
-straps on his shoulders marked his rank. His trousers
-were blue with a pair of narrow gold stripes at the sides,
-and the belt about him had a silver buckle in front with
-the double-headed eagle of the Romanoffs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So this is another day, little daughter,” said Michael,
-as he sat down upon a bench and stroked his beard. “Another
-day of waiting—waiting till these devils have lost
-their power to the army of the Emperor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Another day of hope, my father,” said Katerin.
-“What! Does not the day at the windows give you
-courage. Perhaps the Americans will come up from
-Vladivostok and save us. It is then that Zorogoff will
-have to change his ways.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Poof! The Americans will not come,” said Michael
-wearily. “Do not put your hopes in the foreigners.
-Nothing will happen from that direction which will be
-of any good to us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Something is bound to happen that is good for us,”
-insisted Katerin. “The forces of evil cannot always be
-in power. Have we not sent word to our friends who
-escaped? Will they not get our letters? Will they not
-do something to get us away from the city? All we must
-do is to have patience and be brave. God is with the
-brave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>“Yes, the young are brave,” said Michael. “And it is
-you who are brave, my daughter. I am too old to have
-much heart left. But there are two things against us—one
-of them is our accursed money. I wish we had never
-saved it, but for that you will need it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what is the other thing that is against us?” asked
-Katerin with surprised eyes, as she turned to the door to
-look below for Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Your beauty, Katerin Stephanovna,” said her father.
-“How many times in the old days have I thanked the holy
-saints for your beauty! Yet I mourn now that you are
-so beautiful, for it may be your curse. I have had a
-dream of evil omen, yet I cannot remember it—though
-it left me downcast. If these devils of Zorogoff dare lay
-a hand upon you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin ran to him and kissed him hastily.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, nonsense! I will not be so beautiful, and you will
-not be so depressed as soon as the samovar sings and you
-have had your tea. You make much of little things—and
-you must not keep dreams in your mind. Now!
-Here comes Wassili with the fire for the samovar!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili came in, a whiskered <i>moujik</i> in clumsy boots,
-bearing fire on a shovel. Some of the burning coals he
-put into the stove, and with the scattered remnants fired
-the samovar and went below again for water.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is more dangerous to give the money than to keep
-it,” went on Michael musingly. He seemed bent on studying
-out the problems which confronted him, as if the
-dream which he had mentioned had driven him into making
-some decision.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If we could buy our way out of the city,” suggested
-Katerin, “I would be willing to give it up to see you in
-comfortable surroundings.” She was before a little mirror
-on a table, combing out her hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Once Zorogoff had the money, he would destroy us so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>there would be no witness against him—no claim against
-him in future,” said Michael. “That is what happened
-to Rioumines—he gave up his money willingly—and
-then he was killed. So there is no safety for us in beggaring
-ourselves. By the Holy Saints! I would rather
-burn all the rubles than give them to Zorogoff—but even
-then he would not believe that they had been destroyed,
-and would kill us for refusing to surrender them. And
-I would sooner die a beggar than have your fortune fall
-into the hands of this Mongol!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come! Sit by the fire and warm yourself,” said
-Katerin, pushing a bench toward the front of the stove,
-which was now crackling merrily with the wood. “We
-are safe enough here till the Americans come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, the Americans will never come,” said Michael, as
-he settled himself before the fire and held out his hands
-to the heat. “We must use our wits and get away from
-Chita—to Harbin or Vladivostok. Others have done it.
-We might send Wassili to Harbin for help.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That would do no good. Our friends cannot come
-back here to help us. If they did, they could not fight
-Zorogoff’s army. We must keep up good hope for whatever
-the future holds for us, and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There came a hammering at the outer gate of the courtyard.
-Katerin checked her words and stood immovable,
-her eyes on her father in sudden fear of what the summons
-below might mean. The noise outside stopped as abruptly
-as it had begun, and then was resumed—insistent, compelling,
-ruthless. It sounded like the thumping of rifle
-butts against the planks of the gate. Whoever it was
-that demanded admittance was not to be denied. There
-was in the noise a peremptoriness which indicated that if
-there happened to be any appreciable delay in opening the
-gate, it would be smashed down without further ado.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is that?” asked Michael. “By the Holy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>Saints! The soldiers of the Ataman have come upon
-us!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He sprang up and went to the window, where he put
-his eye to the hole in the frost, and looked out. Katerin
-pressed close to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Soldiers at the gate!” whispered Michael, and as he
-stood staring at his daughter, they heard Wassili shouting
-in the hall below.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Master! Master!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin crossed herself and bowed her head in the direction
-of the icon as she ran to the door and called down
-to Wassili, asking what it was that he wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The soldiers are outside—pounding to get in!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then let them in,” commanded Katerin. “We cannot
-fight them.” She ran back across the room to the
-window and looked down to the court—she could see
-the tops of the tall Cossack caps over the upper edge of
-the paling. There were at least a dozen of them, and
-above them here and there was the glittering point of a
-bayonet.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We are in God’s hands!” cried Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall know what fate holds for us now,” said her
-father, drawing up toward the stove. “We have been in
-doubt long enough. It was the smoke from our chimney
-which drew them, without doubt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“They will want the money,” said Katerin. “It may
-as well go to them—enough to stop their greed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael went to her and put his hands upon her shoulders.
-He looked into her face, tears in his own eyes.
-“We will not give them the money,” he whispered. “Let
-them kill me if they will. I doubt that they will dare to
-do it—but my time is short at best. This is my dream!
-But you must think of yourself and know that if they take
-all we have, you will be helpless—a beggar in a land that
-is beggared, to die of hunger or by your own hand. Make
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>no bargain with them between me and the money! I
-command you! Do not give a ruble of it to keep me alive
-a minute!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If you die, I shall not live,” said Katerin, and taking
-his face between her hands, kissed him tenderly on the
-forehead and threw her arms about his neck, dry-eyed in
-her anguish.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I should like to reach the sky, but my arms are too
-short,” said Michael, expressing his helplessness by the old
-Russian proverb. “I think of having an army at my
-back—I, an old man, weak and already looking into my
-own grave. It is of you I think, Katerin Stephanovna!
-I would sell my soul to save you—yet the money must
-be kept if you are to live!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can hear the soldiers in the yard,” said Katerin.
-“What can we do? We have a few rubles in the Chinese
-casket—five thousand in fives and tens. They make a
-fat bundle. We can give them up—and say they are all
-we have.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do not be too ready to surrender the money,” said
-Michael. “But that is what we shall do. If they demand
-more——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Hush! They are coming up the stairs. Come!
-Quick! Sit here by the table! And take your saber!
-Be bold with them, as befits your rank and your old place,
-but remember that we cannot resist!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As she talked, Katerin grabbed from a chest her father’s
-saber and snapped it into the old general’s belt. Then
-she pulled him to the table and sat him on a bench so
-that he faced toward the fire. This was no more than
-done when a man could be heard mounting the top of the
-stairs, and presently the visitor looked in cautiously at the
-open door.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The intruder was a Cossack officer. He wore a tall
-cap of white, shaggy wool, thrust back on his head. A
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>lock of his black hair hung down athwart his forehead.
-His eyes were black and small, his mouth heavily lipped,
-his cheeks inclined to swartness from exposure, though
-the cold of the morning had given his skin a ruddy glow.
-He wore a long greatcoat with the cream-colored skin of
-the sheep outside and the wool inside visible at the edge
-in front and at the bottom of the skirt. On his shoulders
-were tin stars—he was a captain in Zorogoff’s army.
-From the skirt of his coat on one side hung the toe of a
-heavy saber-scabbard.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The captain stepped into the room after a sharp glance
-at Katerin and her father. Then he looked about the
-room suspiciously, and having made sure that no others
-were present, he bowed politely, at the same time clicking
-the spurred heels of his black boots.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are Kirsakoff,” said the officer abruptly. “I
-am Captain Shimilin, and I have come from the Ataman
-Zorogoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael, his hand on the hilt of his saber, sitting erect,
-turned his head and surveyed the Cossack coldly. Finally,
-he said, “Captain, you are speaking to General
-Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin shrugged his shoulders, and a smile lurked on
-his lips. “You were once a general—but the Czar is
-dead. I do not have to be told who you are, Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, you have heard of the Czar!” said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin stared at her, and then took off his cap. He
-seemed willing to ignore her irony, but his look conveyed
-an appreciation of her beauty, and he allowed his eyes to
-linger upon her. But there was no disrespect in his manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin met his steady gaze without any indication
-that the Cossack captain’s scrutiny meant anything more
-than the usual deference and adulation due her person and
-position as in the old days. She made a pretty picture,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>standing beside her father—the superb carriage of her
-head, the slashes of red velvet of her sleeves, the gray of
-the sable coat and the swirl of the red trailing skirt about
-her feet. She suggested a queenly consort at an audience
-by royalty.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin stood as if waiting for something to happen.
-In a short time two men came in with rifles. Their faces
-were rotund, their noses short and flat, and they were
-dark enough to be full-blood Mongols—Buriats, these
-were, descendants of the men who had followed Genghis
-Khan as his conquering hordes swept over Asia. They
-were poorly dressed in ragged, old coats, with boots reinforced
-with skins and furs wrapped about their tops.
-But they wore the high caps of Cossacks, which made
-them appear to be taller than they really were. This
-pair appraised the contents of the room, and having
-judged the value of its visible loot, turned their beadlike
-eyes upon Katerin—eyes full of menace, eyes like the
-eyes of wolves upon a quarry.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have you come with a message from the Ataman?”
-asked Katerin, when she saw that the Cossack did not seem
-to know how to proceed with his business. She wanted to
-hold the situation in her own hands as well as she could,
-and so far she felt that Shimilin had not shown himself
-to be particularly dangerous. She did not intend to betray
-to him that she and her father were in any way perturbed
-by an informal call on the part of soldiers from
-the Ataman Zorogoff. To show fear would be fatal and
-only her wits could save her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Cossack did not reply at once, but strode across
-the room, threw off his greatcoat, and sat down on a
-bench opposite Michael. Shimilin seemed in no hurry,
-but acted as if he wished to impress father and daughter
-with his own importance as expressed in his uniform. He
-wore a gray tunic with gold shoulder straps, a brace of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>pistols in his belt, a fine saber with a hilt of silver, and blue
-riding breeches.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, I bring a message from the Ataman,” he began,
-elbows on knees, and leaning forward and staring at the
-floor. “You know, of course, that the Ataman’s army
-has been protecting the city from looters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Beggars are always safe from robbers,” said Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin lifted his head and looked at the general in
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Beggars! I like a joke, Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is no joke being a beggar,” put in Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have millions of rubles,” said Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is easy to count the money in the pockets of other
-people,” said Katerin. “We were robbed of all we had
-long before the Ataman Zorogoff began to rule.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin’s face took on a sly look. “Is it that you do
-not like the Ataman Zorogoff? Are you opposed to his
-rule?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I suppose Zorogoff would give up his power if we said
-we preferred another ruler,” retorted Katerin. “If you
-came here to trick us into saying anything against Zorogoff,
-it will not be said. And it takes little of your breath
-to talk of millions of rubles. Does the Ataman expect us
-to hand over to him a fortune which does not exist?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You talk like all the others,” said Shimilin wearily.
-“Partridges are killed with silver bullets—and so are
-robbers. An army cannot live on air. The Ataman
-needs money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Protection from bandits! What difference does it
-make whether bandits and looters take our money, or Zorogoff?”
-asked Michael sharply. “If we had the money—what
-would it matter to us who got it if we lost it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Ataman asks a loan,” said Shimilin. “His government
-will repay you. Am I to tell the Ataman that
-you regard him as a robber?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>“We have but a few rubles,” said Katerin hastily, to
-prevent her father from saying something which would
-draw the wrath of the captain, for the old man was showing
-his anger and was ready to defy Shimilin. “It is all
-the money we have left.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How much?” asked Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Probably ten thousand rubles,” said Katerin. “I
-have not counted it lately, but it is all we have to buy our
-food. What shall we eat if you take it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin smiled. “That is not my problem. You can
-find more money, or borrow. But we know you have
-plenty. Ten thousand rubles will not satisfy the Ataman.
-I will take it, but only with the understanding that it is
-mine—to intercede with the Ataman for you. You
-might find it difficult to argue with his soldiers—in his
-military prison.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin shrugged her shoulders. “True. If the Ataman
-should want to send us to prison, we could not prevent
-him. At least, he would have to feed us there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And is that the way Zorogoff will protect us from
-robbers?” demanded Michael. “If we have no more
-money, we must go to prison, eh! And that is what
-Zorogoff calls ruling, I presume. Hah!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin went behind the screen which shielded her bed
-and returned with a large lacquered cabinet. She opened
-it and took out several packets of rubles of the old Imperial
-issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This is our fortune,” she said, with a gesture at the
-casket, and turned away.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you expect the Ataman to believe that?” asked
-Shimilin, as he stood up and looked into the casket.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I cannot do the Ataman’s thinking,” she retorted.
-“I do not give it—you must take it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin got into his greatcoat, and leisurely stuffed
-his pockets with the packets. When he had taken the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>last, he bowed to the glowering Michael in a show of politeness.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I will do what I can with the Ataman in your behalf,”
-he said. “But I doubt if I will be able to alter his intentions
-toward you—and I am sure that we shall meet
-again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Shimilin made a gesture to his two soldiers, walked
-through the door, and the trio clumped down the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This means war with the Ataman,” said Michael, as
-they heard the gate creak on its ancient hinges as their
-visitors went into the street. “Before prison, we shall
-take the poison together, my daughter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall not die by our own hands till the last
-minute,” said Katerin. “We must pray that the Americans
-will come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If they come at all it will be too late,” said Michael.
-“We, who have conquered Asia, will be destroyed by Asia—we
-shall be lost in a yellow flood. The Mongol rules
-now.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>II<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE INTELLIGENCE OFFICER</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>AN American army transport came lurching out
-of the Japanese sea, and, following the lead of
-a gray and gaunt destroyer which had come out
-to meet the troopship, she swung slowly into the Gulf of
-Peter the Great.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The cliffs of the shore line of Siberia looked bleak and
-wind-whipped, desolate and snow-slashed. The first blasts
-of winter had swept the land. Brown and dull it looked,
-sullenly waiting the onset of northern winds with smothering
-cold from the Pole.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The transport seemed reluctant to approach the shore
-of such an inhospitable land. Her gray war-painted
-sides were festooned with sea-grime from the Pacific. Her
-pace was slow, as if she mistrusted the hills overhanging
-Vladivostok. She was all for caution, though the tumbling
-destroyer drove ahead of her like a terrier leading
-the way for a suspicious mastiff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Among the officers crowding the upper deck of the
-transport was a young man wearing single silver bars on
-the shoulders of his khaki tunic. On his collar were little
-circles of bronze enclosing eagles fashioned from the same
-metal. To those who understood such things, they proclaimed
-him to be a First Lieutenant of the Intelligence
-Division of the General Staff of the United States Army.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lieutenant Gordon was a sturdy chap, of good height.
-His cleanly shaven face was inclined to ruddiness. His
-chin was generously molded, his jaw had a squat squareness
-to it which gave the lower half of his face a suggestion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>of grimness, but the good-natured twinkle of his blue eyes
-belied this grimness. Still, he was reserved—perhaps
-too serious for one of his age, too moodily self-contained.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He had kept to himself a good deal on the passage of
-the transport from San Francisco. While others of his
-age had been romping the decks and singing and making
-gay, he had clung to his cabin. He said that he was
-studying Russian.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When the transport began to draw near to the coast
-of Siberia, Gordon had stood nearly all day alone in a
-sheltered nook at the head of the upper deck where the
-shrouds came down to the rail and prevented more than
-one person’s getting into the corner. He seemed always
-to gravitate to spots in the ship which would insure his
-being alone or cut off in some way from the crowds. Then
-he would stand motionless, gazing out over the bows to the
-horizon ahead, busy with his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Yet for all his aloofness, Lieutenant Gordon was an
-affable chap. And he was keenly interested in all things
-Russian—showed a most laudable ambition to learn all
-he possibly could about the country in which he was to
-serve. There was a captain at Gordon’s table who had a
-cabin full of books about Russia, and Gordon listened most
-attentively to the informal lectures by the well-read captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And there was a major who had been military attaché
-in Petrograd. He spoke Russian well, and gave lessons
-in the language to the other officers. Gordon attended
-some of the lessons, but his progress in learning the language
-was distressingly slow. Still, Gordon did extremely
-well at times. One day the major had asked the
-class to repeat a Russian sentence. Gordon was the only
-one to repeat the words with anything approaching correctness.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Splendid!” exclaimed the major enthusiastically.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>“You are getting a good accent. That’s really excellent,
-Mr. Gordon. And somehow you resemble Russians—if
-it were not for your uniform, you might easily be taken
-for a Russian.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The class laughed. Gordon reddened. When he was
-asked to repeat another sentence in Russian, he rather
-bungled it. And that day he quit the Russian class, saying
-that he could learn faster alone with his grammar.
-And he kept more to himself after that.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>So no one thought it strange that Lieutenant Gordon
-preferred to stand by himself at the head of the upper
-deck as the transport was nosing into the harbor of
-Vladivostok. He scanned the islands sliding past, and
-he watched the boat which came out flying the white and
-blue flag of the Czar’s navy—the old Cross of St. Andrew.
-He watched the shattered hulks of the navy of the Second
-Nicholas, lying in on the beach like the bones of dead sea
-birds. And he saw the warships of Britain, of France,
-of Japan, of the United States, all spick and span at
-anchor below the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Many strange flags flew from the tops of buildings on
-the terraced streets over the bay. The green spires of
-churches glistened in the afternoon sun. Soon the gashes
-running down to the water were seen to be streets with
-people moving in them—carriages, motor cars, and
-hurrying throngs of civilians and soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>On the hills above the city was a queer fringe of flat
-white piles, some of them sheeted with canvas. These
-were vast stores of things gathered to the port from all
-the world for the war against Germany—acres of goods
-and metals, all idle and wasting because the throne of the
-Romanoffs had toppled and the Czar himself was dead in a
-well.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The transport moved up to a dock at the end of the
-bay, past the city. Gordon stood in his nook, watching
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>Vladivostok pass in review before him, and listening to the
-comments of the other officers who crowded the upper deck
-for their first sight of this far port of a shattered
-dynasty.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As the troopship warped in, Russians in belted blouses
-and great boots stood on the dock and stared up at the
-ship and its soldiers in khaki from a distant land. These
-Russians loafed and gossiped and ate sunflower seeds.
-Cossack soldiers in high woolly caps swaggered about with
-sabers jingling at their sides. German prisoners of war
-labored with heavy cases. These men were still clad in the
-dirty finery of gaudy uniforms, sorry-looking specimens of
-what had been once smart soldiers. Shaggy horses in
-rude wagons, driven by peasant girls with shawls over
-their heads and wearing men’s heavy boots, did the work
-of strong men with sacks and bales, loading the carts.
-The Russians could find nothing else to do but gossip.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Gordon watched the people on the dock with interest.
-When the hawsers were fast to the pier, he left the deck
-and went to his cabin. There, alone, he loaded his automatic
-pistol. He filled extra magazines with the blunt-nosed
-bullets, and distributed the magazines through his
-pockets in such way that they would not be noticeable
-through the fabric of his garments.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He looked at himself in the mirror on the bulkhead.
-His face had increased its grimness, and the blue of his
-eyes had taken on a steely sheen. He seemed to be angry
-about something. But he forced a smile at himself—a
-tight-lipped smile of satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Speed is good for nothing but catching fleas,” he
-whispered to his image in the glass.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Soon an orderly came to tell him that an automobile
-waited on the dock to take all officers who had to report
-direct to Headquarters to the building in the city where
-the Commanding General and his staff were housed. Gordon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>followed the orderly, and stepping from the end of
-the gangplank, saluted the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The car bumped away up the street with a group of
-officers. Gordon was silent, while the others chattered.
-The water-front streets were muddy and unpaved.
-Squalid buildings with crude signs in Russian announced
-that within many of the buildings might be had tea and
-food and liquors. Pigs were loose in the streets, scratching
-themselves amiably on house-corners. Old Russian
-songs were being bawled from lusty throats of roisterers
-inside the <i>kabaks</i>. Russians wandered about aimlessly,
-staring at all the strange things which had come to
-Siberia—the American army mules, the motor cycles
-whizzing about among the pigs and wagons, and the honking
-car with the party of American officers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Everybody seemed on holiday but the Chinese. They
-trotted about with burdens on their backs, working like
-ants, apparently unaware that freedom had come to
-Russia and that no one need work. Military motors were
-shooting about in all directions, dilapidated trolley cars
-packed with humanity creaked over bad rails, droshkies
-careened crazily among the burden-bearing Chinese coolies.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The car carrying Gordon rolled into the Svetlanskaya,
-the main street of Vladivostok, and began to climb one of
-the many hills. There was a great stream of confused
-traffic, and mixed in it were strange men in uniforms—black
-Annamites in French blue, yellow Japanese in buff,
-bronzed Czechs in brown, Cossacks in natural gray; Canadians
-in brown short coats, and Americans in snuff-colored
-khaki. On them all were the musty odors and the
-ancient dust of Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The city was a place of swarming tangles of people—beggars
-and princes, vagabonds and viceroys, generals
-and stragglers, friends and enemies, conquerors and conquered,
-all whirling about in mad antics and hurrying as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>if they expected the end of the world to come with sundown.
-Refugees from the interior carrying their few
-poor possessions in old blankets mingled with nobles of
-the old régime who still tried to keep up a semblance of
-importance; poor women in rags with frightened red eyes
-and crying children clustered about them stood on the
-curbs and stared at foreign-looking ladies lolling in carriages
-and clad in suspicious grandeur. The human parasites
-had gathered from all the ports of the Orient to this
-land where people were starving in the streets. Adventurers
-seeking command and harpies hoping to get their
-fingers into stolen jewels, pushed aside blind beggars to get
-into the cafés.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The crisp cold air of winter was seething with joy.
-There were flags everywhere. The restaurants were
-crowded with people who lacked lodgings, gabbling, whispering,
-gaming. But there was something sinister lurking
-in the background of the mad show, glimpsed now and then
-in a squad of soldiers with bayonets fixed to their rifles
-and marching from some mysterious place to some other
-mysterious place with an attitude of deadly earnestness.
-The temper of the people was fickle. They were ready to
-rally to any leader who presented some dramatic ideal, or
-to submit to any ruler who was strong enough to subdue
-them by force of arms. But just now they were occupied
-with having a grand celebration and believed that life from
-now on would be nothing but a carnival.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The car carrying Gordon and the other officers arrived
-at the big building overlooking the bay where flew the flag
-of the United States—American Staff Headquarters.
-Gordon found the Chief of Intelligence in a large room
-filled with map-makers, translators, clerks, officers, busy
-orderlies. But Gordon did not approach the desk of his
-chief at once. The grave-faced colonel with spectacles
-was busy just then, and Gordon lingered among the office
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>workers. There was a great buzzing of conversation and
-a mighty clacking of typewriters.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Gordon was keenly interested in everything. The walls
-were covered with maps of the Russian empire stuck full
-of tacks with colored heads—the fever spots of a sick
-nation, showing where the disease was most rampant and
-dangerous. And Gordon listened to the talk of the
-Russians, who discussed the Americans frankly, knowing
-that they were not understood by the strangers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In time Gordon presented himself at the colonel’s desk,
-saluted, gave his name, and turned over certain papers.
-The colonel looked him over casually, not especially interested
-that another Intelligence officer had been added to
-his staff by Washington.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You’ll want to look about the city, Mr. Gordon, after
-your month in a transport. You’ll be quartered in this
-building. Report to me again in the morning,” said the
-colonel.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>So Lieutenant Gordon spent the afternoon in the teeming
-cafés along the Svetlanskaya. He mingled with the
-various factions scattered through the city—monarchists,
-anarchists, nihilists out of a job, German secret
-agents, and the adherents of new men and new parties
-intriguing for power with the next throw of the national
-dice. It was all a great orgy of talking and whispering
-and singing. Gordon could make neither head nor tail of
-it. But he watched the throngs closely. Every man got
-a scrutiny from the American lieutenant. An observer
-might think that Gordon was looking for some particular
-person in all that motley throng.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>At the officers’ mess that evening Gordon overheard a
-conversation in which the necessity of sending an Intelligence
-officer to Irkutsk was discussed. And Gordon was
-on the alert at once. He said nothing, but he watched
-the Chief of Intelligence up at the head of the table and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>followed him from the mess-room to his desk upstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Sir,” began Gordon, “I understand that an officer will
-be sent up toward Lake Baikal—Irkutsk—to look into
-the situation there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The colonel looked at Gordon wonderingly. It struck
-the chief that this new arrival was dipping into things
-rather hastily. There was enough to learn around Vladivostok
-for a stranger, thought the colonel.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, it has been mentioned,” said the colonel. “We
-need an observing officer up there. That country is controlled
-now by Zorogoff, the Ataman of the Cossacks, and
-we don’t know any too much about Zorogoff. What do
-you know about him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Nothing, sir. But I would like to—see the country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You ought to have a little more time to get acquainted
-with the situation here before you go into the interior.
-The Baikal region is a long way from here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, sir,” said Gordon. “I don’t want to appear too
-confident of my own abilities, but it strikes me, sir, that
-the back country explains what is going on here, rather
-than what you see here explains the country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The colonel smiled. “You like to travel, young man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, sir. Frankly, I’d like to see all I can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have you been assigned to any duty here yet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, sir. Perhaps when I got back from the Baikal
-region I’d be more valuable—have a better understanding
-of the situation as a whole.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I’ll think it over,” said the colonel, and reached for
-his ringing telephone.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And the colonel evidently did think it over, for within
-an hour Lieutenant Gordon was handed his orders to leave
-at once for Irkutsk in a train carrying Czech soldiers and
-supplies toward Omsk and that place known so vaguely as
-“the front.” And an American soldier who was a native
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>of Russia was detailed to accompany Lieutenant Gordon
-as an orderly and interpreter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Gordon did not delay. He went at once to the Trans-Siberian
-station to find his train, leaving the Russian orderly
-to bring on baggage and bedding-roll. Gordon
-found the station filled to overflowing with refugees from
-the interior—sick and well, women and children, lame
-and blind, hungry and unclean. They lay on the floors,
-cooking and eating, begging and filching food wherever
-they could find it. They were like a dirty froth thrown
-up on a beach after a tidal wave, a pitiful human wreckage
-fighting for existence after having survived a typhoon
-which had destroyed a nation. The sights, the smells, the
-misery were appalling. It almost made Gordon ill. He
-longed to find some one person who could be blamed for it.
-A wrath began to grow in his soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He stumbled down the railroad yards in the growing
-dark, seeking the train among a labyrinth of box cars.
-Though he was already in his furs and his sheepskin-lined
-coat against the wolf of winter which was howling across
-the landscape, the wind from the bay chilled him to his
-bones.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Candles gleaming through the windows of an old fourth-class
-car drew him. He found soldiers within—Czechs
-cooking their supper of stew over crude heating stoves
-amid clouds of yellow sulphurous smoke from the awful
-Manchurian coal.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The interior of the car was so jammed with men that
-there seemed to be no more room. The shelves were full of
-soldiers, and the floor was littered with coal and wood
-and boxes and bundles. It was like a pen on wheels, that
-car. It was filthy, battered, and broken. But it belonged
-to the train leaving for the front, and Gordon was
-content.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Presently the orderly came, laden with baggage. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>explained to the Czechs that the American officer was to
-travel in that car by order of the Czech commandant.
-The soldiers smiled and provided two shelves. And in a
-few minutes the train began to grind slowly away from
-Vladivostok, to carry Lieutenant Gordon and his orderly
-some two thousand versts away.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>They reached Nikolsk-Ussurisk the next morning. An
-American captain came to the train. His orderly had
-been sent back to Vladivostok, ill. The captain was without
-an interpreter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Look here,” said Gordon. “You can’t go on here
-without an interpreter—and I’ll not need mine till I get
-to Irkutsk. You’ll have a new interpreter sent up to
-you by that time. I’m all right on this train—for a
-week or two. Send mine along to me when I telegraph
-where I am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Well, that’s an idea!” said the captain. “A most
-pious idea! Perhaps I can send your man along after
-you in a couple of days. He can catch this train all right,
-on a passenger train.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Hold my man, sir, till you hear from me,” said Gordon.
-“I’ll wire when I need him. There is a Czech in
-this car who speaks fairly good English. I’ll get on all
-right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Now that’s mighty decent of you,” said the captain.
-“What’s your name—so there won’t be any hitch about
-sending your man on?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Gordon, sir—Peter Gordon.” And the train rumbled
-on, leaving behind the native of Russia who had been
-detailed as interpreter for Lieutenant Peter Gordon.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The railroad followed old caravan trails into Manchuria
-and Mongolia, over plains and up through mountains
-in which yellow <i>bonzes</i> hid themselves from the world
-on sky-kissing peaks in secret monasteries. Then, winding
-down through the passes, the train traversed the millet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>plains where the conquerors of ancient Tartary and
-China recruited their hordes of warriors—and on into
-the wilderness of Siberia where wolves still ruled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The land was now held in the grip of a desperate cold.
-The wheels whined as they ground along on frosty rails.
-Bridges lay in ruins across rivers, replaced by shaky
-structures of logs that swayed and groaned under the
-weight of the train.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And at every station Peter found mobs of refugees fighting
-to get aboard anything that moved. Some were trying
-to get to Vladivostok, some wanted to go in the opposite
-direction to Perm, or Ufa, or Samara. They
-wanted to get anywhere but where they were. Long
-strings of box cars in the sidings were packed with men,
-women, and children, ragged, filthy, hungry, dying, dead.
-Those alive threshed grain by hand from the rotting piles
-in the fields, or fished in the rivers with wooden spears.
-And there were trains coming back from the front filled
-with human derelicts—in cattle cars festooned with crimson
-icicles!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Yet the people seemed patient in their misery. They
-waited patiently while first one faction rose to power only
-to fall again. And usurpers gambled for power with
-bands of brigands which their leaders called armies. The
-people had destroyed one government. Now they waited
-for some one to create another for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lieutenant Peter Gordon watched day by day in silence.
-At times, his eyes flamed with anger. But he smiled sometimes,
-too, when he mixed with peasants in the station
-restaurants and ate cabbage soup with a wooden spoon.
-For the peasants had many queer and amusing things to
-say about the <i>Americansky</i> after they had assured themselves
-that the stranger could speak but a few words of
-Russian, and understood less. But Peter understood
-enough to know that these peasants were not at all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>friendly to officers, no matter what country they came
-from. They wanted no aristocrats in Siberia, American
-or otherwise. They were going to kill all the aristocrats,
-and be free men. They were not going to leave all the
-land to aristocrats, and pay taxes so that their rulers
-could make slaves of them. Not any more.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>One evening Peter strolled up toward the engine while
-the train was stopped in a station.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“When will we get to Chita?” he asked the engineer.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Are you sure we won’t go through Chita sometime
-to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, not to-night. Not till long after daylight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you,” said Peter, and walked away. The
-Russian engineer stared after the American officer in bewildered
-surprise, for the American officer was speaking
-in perfect Russian. There was something queer about it,
-the engineer knew—but, of course, Americans are educated
-and speak all languages. Still, that was the first
-one the engineer had ever heard who could speak the Czar’s
-Russian—as good as the conductor.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>III<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE FIRING SQUAD</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>AFTER Captain Shimilin’s demand for a million
-rubles for the Ataman Zorogoff, Katerin and
-her father knew that they were no longer safe.
-They had a fortune hidden in the old log house. It consisted
-of packets of Imperial rubles which had been
-smuggled from Kirsakoff’s bank before the looters had
-begun their raids in the city. The soldiers would come
-now and strip the house of all its contents to find the
-money. And if they did find the money, Michael and
-Katerin would be accused of opposing Zorogoff’s government
-and dealt with as many of the friends of the Kirsakoffs
-had already been dealt with—a secret firing
-squad in a prison yard at dawn.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As Michael had said, to surrender the fortune would
-not mean safety. Others had done that, only to be destroyed
-so that no embarrassing claims might be made
-against Zorogoff in the future. Zorogoff was but a brigand
-chief, maintaining an army at the expense of the
-wealthy people in his district and using the peasants and
-former workmen to build up his new autocracy—destroy
-the aristocrats with the workers and then enslave the
-workers who had done the business for him. Thus he
-played the poor against the rich and controlled both.
-And it was his purpose to leave none living who understood
-his aims.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In Michael’s room there was a stove of tile built into
-the wall. It reached to the ceiling, and stuck out into the
-room like the half of a supporting pillar—a great black
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>column faced with blackened zinc sheets of half-cylinders.
-At the bottom was a small iron door to admit the wood,
-with a circular damper through which the flames might be
-seen when there was fire in the stove. But the Kirsakoffs
-did not use this stove. They used their scant supply of
-fuel in the stove in Katerin’s room, not only to conserve
-their heat in the most comfortable room, but to reduce
-the amount of smoke visible from the chimneys outside
-during the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The stove in Michael’s room had been selected as the
-hiding place for the Imperial notes which had been smuggled
-from the bank weeks before. It was Katerin’s idea
-that the packets could be stacked against the tiles on the
-outside of the stove, and the sheets of zinc replaced. And
-unless a fire was maintained in the stove for a time long
-enough to heat the tiles to the danger point, the paper
-money would not be injured. If the Cossacks came to
-search for the money, she planned to light a smoldering
-fire in the stove. And by night, a couple of candles in
-behind some pieces of charred wood, would throw out light
-through the damper so that it would appear that the
-stove was burning.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The packets of rubles were now concealed in a lot
-of discarded peasants’ clothing. The various garments
-had been distributed through the house, but Katerin had
-gathered them in her father’s room, and was ripping them
-open, while Michael was preparing the stove for the money
-by removing the zinc facing against the tiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was the evening of the day on which Shimilin had
-visited them. Katerin was ripping open old gray coats
-which smelled of stables and were covered with patches,
-breeches contrived out of cloth and the old skins of
-animals, uncouth jerkins which had originally been padded
-with cotton against the cold of many long-gone Siberian
-winters.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>The windows were blanketed to keep the candlelight
-from being seen in the street below, and father and daughter
-talked in low tones as they worked, while Wassili and
-the old woman below in the kitchen kept a sharp watch
-against intruders.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael stood on a bench and worked out the screws
-which held the zinc plates in place against the wall. It
-was now so cold in the room that his breath showed white
-in the light of the candles, for they had let the fire in his
-room die early, and the door to Katerin’s room was kept
-closed so that the heat might not escape from it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Be careful lest the metal sheets fall and make a clatter,”
-warned Katerin as she stripped open an old coat, and
-released a shower of packets of rubles of large denomination,
-from which the face of the dead Czar smiled up at her
-wistfully from the engraving. The rubles made a colorful
-pile at her feet—blues, crimsons, and yellows, some worth
-a hundred rubles, some worth a thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Now!” said Michael, as he lifted off the top plate.
-“We are ready for the hiding—and my back is nearly
-broken, too. May Zorogoff break his neck if he ever
-finds where it is hidden!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin got to her feet and looked up at the rude clay
-tiles and the stone blocks mortared in behind them. The
-fire did not touch the tiles—they merely retained the
-heat and radiated it slowly into the room. And between
-the stone blocks and the tiles there was an air space, wider
-in some places than in others, so that the thickness of
-the packets of money would have to be gauged for the
-crevices they were to fill.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin began filling the spaces under the zinc plates
-above the stove door. Then the plate above was put into
-place, and the aperture behind it packed with money.
-They worked more than an hour before they had disposed
-of the bulk of the packets. They could hear the calling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>of the sentries in the streets. At times Michael and Katerin
-stopped and listened to the cracking of the frost in
-the timbers of the house, and once they put out the candles
-when they thought they heard the gate to the courtyard
-being opened cautiously. But the noise proved to be
-but a whim of the wind with the boards hanging loosely
-from the roof of the old wagon-shed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When all the zinc plates were back in place, Katerin
-took a piece of candle, and putting charred sticks of
-wood back into the stove, she so arranged the candle that
-when she lighted the wick and closed the iron door, a
-flickering light appeared through the holes in the
-door.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We have a fire in the stove,” she said to her father.
-“Who is to look for paper rubles in a burning stove?
-When the soldiers come to search, you have a fire going
-in an instant. And the wood can burn and not harm the
-rubles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We could not do better,” said Michael. “Your wits
-will save us yet. And that money is all that stands between
-you and beggary—even I, alive, without the fortune,
-could not save you from hunger and cold. There
-is your treasure! It must be saved to you, my daughter,
-at all cost.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I care only for you, my father,” said Katerin.
-“And now you are tired and worn—to bed, for we
-must keep our strength and have our sleep, even though
-disaster crouches in the future.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She kissed him, and went to her own room to get behind
-the blankets which curtained the window and to blow
-a tiny hole in the frost coating the pane. Outside, the
-night was brilliant, with a haloed moon throwing a silvery
-sheen over the glistening plains, with a tree here and there
-doubly black from its shadow on the powdery snow. Out
-in the end of the street the fire of the sentries was burning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>redly. It threw into heavy relief the black forms
-squatting about the glowing coals.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Merciful God!” she whispered in prayer. “Are we
-to be saved? Help must come to us, or we perish!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She closed the blankets and went back to her father’s
-room. She made sure that he was properly covered,
-kissed him tenderly, and took away the candle, for she had
-known him to lie all night smoking cigarettes till the dawn
-by candle light.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In her own room once more, she prayed before the icon,
-and prepared for bed. Worn out with the worry of the
-day and anxiety for what the new day might bring, she
-finally fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But the next day came and went without any word
-or sign from the Ataman that he was dissatisfied with the
-report of Captain Shimilin. Several days passed, and
-still there was nothing to indicate that Zorogoff would
-annoy them again. Michael began to have hopes that
-something would happen which might distract the attention
-of the usurper from them. But every hour they
-lived in expectation of another visit from Captain Shimilin—and
-no news came that the American troops were
-moving up the railroad to give protection to the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael seemed to grow weaker as time passed. He
-fretted under the restraint of what was practically imprisonment.
-He worried constantly about the future for
-Katerin’s sake. He devised many a scheme by which
-they were to escape from the city, only to abandon each
-one when Wassili returned from buying food in the
-market and reported that Zorogoff’s soldiers were guarding
-every outlet from Chita.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Among other plans, Michael had thought of getting
-a droshky or a sledge and attempting to dash through fog
-or darkness, down the line of the railroad to the Manchurian
-border. He thought it might be possible to get
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>into some Manchurian city, or to board a train bound
-toward Vladivostok at some point along the railroad
-which was outside the zone controlled by Zorogoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But while it might be possible to get through the cordons
-of Cossacks around the city, either by eluding them
-or bribing them, Michael knew that he might be betrayed
-before leaving the house at all. To carry out such a
-plan, it would be necessary to take a droshky driver into
-confidence, and though he might accept a large sum in
-payment, he might also betray Michael. For Zorogoff’s
-spies were everywhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Then it was that Captain Shimilin returned to the
-house where the Kirsakoffs were concealed. His soldiers
-came pounding at the gate of the courtyard one day just
-before noon, and the Cossack captain once more faced
-Michael and Katerin in the room with the blue carpet,
-the silver samovar, and the battered candelabra.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin was frankly arrogant now, and he looked at
-Katerin with an air of bold assurance that, no matter
-what she might say, it would be of no avail to her. His
-pair of Mongol soldiers came with him, their eyes hungrier
-than ever for the things in the room. Katerin involuntarily
-pulled her sable coat closer about her when she saw
-the greedy gaze of the precious pair upon it. She had
-decided to be outwardly gracious as long as she could.
-But she was ready to stand out against the demands of
-the Ataman, as expressed by Shimilin, as long as she could,
-and then abide by the consequences.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin entered without a word, threw off his coat,
-and lighted a cigarette. It was plain that his course of
-action was settled, and that he knew perfectly what he
-would do from first to last. And his air indicated that
-he would stand no trifling.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael sat by the table. He had been playing at
-solitaire when Shimilin arrived, and the cards were still
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>spread out on the board. Katerin had agreed with her
-father that she should handle the situation, for the old
-man might be trapped by Shimilin into saying something
-which would be used by the Cossack as an excuse for arresting
-the old general. Zorogoff had his own methods
-for giving a tinge of legitimacy to his unwarranted actions
-and justifying himself in the eyes of his soldiers. And
-Shimilin knew what Zorogoff demanded now.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what have you come for this time?” asked Katerin,
-as Shimilin continued to sit silently and smoke his
-cigarette.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Ataman will take no more excuses,” said Shimilin.
-“I talked with him about you and your father, but
-he would heed neither me nor your protests that you have
-no money for him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You mean that the Ataman expects us to provide a
-fortune for him? And that having taken all we possess,
-you come back wanting more money?” demanded Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is what I have come for. I am sorry that I
-have to put you to the trouble, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps if I should talk to Zorogoff,” suggested
-Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You can only talk to the Ataman with money,” said
-Shimilin. He spoke without belligerency, almost apologetically,
-yet there was no doubt that he was completely
-in earnest.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My answer to that—I am dumb,” said Katerin.
-She sat down near her father, and folded her hands in an
-attitude of helpless resignation.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You know of some of the things that have happened
-here since the Ataman began to rule,” replied Shimilin.
-“I can tell you that the dumb have been made to speak
-for Zorogoff. This is a matter that you would do well
-to consider with great care.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael picked up one of the cards before him, and resumed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>his game, as if what was being said held no interest
-for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin leaned forward from the bench and looked into
-the black eyes of the Cossack.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This is a matter that I have considered,” she said
-slowly. “I have given thought to it much longer than
-you suppose—and I have considered that you, who are
-a Cossack, might even kill Russians by order of a Mongol
-chief. I am wondering if you have thought of that, Captain
-Shimilin, and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin sprang to his feet, his face flushed and his
-eyes menacing.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take care what you say about the Ataman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, yes,” she said. “I also understand what you
-seek. It is to have it to say that we insult the Ataman.
-If calling him a Mongol is an insult, that is his affair—we
-only speak the truth, and if the truth be against him
-as he sees it and he resents it, we have nothing to do with
-that. I am not making little of him for his blood or his
-race. There have been many great men among his people,
-and he is of royal line. But it is to you, Captain Shimilin,
-that I am speaking. My father and I have always
-been friends of the Cossacks. Now you put a Mongol
-into power here. Do you expect him to give you what
-we Russians have always given you? The rank of free
-men? Even our Czar was Ataman of all the Cossacks.
-Have you not learned to rule in your own way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As Katerin went on, her confidence grew. She saw that
-there was shame as well as anger in Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We Cossacks held up the throne on the ends of our
-lances,” said Shimilin doggedly. “We have our own master
-now, and we ask no advice from you or your father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Your own master?” Asked Katerin with gentle irony.
-“If you are your own masters—why not a Cossack?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>“This is our country, and we shall rule it as we wish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“As you wish now? And how long before the Mongol
-will be ready to dispense with Cossack lances and turn
-your country, as you call it now, over to those who are
-closer to him in blood?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You forget,” raged Shimilin, “that the Ataman protects
-you—and that you must give him help with money,
-as there is none in your family who can aid him with a
-sword!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Tribute or death!” cried Katerin. “Is that protection?
-And if a Russian cannot pay, the Mongol gets
-a Cossack to kill us! Do you think that if I could wear
-a sword I would take service under Zorogoff at those terms—and
-help to destroy my own race?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Your father ruled here with the help of Cossacks,”
-retorted Shimilin. “We paid for the bread of majesty
-with our lives and our service—and killing Russians is
-no new business for us—eh, Michael Kirsakoff? How of
-that, old one? Did we not get well schooled in killing
-Russians in your time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True!” cried Michael, turning to look at Shimilin.
-“But you were in the service of Russians. Think well
-of that. And those you killed broke the law, or had
-killed in their own turn, with their hand lifted against
-their fellow Russians or against the throne. The law is
-the law and justice is justice. Men are not all just, as
-we were not always just. But what law have we broken
-here in this house against your Ataman, that you should
-threaten us because we have no fortune?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin gave no reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you see no difference between the Czar and a
-Mongol princeling?” asked Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin turned to his soldiers. “Wait outside for
-me,” he commanded with a gesture of dismissal. “I will
-call you when you are needed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>The two men with rifles went outside and closed the
-door behind them.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin sat down again in an effort to compose himself.
-“I did not wish my men to hear the Ataman insulted,”
-he began. “I have come here by order of Zorogoff
-to take your money—all of it. It is only to be a
-loan and you will lose nothing in the end. This is my
-advice—give your money to me. I will promise you
-safety.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He was frankly conciliatory. It appeared that he
-wished to cover his chagrin over what Katerin and her
-father had said and to put himself in a better light with
-them by a tacit agreement with them that he had no stomach
-for the business.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And if we had money and we gave it,” said Katerin,
-“how do we know that we would not be destroyed to hide
-the debt, as has happened to others?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then it is that you do not trust Zorogoff,” said
-Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin laughed lightly. “Those who have trusted
-him are dead. He has taken fortunes before—and then
-the firing squad. What need has he to destroy us? We
-should be safe because we are poor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin glanced at the door. He leaned forward and
-whispered, “Then trust me. Turn over your money to
-me—and I promise safety. On my word as a Cossack!
-Come!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael turned quickly and looked at Shimilin in surprise,
-but Katerin gave her father a glance of caution.
-She suspected that Shimilin was trying to trap
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You must trust us, Captain Shimilin. We have no
-fortune for Zorogoff or any other man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin scowled in disappointment, and seemed to have
-more to say, but evidently thought better of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>“You will have a glass of tea with us,” said Michael.
-“My house is poor, but no man goes from it without——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No!” shouted Shimilin. “I will not have it from
-you. You do not trust me!” and he stepped to the door
-and flung it open. The two soldiers came back into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Kirsakoff, you must go with these men,” said Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What!” cried Michael. “I am to go? Where am
-I to go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Before the Ataman. It is his orders,” said Shimilin
-quietly, and folded his arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Does this mean that my father has been arrested?”
-gasped Katerin, staring in horror at the Cossack.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Call it what you like,” grunted Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But arrested for what? For being poor? You mean
-that my father is to be taken away by soldiers and no
-charge is made against him?” pressed Katerin, now aware
-that disaster had come.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Get ready to go, and say no more, Kirsakoff,” said
-Shimilin. “I shall stay here with your daughter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I shall go with my father,” insisted Katerin, doing
-her best to conceal the agony which possessed her.
-She knew that if her father were taken she might never
-see him again. “Please! I shall go with my father!
-Surely, there can be nothing against my going.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have no fear,” said Shimilin. “Zorogoff wishes to
-talk with your father, that is all. No harm will come to
-him. And I shall see that no harm comes to you here
-while we wait. It will be better for you, and easier for
-your father if you do not make any trouble about it.
-You will only have to submit in the end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall go,” said Michael, rising unsteadily to his
-feet. “I have no wish to oppose the Ataman if he desires
-to talk with me. Come, my daughter—fetch me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>my coat and my cap. The sooner this is over, the sooner
-we shall know what the Ataman expects of me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin hesitated, scanning the face of Shimilin as if
-hunting out some secret motive behind the taking of her
-father from her. Then with sudden resolution she went
-and brought her father’s cap and coat from his room, and
-put them on him with loving care. When she had pulled
-the fur cap down about the old general’s ears, she threw
-her arms about his neck and kissed him, her heart torn
-with anguish at the parting, but determined not to give
-way to her fears and doubts before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God go with you and may you return to me soon,”
-she said. “And do not worry for me, my father.” She
-smiled at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And God be with you, Katerin Stephanovna, the
-brave one,” said Michael. Then turning to Shimilin, he
-said, “I am ready to obey your commands and I submit
-myself to your soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take Michael Kirsakoff to the Ataman,” said Shimilin
-to his men, and they fell in on each side of Michael.
-Between the two, Michael marched across the room, doing
-his best to keep his weak old legs from betraying the
-unsteadiness of his age. At the door he crossed himself
-twice, and turning back, said to Katerin, “Hope is
-mightier than fear—remember that you are the daughter
-of a soldier and that we do not fear death, but only the
-loss of honor. Think not of me, but of yourself, and
-God’s blessing and mercy upon you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He turned and was gone, leaving Katerin standing with
-folded arms staring at the open door through which he
-had passed. Her face was white, her lips drawn tightly
-together. She remained thus, listening to the footfalls of
-her father and of the soldiers going down the stairs.
-When she could hear them no more, Wassili came up and
-peered in at the door, his eyes full of terror, and by his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>look silently questioning the truth of the scene he had
-just witnessed below.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“See that the doors are properly closed, Wassili,” said
-Katerin, and the <i>moujik</i> went below again. She walked
-to a bench and sat down facing the stove, partly turned
-away from Shimilin who stood in the center of the room.
-She ignored his presence, but sat watching the flames
-dancing inside the stove behind the iron door, her hands
-gripped together in her lap.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin walked to the window and smoothed away the
-frost to look into the courtyard and the street. Soon he
-turned from the window and looked at Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You may as well tell me where the money may be
-found,” he said. “There is nothing to be gained by keeping
-it—and much to lose. I gave you your chance, but
-you preferred to trust Zorogoff. You would not give it
-to me—Zorogoff will take it. Where is the money to be
-found?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Where?” she asked, speaking as if in a dream, and
-not looking at him. “Where is the money to be found?
-That is a question.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I do not enjoy this business,” said Shimilin, cajolery
-in his voice. “If you would trust me——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I trust only in God,” she said. “We trusted the
-Cossacks and they have turned against us. We are in
-your hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin walked across the room, passing behind Katerin,
-and drew a glass of water from the samovar and
-poured into it some tea from the pot on the top of the
-samovar. He stood examining the things on the table,
-drinking the hot tea noisily.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There came the sharp crack of a board being broken in
-the courtyard below. Katerin turned her head in an attitude
-of listening, startled by the noise, and conscious
-that its meaning might hold some import of terrible significance.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>She had supposed that her father had gone
-from the house with the soldiers. She stood up to go to
-the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin stepped quickly in her way. “You are not to
-look out,” he said calmly. “All that you are to do is
-to tell me where the money may be found. Why do you
-make all this trouble about it? I tell you it is bad. You
-could be happy and gay if you would trust me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps you will have another glass of tea,” suggested
-Katerin. She returned to the bench and sat down
-to mask her worry over the noise she had heard in the
-court.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you wish to see your father again?” asked
-Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin looked at him, unable to conceal the swift terror
-which struck at her heart with the Cossack’s words.
-He returned her look with steady eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I wish to see my father again, if it be God’s will,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Zorogoff is God,” said Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She gave no reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I warn you—you must submit to Zorogoff’s will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Still she gave no answer. The frost from the upper
-part of the window had melted away in the heat of the
-room, and the ridge of ice across the bottom of the panes
-was dripping water to the floor, like the ticking of a
-clock.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin turned to the fire again. Her face was drawn
-as if she were crying but her eyes were free from tears
-and she made no sound.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There came the sound of dull thuds from the courtyard.
-Something was striking frozen ground with regular blows,
-and soon could be heard the sharp rasping of metal on
-stone.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin moved as if she would get up to look out of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>window, but seeing Shimilin standing in front of her as
-if he intended to block the way, she sank back on the
-bench. Her terror grew as she began to understand the
-meaning of the sounds outside.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is that?” she whispered to Shimilin. “Tell
-me! What is happening?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come and see for yourself,” said Shimilin, and moved
-aside so that she might pass to the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She got up and started to cross so that she might look
-out. But she had not gone half the distance, when she
-stopped at hearing Wassili screaming below stairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Mistress! Mistress! The soldiers are——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Wassili’s cries were checked. There were sounds of
-a scuffle, followed by harsh warnings from soldiers that the
-<i>moujik</i> must be still.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin ran to the window. As she looked below, she
-gave a gurgling cry as if she had been struck in the
-mouth, and put her hands up to her face to shut out the
-sight of what she saw. For below in the courtyard her
-father was working with a shovel and throwing up broken,
-frozen, brown earth. A soldier was breaking the ground
-with a pick. And about the workers stood a large group
-of soldiers with their rifles, watching Kirsakoff dig a
-grave!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin backed away from the window, sobbing, and
-threw herself upon a bench.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You submit to Zorogoff or you die—both of
-you!” said Shimilin. “There is yet time to save your
-father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin stood up and faced Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have betrayed us!” she cried. “There is no
-truth in you, you are not worthy of trust! Death is
-better than life where there is no honor, no truth, no
-faith in any man!” She turned her back upon the Cossack,
-and held out her arms to the icon of the Virgin
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Mother. “Mercy on the soul that goes to greet you—mercy,
-mercy, oh Mother of God!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A whistle broke shrilly on the cold air outside. Shimilin
-leaped at Katerin, and grasping her by the shoulders,
-swung her round and thrust her at the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Look!” he commanded. “If you can be so stubborn!
-Look, and see if you still wish to disobey the
-orders of the Ataman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin saw her father standing with his back to the
-old wall of the court and six soldiers before him with
-their rifles upraised and aimed at the old general.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She fell back against Shimilin, half fainting, but recovering
-herself, staggered away from the window and
-fell upon her knees, her head bent toward the icon, moaning
-prayers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Your father can be saved,” warned Shimilin.
-“Would you send him to execution? Tell me where the
-money is hidden—or when I lift my hand to the window,
-the soldiers will fire!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We are ready for death. I commend my soul and
-the soul of my father to God! Better death than life
-under the cruelty of a Mongol and the treachery of our
-Cossacks!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You will not trust me,” said Shimilin. “I could
-save you both. Fools! I am ready to risk my own life
-to save you, yet you will not believe!” He raised his
-hand to the window.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>IV<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE PLACE OF THE VOW</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>A&nbsp;NEW conductor boarded the train in the
-night. He was a big fellow, with a body round
-as a bear’s and covered with many coats. He
-wore a big sheepskin cap, and carried a smoking lantern
-which was made of tin and was square, with a red circular
-glass in one side, a blue one in the other, and white ones
-on opposite sides. He held the lantern aloft and studied
-the sleepers on the shelves, making rainbows in the dim
-light of the car as he turned his prismatic lantern.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Snicking the ice from his whiskers, he waited till the
-train moved out again, when he promptly lay down in the
-passage between the sleeping-shelves and began snoring
-into the red light of the lantern on the floor beside him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lieutenant Peter Gordon, who was on a lower shelf,
-was awake with the first glimmer of gray light through the
-frosted windows. And as he looked out upon the floor
-of the car, he was startled by the sanguinary face of the
-new conductor in the red glow of the lantern as it rattled
-with the jolting of the car. Peter studied the queer figure
-prone on the floor, and observed the booted feet stretched
-out toward the cold stove in the corner.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Before long the conductor sat up, rubbed his eyes and
-yawned a chasm of a yawn. He dug into his clothing
-with a burrowing motion of his arm and brought forth
-through many strata of coats a watch fit for a giant. He
-put it to his ear, tilting his great cap to one side, and listened
-to the ticking. Then he squinted at it in the red
-light, and having assured himself that the new day had
-arrived on time, he buried the watch somewhere in Pliocene
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>recesses and hove himself to his feet and attempted to look
-out of the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There was a remnant of candle stuck to the dirty window-sill
-by its own frozen cataract of tallow. The conductor
-fumbled for a match, struck it, and lighted the
-candle. The heat from its flame began to melt a widening
-oval in the frost. The jumping flame revealed more
-of the interior of the car—rifles hanging to the walls
-and rattling against the boarding with every lurch of the
-train, shoes hung on nails, garments swinging from the
-upper shelves, bare feet sticking out from blankets, outlandish
-bundles tied with bits of rope and twisted cloths,
-cartridge belts toothed with the brass tops of cartridges.
-And above the complaints of the laboring train could be
-heard the snores and sleep-mutterings of the Czech soldiers—men
-of an improvised army which had fought its way
-across Siberia and was now on the back trail to fight
-again that their comrades might be saved from annihilation
-by treacherous enemies.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The conductor studied the frozen wilderness through
-the window. Having satisfied himself with the landscape,
-he stared at the cold stove. He took the big ax which
-braced the door of the car shut and attacked a chunk of
-wood on the floor with crashing blows. With the splinters
-split off he started a fire and dumped in slabs of Manchurian
-coal, which crackled like a line of musketry and threw
-out into the car ribbons of yellow stifling smoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>All the sleepers began to cough as the smoke penetrated
-the car. Soon there was a chattering and a rattling of
-mess gear, and some one at the other end of the car
-started the other stove—and a counter smoke-screen
-against the conductor’s. Another day had begun in the
-filthy rabbit-hutch of a car. And the gallant Czechs,
-content to endure their Valley Forge of Siberia, chanted
-the songs of their homeland.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>Peter threw off his blankets and sat up. The conductor
-smiled at him and reached Peter’s boots up to him
-from the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The fire will make it warm soon,” he said, not knowing
-that Peter was an American officer and not supposed
-to understand or speak Russian.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How soon will we get to Chita, my friend?” asked
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“To Chita? Oh, soon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And how soon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps half an hour. But you are going to Omsk?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Only to Irkutsk,” said Peter. He broke the ice in his
-canvas bucket and washed his face, while the conductor
-looked on awe-struck at any person who could be so mad
-as to wash in ice water. He scanned Peter’s tunic, which
-hung from the shelf.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Are you Czech?” he asked finally.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, I am an American—an officer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The conductor opened his mouth wide and crossed himself
-with both hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But you speak Russian,” he said. “It is not right
-that you should speak Russian like a Russian and be an
-American!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am really Russian,” said Peter. “But it is that I
-have been in America a long time. I came from Petersburg,
-and now I have come back to help Russia to be
-free. Do you know Chita well?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I? Yes, a little. My wife’s cousin died there in the
-time of the pestilence. He was a fur-hunter, but he was
-a stingy. I am not sorry that he died. He ate much
-when he came to see us, and never had an extra kopeck
-for the children.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who is the governor of Chita now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The conductor gave a snort of disgust. “How could
-there be a governor in this time of freedom? That is the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>old way. But we are free men now, as good as anybody.
-Am I not as good as an officer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Better,” said Peter. “But there was a governor in
-the old days. Every place had a governor for the Czar.
-You know that as well as I, my friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, I know it. But what does it matter now?
-This is not the old time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There was a prison in Chita—or was there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, there was a prison. A big one on a hill. You
-shall see it in time as we come to the city. But it is empty
-now, and the devil may live in it for all I care.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have heard that there was a Colonel Governor in
-Chita with one eye. He lost the other in a fight with a
-tiger, but he killed the tiger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Poosh!” said the conductor. “That is somebody’s
-vodka-story. I have been on the railroad from the time
-it began, and I never heard of any Colonel Governor who
-killed a tiger, or who had one eye. The last governor at
-Chita was named Kolessow, and he had a bad leg, not a
-bad eye. He ran away when the revolution came. Before
-that was Kirsakoff, and I can tell you Kirsakoff had
-both his eyes. I never saw him—and a good thing, too,
-or——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There never was a governor here named Kirsakoff,”
-said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No!” cried the conductor. “You have been in foreign
-lands, but you know more than I about this, do you?
-I say that there was a governor—Michael Alexandrovitch,
-and a general!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps I am wrong after all. Forgive me. But I
-had forgotten, because Kirsakoff went to Odessa.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps he did. I don’t know,” said the conductor.
-“Are you looking for him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, no,” said Peter. “I am looking for my brother.
-All I know is that my brother was in a place where a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>Colonel Governor with one eye lived—the fellow who had
-a fight with a tiger. But it was not Kirsakoff, surely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said the conductor. “It could not be he. So
-you have lost your brother? It is always the same story.
-Since we got freedom everybody is lost. I have not had
-my pay for six months, and I have seven children living
-and my wife is sick. My children cannot eat freedom,
-but it is the capitalists who are keeping us poor. In the
-old days I had a cow. And now the Americans have come.
-It is said that they want to steal our railroad and take
-our work away from us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is a lie,” said Peter. “The Americans are your
-friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What kind of friend comes to steal your work? I
-don’t know anything about politics, but my children have
-nothing to eat but cabbage. I know that, and they know
-it. I think it was better with the Czar. These fellows
-who come and talk politics—they are smart men—and
-good men. They gave us a lot of rubles. But with freedom
-it costs a hundred rubles for a loaf of bread, and I
-get no pay. And those fellows who talked politics ate
-my cow, and nobody wants the rubles they gave me.
-What kind of business is that? Not to take rubles after
-my cow has been eaten!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter shook his head, helpless for an answer, and finished
-his dressing. He went out on the platform between
-cars. The cold air assailed him witheringly, for it was
-more than sixty degrees below zero that morning. He
-pulled the fur strap of his cap across his nose and leaned
-out from the car steps to scan the snow-streaked plain.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In the distance were low hills covered with sparse
-fringes of pines and larches. At the base of the hills,
-huddled against them like a flock of sheep seeking shelter,
-were primitive huts of the aboriginal Buriats, and stray
-Mongol herdsmen in winter quarters.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>The train made a detour on temporary trackage to get
-round the wreck of a bridge that had been blown up. The
-little river was frozen and peasants were cutting a hole
-in the ice to get water for a pair of scraggly little Siberian
-ponies with coats of long frost-covered hair and
-icicles hanging from their nostrils. The men stopped to
-watch the train go past, and flailed their bodies with their
-arms to keep warmth in their blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Once more the slowly moving train changed direction
-and drew near to low hills ahead, their crests serrated by
-timber and their sides slashed with snow which was held
-in the frozen water courses. As it rounded these hills
-and ran in through a low pass, a city of bizarre appearance
-was unmasked. It lay in a great cup between hills—in
-a wide valley, level as a plain.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>At first sight the city looked more like the smoldering
-ruin of a vast settlement that had recently been destroyed
-by fire. Rising from a sea of small huts was what appeared
-to be a forest of gigantic white fungi—columns
-of ivory smoking from the tops, or some poisonous growths
-like giant toadstools, or a land filled with tiny craters
-from which rose gray fumes that spread high in air into
-motionless clouds. These queer pillars were nothing but
-smoke rising from the buildings of the city and the warm
-air from chimneys rising straight up in the still, frigid
-air.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Through the pillars of steam and smoke could be seen
-taller buildings, and here and there minaretlike spires
-lifted out of the ruck, and catching the morning sun, reflected
-the light with tints of gold and bluish green. And
-there were great blue domes marking the synagogue, while
-a cross and a crescent glinted with gilt from the top of a
-Moslem mosque. The old exile settlement of Chita—the
-Valley of Despair—had grown to a city and filled
-the plain.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>On the slopes of the hill above, Peter saw a great yellowish
-stockade built of upright logs which enclosed low,
-rambling buildings. The sun flashed from tiny windows
-which were smaller than the gun ports of a frigate, or
-where the tiny windows were broken there were black holes
-like eye sockets in a skull. Many stubby chimneys built
-of stone gave the low buildings the appearance of castellated
-walls. But no smoke issued from the chimneys.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In contrast with the smoking city below, the place of
-the stockade seemed to be deserted. The scant snow all
-about it was unbroken by any path, showing that if there
-was a road leading to the stockade, it was not in use.
-The yellow color of the walls suggested an unhealthiness—a
-place shut away from the population of the city.
-The lines of the place were clearly etched upon the slope
-like the skeleton of some monstrous animal which had
-died upon the dreary and deserted hillside. And it was a
-dead thing—the wreck of the old prison of the Valley
-of Despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The train puffed into the station. The platform was
-thronged with a surging mob of people making a mad
-clamor to get into the cars filled with soldiers. They
-pleaded to be allowed to ride to any place, but there was
-no room for them in the stifling train and the Czechs refused
-to allow the refugees aboard. So they gathered up
-their pitiful belongings and swarmed back into the station
-out of the cold to wait for other trains which might take
-them away.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter gathered up his blanket-roll and his bag and
-slipped out of the car. He got a porter at the station,
-a big <i>moujik</i> in a dirty white apron, to take the things to
-a droshky in the square.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Once free of the mob, and with the station between
-him and the train, Peter looked across the square. Some
-soldiers were drilling in the open place—short chaps, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>heavy build and awkward movements, learning to march
-and countermarch under the commands of Cossack officers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There were many brick buildings of three and four
-stories. But between them were the low, squat log houses
-of old times, battered and unkempt, run-down pioneers
-now relegated to the position of poor relations and long
-neglected.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peasant women trotted round and round their crude
-carts, selling blocks of frozen soup and loaves of black
-bread to refugees from the station. The cold air was
-laden with sour odors. There was a great gabbling between
-buyers and sellers. The women and men kept running
-round in circles for warmth, their breath bearding
-them with steam from their nostrils. To the half-clad
-and hungry, merely keeping alive in such cold was an
-agony.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A group of boys with tattered newspapers gathered
-about Peter, noting his furs and his brown field-boots
-with curious eyes. These boys were wrapped with long
-woolen scarfs, and wore uncouth clothes and men’s boots
-long since thrown away by the original owners—boots
-lacking soles except for rags bound round the feet. If
-the lads stood still for but a minute, it was to shiver
-violently, so they kept jumping up and down like marionettes
-moved by a string. Peter’s eyes filled with tears at
-the sight of them, and he threw them a handful of paper
-rubles and kopecks that they might have hot cabbage
-soup.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Poor little chaps!” he said, and, getting into a
-droshky, told the <i>iswostchik</i> to drive to the best hotel.
-The horses broke into a gallop at once, straight across the
-square, and it was then that Peter noticed an ancient
-building in the line of the street ahead. It was built of
-logs in the old style.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>“Is that the old post-house?” he shouted to the driver.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, that is it,” said the driver.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then stop! In front of the post-house!” cried Peter,
-slapping the driver on the back with a lusty thump.
-“Turn, please—and stop!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But it is a restaurant now,” said the driver.
-He seemed bewildered, but he swung his horses into the
-street before the old building and brought them up
-abruptly, muttering in his whiskers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You said to go to a hotel, and this is a restaurant,”
-he complained. “How am I to know what you want,
-when you say two different things to me about where you
-want to go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I wish to stop here but a minute,” said Peter. He
-jumped out of the droshky, and, standing in the street,
-looked up and down its length, and turned to survey the
-old post-house. Sure enough, the sign over it said it was
-a restaurant, and through the tops of the partly clear
-windows he could see the gaudy colors of curtains hanging
-within.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Sofistkaya!” whispered Peter. “I would never
-have known it.” He studied the square, the big white station,
-and the buildings of the street. He walked through
-the loose sand to a spot directly in front of the door of
-the old post-house, but well out from it, and crossed himself
-twice with both hands in the old way.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He looked down at the sand and dirty snow.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Blood of my father!” he whispered. “I have come
-back to keep the vow! I pray that I am not too late—that
-Kirsakoff still lives!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He stood there a few minutes, the tears streaming
-down his cheeks and freezing on the flesh. He uttered
-prayers, and then strode back to the droshky, entered it,
-and was once more rolling up the Sofistkaya.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>V<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE ATAMAN’S DECISION</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_7 c022'>WHEN Captain Shimilin raised his hand to the
-window, there was a sharp command in the
-courtyard below, followed by the crash of a
-volley from the rifles of the soldiers Katerin had seen
-standing before her father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin, kneeling in front of the icon, fell forward upon
-the floor at the sound of the volley. Shimilin, still at the
-window, stood gazing across the room at her, a puzzled
-look upon his face, as if he did not know what to do
-next. He heard Wassili wailing in the kitchen below,
-and from the court came the sounds of metal being thrust
-into flinty soil and laughter and joking comments from
-soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin lay still for several minutes. Then she sat up,
-and stared at Shimilin as if she had just been awakened
-from a dream and was still in doubt about her surroundings
-and why she should be there.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is finished,” said Shimilin. “Your father is dead.
-I am sorry for you, but the Ataman must be obeyed. If
-you will give up the money now, I will protect you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She did not answer him, but continued to stare at him,
-attempting to grasp what had happened.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have killed my father!” she whispered, putting
-her hands up to her cheeks. “You have killed my father!
-And now you want me to pay you for it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is Zorogoff who has killed your father,” said
-Shimilin. “I obey his orders—as you must.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He walked over to Katerin and held out his hand to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>help her to her feet. But she evaded him, and stood up.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are a murdering dog,” she said quietly, hatred
-and revulsion in her look as she shrank away from him.
-“You lied to us—and you lie now! You are no better
-than the Mongol—worse than Zorogoff, for he would not
-kill his own kind for you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take care!” he warned, moving toward her threateningly.
-“Take care! My soldiers are still below.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She cried out with rage against him, and sprang at
-him and struck him in the face with her open hand. Then
-she threw up her arm and whirled away from him, to run
-behind the screen of her bed as if to get a weapon. But
-Shimilin grasped her by the shoulders and pulled her back
-into the center of the room. She tore away from him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Kill me!” she cried. “There is nothing left in life
-for me now. Kill me, too!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, I will not kill you,” said Shimilin suavely. “We
-do not kill women like you too soon, Katerin Stephanovna.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are swine!” she raged. “You told us my father
-was to go to the Ataman. Talk to me no more, but kill
-me here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin said nothing, but stood looking at her with
-every sign of being on the verge of complying with her
-command. But he did not put hand to pistol. Instead,
-he shrugged his shoulders and smiled, went to the bed
-behind the screen and pulled off a blanket. He threw it
-to her but she let it fall upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take the blanket,” he said gruffly. “You may have
-death if you want it, but not by my hand. Take the
-blanket and come with me to the soldiers below.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin kicked the blanket aside.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I do not fear the cold any more than I fear death,”
-she said quietly, and moved to the door. “Come! I will
-show you how a Russian woman can die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>Shimilin followed her down the stairs to the hall below.
-The old woman in the kitchen who did the cooking was
-crying in a room beyond the kitchen, out of sight. Katerin
-felt impelled to call a farewell to the old woman, and
-to Wassili, but she refrained because she suspected that
-the two servants might protest to the soldiers and draw
-ill treatment and probably death.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>So she passed down the hall and out through the
-double doors into the courtyard. The place was full of
-soldiers, and her eyes lit at once upon a pile of fresh,
-brown earth near the wagon-shed. That, she knew, was
-her father’s grave. She walked straight to the mound,
-and stopping beside it, turned and faced the soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The heavily clad men stood about with their rifles, looking
-like great beetles, their heads topped with big caps,
-their faces wrapped in fur or rags, their bodies rotund
-with many garments, and the breath from their nostrils
-making what might have been inverted white horns as the
-air they breathed out turned to steam and spurted out
-from their faces behind the straps over their noses. They
-were not in ranks, these men, but gathered in groups as
-if waiting for some one to tell them what they should do
-next.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Captain Shimilin followed Katerin halfway across the
-yard, where he stopped to speak to a tall soldier in a long
-coat. The pair talked together quietly, looking at Katerin.
-Shimilin carried a towel which he had snatched up
-as he had passed out of the hall. He whipped the towel
-against his coat while he talked with the other soldier,
-and it was plain that the Cossack was in bad humor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin glanced at the spade and the old pickax which
-had been cast aside from the mound of earth. She lifted
-her eyes to the upper windows of the house. Then she
-threw open her sable coat, revealing the dull crimson of
-her velvet gown and the white of her throat. Gray and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>white and crimson, she made a striking picture against
-the dull background of the old buildings. The morning
-breeze which whipped in gustily over the courtyard wall
-and rattled the dead vines along its top, lifted wisps of
-her hair about her ears. The cold tortured her, but she
-gave no indication of her suffering. She looked like a
-beautiful flower which had grown in a drab garden now
-infested by wild things which had broken in for destruction
-and hated all things beautiful.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She let her hands fall to her sides. The cold was numbing
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am ready!” she called to Captain Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Cossack moved to her, and held out the towel. “I
-shall cover your eyes so that you shall not see the rifles,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Please do not touch me,” she begged. “It is all I
-ask. Let them shoot!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The soldier who had been talking to Shimilin walked up
-to Katerin and peered into her face. His features were
-concealed by a strap of fur. Katerin knew by his manner
-that he must be an officer, though he wore no insignia.
-After a casual glance at him, she looked beyond him and
-fixed her gaze upon the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you understand that you can save your life if you
-will follow the advice of Captain Shimilin?” asked the
-stranger.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I do not seek the advice of Captain Shimilin—nor
-any other person,” said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You prefer to die?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have done with life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You talk like a brave woman,” went on the stranger.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, be done! I am cold!” said Katerin. She noted
-that a group of soldiers had fallen into line before her,
-and that the others about the yard gathered closer, regarding
-her with curious eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>The tall officer drew apart again with Shimilin, and they
-carried on a low conversation once more. The men in
-line began to examine their rifles to be in readiness. Both
-Shimilin and the other officer returned and stood before
-her again.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Because your father, General Kirsakoff, was Governor
-here in the old days, is no reason why you should expect to
-oppose the new ruler,” said the officer.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin did not answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The officer threw open his long coat, showing a uniform
-of gray tunic and blue breeches. He pulled the strap
-from his face and revealed the dark face of a Mongol.
-Sparse mustaches fell from the ends of his upper lip,
-clinging to his jowls as they drooped past the side of
-his mouth. His black eyes were set in close to a wide
-flat nose. Yet his face had a proud and serious mien—the
-face of an Asiatic of high degree, the face of a stoical
-and cruel man.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am the Ataman Zorogoff,” he said. “I rule.
-Your father would not loan his fortune to my government.
-That is all I ask of you. I give you your choice—submit
-or die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin looked at him scornfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am nobody,” she said. “I submit only to God and
-the saints of heaven. I do not recognize your right to
-rule, even though you take my life. Tell your brave
-soldiers to shoot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff laughed harshly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have the spirit of the devil, mistress.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Speak of the devil and we see his tail,” retorted
-Katerin, using an old Russian proverb.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are a brave woman,” repeated Zorogoff. “You
-have the blood of good ancestors—a fighting, ruling
-breed—as were mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My ancestors have never feared death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>“Do you know that I am a prince in Mongolia?”
-asked Zorogoff tartly. He seemed nettled by Katerin’s
-way of looking at him, rather than by her scornful words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I do not doubt it, sir. And you belong there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah! Is that true? Though your father is governor
-no longer, you still tell people where they belong. My
-people ruled this land before your people came, and once
-more we shall rule. But if you will give up your money
-to the government, in time you shall have it back. My
-soldiers need food and clothing. What is your answer,
-mistress?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A tremor of cold shook Katerin’s body. The air was
-stifling her, and she was chilled till she no longer felt
-pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Death!” she answered through quivering lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff turned to Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The better the horse the worse his bite,” said the
-Ataman. “But once he is broken, you have a good horse.
-I do not want to kill a woman so brave as this one.”
-Turning to Katerin, he went on, “Your sons would know
-how to rule, mistress.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I leave no sons,” she said, now too chilled to care or
-perceive what the Ataman’s meaning might be.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I was thinking of what your sons might be like,”
-went on Zorogoff. “Do not be too sure about sons.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin gave a cry of agony. She knew now what
-Zorogoff meant—and she feared now that she might not
-die after all. She looked at Zorogoff, as he stood before
-her, peering into her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Kill me!” she cried, and then realizing that unless
-she angered him by insults, he might not give the order to
-the soldiers, she spoke with infinite loathing, loud enough
-so that the soldiers might hear. “You are a lowborn
-dog! Your mother was a scullion and your father a
-mover of dead bodies! You are neither Cossack nor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>Mongol, but vermin from mud huts and a disgrace to both
-white and yellow!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah!” said Zorogoff. “Now I know that there is
-fear in you, and fear for what, my lady! You prefer
-the rifles to a palace. What if I should give you the fate
-you dislike?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Go to the market place for your women, you swine!”
-cried Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Ataman stepped aside and beckoned Shimilin after
-him. “Let us see how brave she is,” whispered Zorogoff,
-and he made a gesture to the men with the rifles. The
-muzzles lifted promptly and the men took aim at
-Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I will show you who rules now,” called Zorogoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And I will show you how a woman of the nobility
-can die, lowborn one!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Fire!” commanded Zorogoff, throwing up an arm in
-a gesture of command.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But the rifles did not speak, though they remained leveled
-at Katerin. She began a prayer, gazing steadily
-into the muzzles which faced her, and waiting for the impact
-of the bullets.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Seconds passed. They became minutes. Katerin
-closed her eyes against the cold. After a wait she opened
-her eyes again and eight rifles still pointed straight at
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Shoot!” she pleaded. “Please shoot!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She closed her eyes once more. The minutes passed,
-and Katerin’s body wavered, swayed, and she collapsed
-in a faint across the fresh mound of earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take her up and carry her into the house,” commanded
-the Ataman. “She is a brave woman—but
-stubborn. She shall submit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The soldiers picked Katerin up and carried her through
-the hall to the kitchen. Wassili and the old serving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>woman began to scream, thinking that their mistress had
-been killed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff and Shimilin walked out of the yard and into
-the street. Shimilin whistled on his fingers. Soon the
-troika of the Ataman swung out of a side street and the
-horses came galloping up. There were three men in the
-troika—two soldiers—and Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Where is my daughter?” demanded the old general.
-“What have you done with her? Does she still live?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You will find her inside the house,” said Shimilin.
-“She is not dead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God is good,” said Michael, at once careful of his
-words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Go back to your house,” said Zorogoff, “and wait till
-I return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So?” asked Michael. “And why do you return?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You shall know then. There has been too much talk
-to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael got out of the troika and the Ataman got in
-with Shimilin. Already the soldiers were marching out
-from the yard, and swinging back into the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take care that you do not leave the house,” warned
-Zorogoff, as Michael stood waiting for the soldiers to be
-clear of the gate. “I do not wish to have you and your
-daughter run the danger of being fired upon by the sentries.
-I wish you both to live as long as God lets you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael, afraid that there was still a trap and that the
-Ataman had no intention of leaving, though he had been
-covered by the robes in the troika and had swathed his
-face and head in furs, did not dare turn his back upon
-the precious pair in the vehicle.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I thank you for your consideration,” said the old
-general. “I thought I was to die, but I still live and my
-daughter is safe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff leaned out and spoke earnestly. “If the cat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>wants a fish, let her wet her feet,” he said. And then
-added with taunting irony, “You are proud of your
-rank and your race, Michael Alexandrovitch—you and
-your daughter hold yourselves superior to a Mongol who
-is of the blood of rulers, and who rules. But I, too, have
-pride. You should know more of me and mine, and to
-that purpose you and your daughter shall live in my
-palace. I go to prepare for you, and you shall both
-live under my roof.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What?” cried Michael. “That is a new string to
-the fiddle! Why should we live in your palace?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So that I may take care of your health, Michael.
-And I shall need your advice in government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My advice in your government! You come with a
-firing squad to kill me and now you talk of taking me to
-your palace! Surely, this is a day of madness, and I do
-not understand!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You will in time,” replied the Ataman. “You have a
-lesson to learn. It is that you must not hold yourselves
-superior to Mongol princes. For your grandchildren,
-Michael, are to be Mongols, and you and your daughter
-shall hold them in your arms. You both shall love them—though
-they be of Mongol blood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff spoke to the driver and the horses galloped
-away, leaving Michael cursing under his breath. Then he
-ran into the yard as fast as his cold-stiffened legs could
-carry him, and entered the house, calling for Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili burst through the door of the kitchen into the
-hall, and cried out in terror at sight of the master whom
-he supposed to be dead. The <i>moujik</i> fell to his knees,
-crossing himself and making the sign to ward off devils.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Katerin! Katerin!” shouted Michael, as he saw the
-form of his daughter stretched upon an old bench that
-had been turned into a couch. The old serving woman
-was giving her mistress restoratives and attempting to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>warm her—but she fled, screaming, as Michael entered.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin opened her eyes and shivered violently. She
-stared at her father, who stood over her, and then closed
-her eyes again and began to cry. She supposed that she
-was delirious and that her father was not really there.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have they tortured you?” cried Michael. “Oh,
-Katerin Stephanovna, you are spared to me—and I live!
-Look, my daughter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He lifted her up from the bench and kissed her, crying
-to her again and again that he was not dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, God! Thou art good!” she moaned, and then
-she was swept by sobs of joy and fell back upon the bench.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael collapsed upon the floor, and when Wassili and
-the old woman overcame their fears and entered the
-kitchen again they found father and daughter crying
-quietly and clinging to each other consolingly.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>VI<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE PRISON ON THE HILL</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER did not stop at the Hotel Dauria to see
-the room which a sleepy-eyed youth said might
-be had. There was a red-hot stove in the entrance-hall,
-a dirty stairway leading to an upper floor,
-a pair of stuffed bears standing among pots of rubber
-plants, and a few old benches on which in better days the
-droshky-drivers, the fur-hunters and the gossips of the
-city gathered of nights. The front windows were boarded
-up and the place still bore signs of the work of looters—leather
-hinges on the double doors, wall-paper ripped off
-in great gashes which exposed the rough plaster, and
-here and there the mark of a bayonet point or the pock
-marks of wild bullets.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter simply dumped his baggage in the entrance-hallway
-and went out again to pay off the <i>iswostchik</i>. Where
-he went, Peter wanted no one watching, so he set out as
-if on a casual ramble through the almost deserted streets.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He knew the way to the old prison. It would be up the
-Sofistkaya and over the little bridge which spanned the
-frozen stream running through the city. But it was not
-the same old wooden bridge which Peter expected to find.
-It proved to be a sturdy arch of concrete, level and wide.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Some of the buildings near by had been half wrecked or
-burned. One big building was but a shell, a black ruin
-streaked with snow, with the windows out and the interior
-walls revealing old log pillars and a few crazy
-rafters. From a lower window there fluttered a bit of
-curtain, like a distress signal from an abandoned derelict.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>It was the old house of the governor—Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter lingered and studied this building. There were
-few people in the streets, and they paid no attention to
-him, for in his furs there was little about him to mark
-him as a foreign officer, or a soldier at all, for that matter,
-because he wore his pistol under his outer coat in
-such way that he could reach it through a pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Water-carts hauled by ponies passed, bringing water
-from the city wells. They were shrouded in ice. A few
-peasants were on their way to the station bazaar with
-bundles of vegetables or partridges. Chinese trotted
-about with packs on their backs, smugglers in sugar and
-tea, or traders in luxuries brought in by hand over the
-railroad—such luxuries as candles, buttons, cigarettes,
-and salt.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter went on till he could see above him on the hill
-the yellow walls of the old stockade. He mounted the
-slope, but headed as if to pass the prison far below, and
-walking as if he had no other intention than to wander
-up the hill and look back upon the city. He stopped at
-times, and looked behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As he went up the slope he managed to draw in closer
-to the stockade. The old road had no tracks upon it,
-proof that the prison must be deserted. And, in fact, the
-city itself seemed to be deserted as he looked down into
-it from the upper land. Though smoke came from the
-chimneys, the people kept mostly indoors. There was
-an ominous hush in the air, as if the inhabitants were
-afraid to be seen. The forests gave off no sound of
-woodsmen or hunters. Away on the side of the plains
-toward Manchuria Peter could see groups of three and
-four horsemen on patrol. But the Valley of Despair
-seemed like a place in which a pestilence raged, so bare
-was it of living beings except around the station.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The place is accursed!” said Peter, as he stood and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>gazed out over the valley and the city. “After America,
-I know now what this all means. And there is something
-which has brought me back. My father, can it be you?
-Can you know? Have you guided me so that justice may
-be done? I pray that Kirsakoff be still alive!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Peter did know the meaning of it all. Chita was
-a ghastly city built from the weeping of women and the
-curses of men doomed to chains and living deaths in dark
-cells. The very soil reeked with the blood of exiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Peter Gordon, the American, was once more Peter
-Petrovitch Gorekin, the Russian. During the three weeks
-that he had been on the train from Vladivostok, he had
-become more Russian every day. He knew now that the
-Russians were not free, though the throne had been overturned.
-There was still work to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter went on, now straight for the entrance to the
-prison, where he found the heavy gate lying in the snow,
-torn from its iron hinges and covered with the dents of
-logs and rocks which had battered it down.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He entered the prison yard. There were broken tables
-and piles of half burned records among charred logs.
-The sentry platforms had been dragged down from the
-inner wall and made a clutter of wrecked timbers. The
-little windows gaped open and the iron bars across them
-had been bent outward. Fine, hard snow covered the
-wreckage like a powder, gathered here and there in the
-cracks of the stone walks and in the holes where the flat
-stones had been ripped out and overturned.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The place was without life. Yet it seemed to throb
-with life. Peter half expected to find people inside the
-long galleries of the prison buildings, though he knew that
-there could be no living person in such a place of horrors.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The door opening to the inner guardroom was also
-down, a thing of planks strapped together with iron bars.
-It lay askew across the stone threshold, and Peter walked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>over its side. It gave out a dull, hollow sound, which set
-the echoes going through the long inner galleries of the
-cell-wings. A vile odor assailed him as he stepped inside,
-and he shivered.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He knew this place well. There were broken desks here,
-and gun-racks on the walls had been ripped from their
-supports. It was here that he had been taken the morning
-after his father had been cut down by the Cossack
-before the post-house. And Peter saw again in his mind’s
-eye the commandant with the gold bars on his shoulders,
-he heard again the careless questions snapped at him.
-Then he saw himself, a terrified little boy, led down the
-long gallery and thrust into a dark cell.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He pushed on now into the gallery with its battered
-cell doors lying half inside and half outside the cells, some
-swinging crazily on bent hinges, some partly burned and
-lying in bits of charred wood, others splintered and their
-fragments strewn along the stone-floored passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>His feet made dull echoes. There was a sound of
-frightened things scampering into dark holes before him.
-And to Peter it seemed that there were thousands of men
-in the place—men who peered out at him derisively and
-gave long hooting laughs at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was colder inside the prison than outside in the clean
-air—a dark, dank, penetrating cold combined with the
-sickly smell of an old cage in which frozen white shoots of
-growing vegetation killed and preserved by the cold glimmered
-uncannily in the rank air.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He found the cell that had been his—sixth on the
-right side. The big door was swung inward. The stone
-benches inside were black and polished with years of dirt
-and years of being sat upon. The stained log walls were
-covered with thousands of marks which recorded days and
-years spent in the cell by exiles. Among these rows of
-time-keeping scratches were also etched words of hate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>and messages of comfort and the scribbled jeers of men
-who had made a jest of going from such a place to the
-execution yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>One line on the wall caught Peter’s eye under the searching
-beam of his pocket flash light. “God curse Kirsakoff,”
-Peter read. The letter had been formed by his
-own boyish fingers with a nail—fingers stiff with cold.
-He laughed at the sight of it now, and slapped the pistol
-on his hip under his greatcoat. His laugh came back to
-him multiplied a hundred times from the cells of the long
-galleries stretching away in the darkness. The echoes
-sounded like a scornful chorus from ghosts.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He sat down on the stone bench and looked at the dirty
-hole in the door through which food had been passed in
-to him—black bread and greasy soup made from the
-refuse of cabbages. He sat there several minutes, and
-threw his memory back to the days and nights which he
-had spent there buried alive, doubting at times that he existed
-till food was brought and the rats gathered round
-him, squeaking for their share.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Fear gripped him. He sprang up and ran, his boots
-making a clatter over the planks of the broken doors in
-the passage. He gained the prison yard and his whole
-body was laved in a sweat of agony. He got out into the
-open, and stopping an instant to scan the slopes below
-to see if he had been observed or followed, he turned away
-to the left to the fenced-in grove which was the old burial
-ground of the prison.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was in there that his father had been buried, but
-Peter did not know where. A few rotten boards lay upon
-the ground; a few weather-beaten crosses scored and
-twisted out of shape, littered the ground. Peter stood
-with tears in his eyes and looked over the rough ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Peter Petrovitch has come back, my father,” he said.
-And crossing himself, he said a prayer. Then he turned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>and descended the slopes toward the city, bearing off to
-the right and trying to make it appear to any watcher
-that he had been wandering about aimlessly. The
-thought struck him that he had been unwise in going to
-the prison. It might lead to gossip, especially when it
-became known in the city that he was an American. Why
-should an American officer go prowling about the old
-prison of a city which——</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter checked his thoughts in that direction. It
-seemed strange that he should refer to himself as an
-American. America was now very far away, a dim vista
-in his memory, hard to realize, like an old dream faintly
-remembered. It seemed odd that America had receded so
-far into the background of his mind. For was he not a
-Russian? Yes, he knew that he was Russian to the core.
-His Americanism had never been anything but an outer
-shell, a readjustment to new conditions, a learning of new
-things, and a new life. But he had not changed—only
-the clothes upon his back. True, he thought, the clothes
-would serve a purpose. Who would ever suspect that an
-American officer had come to Chita to do what he hoped to
-do? Who would ever suspect that the American lieutenant,
-Peter Gordon, could be Peter Petrovitch Gorekin, the
-son of an unfortunate?</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He entered the city again, this time far to the right of
-where he had gone up the slope, and rambled along the
-Sofistkaya till he came to the old post-house again—the
-restaurant. He went in, and found a few soldiers sitting
-about tables talking and playing games. He took a
-table to himself and when the gypsy girl came for his
-order, he called for vodka. He was chilled by his walk
-on the hill and his spirits were depressed by the prison.
-The liquor warmed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The restaurant was a dirty place. The old plank
-floors were spotted with mud where the ice-balls from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>heels of patrons had melted, and the blackened log rafters
-were cobwebby and sooty. There was an ancient icon in
-the corner. The walls had been partly stripped of a
-moldy old paper so that the yellow plaster showed through
-the gashes. And here, as in the hotel, there were bullet
-craters.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter finished his glass of vodka and went out again.
-He hurried back toward the hotel, but he had not gone
-far when he espied in between two modern buildings and
-well back from the street, an old hut—an <i>isba</i> of the
-old days. He stopped in his tracks and stared at it.
-The building was not more than eight feet square, of
-single story, with a small window under the eaves. There
-was a rude chimney of stones at one end. A sign over
-the door told that cigarettes, matches, and holy cards
-were sold within.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter went in between the two buildings and pushed
-open the low and sagging door of the hut. There was an
-old man sitting on a bench under the window with a newspaper—a
-thin old hulk of a graybeard with a face
-shrouded in white whiskers that were stained yellow about
-his hidden mouth. He wore a tiny black skullcap on his
-head which brought out the bleached whiteness of his
-whiskers and the pallor of his crinkled forehead. His
-hands were tucked in the sleeves of his ragged old coat,
-and he huddled up toward the smoldering fire in the
-ancient fire-pit.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Startled by Peter’s entrance, the old man thrust the
-newspaper behind him quickly. As he got to his feet he
-kicked the paper out of sight behind a box. He stood
-looking at Peter with questioning eyes, knowing that there
-was something strange about the visitor but not being
-able to tell what in the vague light coming through the
-frosted window.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you sell cigarettes here?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>“Yes, I sell cigarettes here,” croaked the graybeard.
-“Is it that you have come for cigarettes to this poor
-place—you, who are dressed in odd clothes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What else should I come for?” asked Peter pleasantly.
-“Do you think I have come to rob you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old one appeared relieved, but he was still on his
-guard.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We never know what a man comes for these days.
-And you are not a man of Chita, I can tell that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What does it matter where I came from, if I pay
-for what I take? Come! Let me see some cigarettes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The graybeard grunted and shuffled across the room to
-a shelf and took down some packets of tin covered with a
-faded paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter looked the room over. It was hard to believe
-that this tiny hut was the place in which he had worked
-with his father. In his memory it had taken on vaster
-proportions, yet in reality it was but a boxlike hovel.
-There was the same old adz-hewn plank bench well polished
-by years of use; the floor near the fire-pit had the
-very depressions worn into the wood by the legs of his
-father’s stitching-frame. And the same stone in the
-chimney on which his father had whetted the leather-knives!
-By that fire-pit Peter had spent many nights
-studying out Russian letters and words in battered almanacs.
-The place still smelled of leather—or Peter
-fancied it did.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Here are cigarettes of the best quality from Harbin,
-<i>gospodeen</i>,” said the old man, proffering a long tin box.
-“I keep them for such as are of the upper class. I must
-pay grease to Chinese for bringing these cigarettes in, and
-if you buy, you will be back for more—and twenty
-rubles for the box.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter sat down on the bench and pretended to examine
-the packet of cigarettes. But he was really looking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>at the little battered samovar on the little wooden
-table. Beside the samovar was a blackened piece of tin
-which was used to transfer hot coals from the fire-pit to
-the samovar. And the rude shelves with their packages
-of “Moscow biscuits,” matches, cigarettes, and holy
-cards for the holidays and the name days of children
-drew Peter’s eyes. The stock in trade was smoke-blackened
-and fly-specked by countless summers and winters.
-And the room reeked with smoke, which made the old man’s
-eyes red and watery.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter saw that the cigarettes were of the cheapest
-grade.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Why do you double the price because I am a
-stranger?” asked Peter. “You know that half a ruble
-would buy these in the old days, and now with the money
-bad, ten is enough for them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God protect us! You speak the Czar’s Russian,
-though you wear a foreign coat! Have you come here
-to buy from me, or to find who is smuggling? There is
-no duty now, true, but I have to pay grease, as I said.
-I would say the same to the Ataman himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I know something about the price of cigarettes,”
-said Peter. He was willing enough to pay the price but
-he knew that reluctance would draw the old man out, and
-that an argument would probably develop an acquaintance
-which might be useful.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But the troubles have come and that makes the price
-high,” whined the old man. “Am I to starve among my
-cigarettes? There are few enough to buy these days, I
-tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I will pay, but you are an old robber,” said Peter,
-going into his pockets and fetching out two ten-ruble
-notes of Imperial money. The old man’s eyes danced,
-for he knew Imperials to be worth twice again the new
-paper money on which his prices were based.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>“Did you come here for a <i>ruganie</i>?” demanded the
-old man, meaning a mutual slandering of each other in
-Russian in which both parties to the argument call names
-of an import so evil as to chill the marrows of respectable
-listeners. “And you! You look like a gentleman.
-From what place have you come?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“From the place I go back to. Have you been in
-Chita long, little grandfather?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I?” asked the old man, stroking his whiskers. “Yes.
-What does it matter? I shall be here all time. See the
-hills outside? My bones shall build them higher,” and he
-broke out into a cackling laugh as if the joke were one
-that he used often and still liked its flavor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You were here in the old days?” pressed Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old one gave Peter a keen look, and sat down on
-the end of the bench, hiding the precious ten-ruble notes
-away somewhere under his arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I? Why not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You were here when the prison was full of unfortunates?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I was here when it was emptied, too,” and he laughed
-again and bent to poke the fire with an old cane. But
-he was getting cautious again, as if he suspected that
-there might be more behind the twenty rubles than he
-had bargained for.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What happened when the prison was emptied? It
-must have been a joyful time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Graybeard made a noise in his throat which might
-have been a chuckle, and turning from the fire stood up
-and straightened his back, to gaze frankly at Peter as
-if to ask why so many questions were being asked. It
-was plain that he disapproved of giving gossip extra
-with what he sold.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You should have been here if you wanted to know,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>“I suppose they killed the soldiers,” went on Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, the unfortunates did not kill the soldiers—except,
-perhaps, the bad soldiers who had been cruel. Were
-not the soldiers made free also by revolution? As well as
-the unfortunates?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” assented Peter. “But the officers? Many
-of the officers were killed, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The square down there by the station,” and graybeard
-threw out his arm and his eyes took on a reminiscent
-look, “the square is full of dead folks—old and
-young, officers and all, rich and poor, high and low,
-witches and holy men. But the unfortunates did not
-harm me. I am Rimsky and the friend of all, though
-many were drunk and did not know who were friends.
-But I got into a potato-cellar till the worst was over,
-though I was stiff in the legs a good month after. But
-I was out in time to see them all go off to Petersburg to
-kill the Little Father, the fools!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Would you have the Czar back? Is that what you
-mean?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I? Why do you ask me that? Is it not enough to
-know that in the old days there was peace—and that I
-would have peace in which to die. Should not a man have
-peace in which to meet the dead? That is all I ask
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But are not the new times better than the old?”
-asked Peter. “Would you have the old times back—and
-the prison on the hill full of people?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky lighted the fragment of an old cigarette and
-smoked a minute before he replied, pulling at his whiskers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“New times, new troubles,” he said with tired voice.
-“We knew in the old times what to do to be happy, and
-likewise what not to do. It was all put down plain in
-the laws and the rules of the governors. Those who
-wanted better government did not know that bad government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>is better than none. Now it is all fighting, and
-no man trusts another. But I am not afraid, for my life
-is behind me. Now, when the railroad came here, it was
-said that everybody would be rich and happy. Before
-then we had only the mail-sledges, with their bells and
-horses. The people were happy enough, but for these
-educated fools always talking about what should be done
-with government and getting themselves and poor people
-into trouble. Now what do we have? All night an accursed
-ringing of railroad bells and screeching whistles
-till a man wakes in his bed, thinking the devil is calling.
-And people and cows get killed by the railroad—and
-mad soldiers come to kill and burn honest people. Is
-that good? Who is made rich thereby, and who is made
-happy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you think you would be happier if the Czar
-were back,” suggested Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Is that what you have come to ask me?” demanded
-Rimsky, giving Peter a shrewd look. “Is it that you
-are counting those who want the Czar back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, no,” said Peter. “I have nothing to do with
-the government. I will not say to any one what you
-say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I cannot be too sure of that,” said Rimsky, and blew
-the smoke from his cigarette upward. “But when the
-Czar ruled, I had a watch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you want a Czar back?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“<i>Tchuk!</i>” cried Rimsky. “The Czar is in a well,
-they tell me. But how do I know what to believe? First
-it is one lie, and then another, till our heads whirl and
-we get drunk to forget so much talk about nothing. How
-do I know but that the Czar is on his throne and eating
-fish-pie for his dinner?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But suppose a new Czar should come to the throne?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, now you are trying to have me talk politics and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>get into prison. It does not matter. I want only a fire,
-my tea, a good soup with meat and bones in it, and a pair
-of boots—and men who can be trusted, even if they
-be Czar’s governors and cruel. Who is a man to appeal
-to now if he is robbed, as was I last month? In the old
-days robbers were hanged, and it taught them something,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But you are speaking of Chita, of course. You had
-no complaint here, for you had a good Governor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky went to the samovar and took off the little
-teapot, shook it with a circular motion, filled it with hot
-water and poured a glass made from the bottom of a
-bottle full of tea for Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You talk too much for a stranger,” said Rimsky.
-“What do you know about our Governor? Is this the
-first time you have been in Siberia, young man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Of course,” said Peter, taking the tea. “But I have
-heard about Chita before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You may know more than you want to know about
-it before you get out,” warned Rimsky. “Are you going
-to stay long—and buy more of my cigarettes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I’ll be here a few weeks, I suppose. I came to see if
-I could buy some furs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, but you are a soldier,” said Rimsky. “And you
-will find no furs that are good. Everybody is hunting
-men these days,” and he broke out again in his cackling
-laugh, as he drew himself some tea in a little yellow bowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Did the unfortunates kill the Governor who was here
-when they got out of the prison and freedom came to the
-people?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Did they?” asked Rimsky. “You tell me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But you were here, and you know. I was not here,”
-said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky shrugged his shoulders and sucked his tea from
-the bowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>“The <i>provodnik</i> on the train told me that the soldiers
-killed the Governor here. What was the name?
-Kir—— well, I can’t remember.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Those fellows on the trains do a lot of talking,” said
-Rimsky. “They are know-it-alls, and all they do is take
-grease from people who want to have food sent up to
-us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I’m afraid they don’t tell the truth,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So they told you the soldiers killed Kirsakoff, did
-they? But Kirsakoff was not the Governor. You see
-that they lied.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps they did not say he was Governor when he
-was killed. But they said he had been a Governor in the
-old days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If Kirsakoff had been killed, I would know it,” said
-Rimsky.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” agreed Peter. “I thought the <i>provodnik</i> was
-talking to make wind and a big man of himself. I knew
-he was lying.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How did you know that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I guessed it. Now that you say Kirsakoff was not
-killed, I know it was a lie. Just big talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Why should anybody kill Kirsakoff?” demanded
-Rimsky.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is what I should like to know. Everybody said
-he was a good man, but perhaps some people did not like
-him—people in the prison, of course, who were against
-the government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“General Kirsakoff had been retired when the troubles
-came,” said Rimsky. “More than seven years ago he
-was retired. I remembered well the time—I had a sore
-foot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Was he gone from Chita when the troubles came?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, he was here,” said Rimsky, looking straight at
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>“Ah!” said Peter. “So the <i>provodnik</i> lied when he
-said Kirsakoff was dead. He is still here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What does it matter where he is?” asked Rimsky.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It does not matter,” said Peter, and set the glass on
-the table, buttoning his coat about his neck in preparation
-for leaving.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I hear much gossip in this place,” said Rimsky.
-“Where do you live in the city?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you for the tea,” said Peter. “It is cold outside.
-I may want some more cigarettes—at twenty
-rubles a box.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I hear many matters spoken of here,” hinted Rimsky
-with confidential air. “About where governors are and
-such talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Is Zorogoff a good man?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is a very cold day outside, true,” said Rimsky.
-“But this is a good place to hear gossip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I care nothing for gossip. But I can see that you
-live on it, as an old gander lives on snails,” said Peter
-laughingly. “I am going to the Dauria—I am an
-American officer. But see that you do not gossip about
-me, old fellow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky wagged his old head and cackled wisely.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A tight lip fools the devil,” warned Peter. “If you
-talk I’ll tell Zorogoff you charged me double for cigarettes.
-But I’ll come in and see you some day, and bring
-a bottle of vodka.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then God guard you till you return!” cried Rimsky,
-and Peter went out through the door of the hut.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky sat chuckling into his beard after Peter had
-departed. And more than once the old cigarette-seller
-told himself, “The sturgeon does not become a sterlet because
-he leaves the river for the lake, and the Russian
-does not become a foreigner by changing his coat.” That
-was a saying of wise men.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>VII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>OLD RIMSKY THINKS</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>OLD Rimsky had a wise head. Many people
-were afraid of him and said that he talked with
-witches and had charms against evil—and he
-did sell charms against sickness, bad luck and poor
-crops. Besides, he had the reputation of knowing many
-things before they happened. But he was merely a wise
-old owl with the keen perception of human motives which
-is sometimes given to the unlettered man, though he
-could read well enough to get the meanings out of newspapers
-if there were not too many words in the articles
-invented by aristocrats to fool the poor people.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He spent the remainder of the day thinking about the
-Russian in the American coat who paid double for cigarettes
-and took a profit in getting answers to questions.
-He had watched Peter closely, and turned the whole matter
-over mentally, sitting by his fire and drinking tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky decided that he had not been clever enough
-with the stranger. It was plain enough now that the
-stranger had come to learn something about Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff who had been Governor. And
-the stranger did not know where Michael was to be found.
-In some way the business could be turned to profit and
-over many glasses of smoky tea Rimsky evolved a plan by
-which he could put money in his purse.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There was an old pig-killing <i>moujik</i> named Ilya Andreitch
-who slept in the basement of a bakery on a street
-up near the bazaar. Ilya had worked for Kirsakoff years
-before, and should know where the general lived if anybody
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>did. As for that, Rimsky now remembered that
-Ilya had once boasted that he knew where Kirsakoff lived
-since the troubles came and all the rich people were in
-hiding.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But there might be little in the boast, for Ilya was an
-old fool who was always pretending to know things. But
-for all his outward stupidity, Ilya was a sly rascal. His
-father had been sent into exile for taking money from
-revolutionists in Moscow by pretending to have knowledge
-of what the secret police were going to do—who was going
-to be arrested, and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It happened that Rimsky had Ilya pretty much under
-the thumb, as the saying is. For Ilya had once fed the
-pigs of a watch-fixer in the city, and had stolen from his
-employer a whole handful of silver holy medals. Rimsky
-had bought them from Ilya for a tenth of their value.
-Out of appreciation for buying them, Ilya had spent all
-the money he got on vodka with Rimsky. The vodka had
-been stolen by a waiter in a restaurant owned by a Greek,
-and at half price sold it to Ilya, which was quite all right,
-for everybody stole from foreigners if they could. The
-thing for the foreigners to do is to stay at home and not
-go about selling food and drink at prices too high.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky knew that he might be able to induce Ilya to tell
-where Kirsakoff was living. That might mean double
-money for Rimsky. Kirsakoff would no doubt pay well
-to know that an American was seeking him, and the American
-would probably pay well to know where Kirsakoff
-might be found. It was only a matter of handling them
-properly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And by delaying the information sought by both Kirsakoff
-and the man who called himself an American, a pretty
-penny might be realized. It was by such smart methods,
-Rimsky felt sure, that rich folks got rich. And by getting
-rich, they made poor folks poorer. Being rich was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>all simple enough, for there was only so much money in
-the world, and the trick was to get a lot of it by being
-smarter than other folks. There being many fools, the
-problem was easy enough. Rimsky knew that the Jews
-got rich by being able to figure interest on money, and by
-selling only when people wanted to buy and buying only
-when people wanted to sell.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>So he contrived a plan by which Ilya was to supply the
-information for little or nothing, and Rimsky was to sell
-it for a bundle of rubles. It would not do to tell Ilya
-what was wanted. It would be best to loosen his tongue
-with vodka, and then accuse him of having lied when he
-had said he knew where Kirsakoff was living. That
-method would get Ilya to boasting and he would pop it
-all out. It could all be passed off as drinking talk, and
-if Ilya insisted on keeping his secret, it would be easy
-enough to turn the talk to holy medals. That would
-make Ilya see the honey pot, as the saying is; then he
-would get Ilya so drunk that he would forget all that had
-been said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>So when the lights began to appear in the shops across
-the Sofistkaya, Rimsky put up his own shutters over the
-window and wandered toward the bazaar to look in at the
-bakery where Ilya might be found.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was quite dark when Rimsky reached the courtyard
-in rear of the building of the bakery. There was a shaft
-of flickering light dancing out from a partly open door,
-and the yard was filled with the comforting odor of burning
-dough. Rimsky planned to ask the bakers first for
-a man who once hauled wood for them—a peasant dead
-several months before. That would be excuse enough for
-coming, and talk could be made till it was time to ask
-casually for Ilya. That would throw sand in Ilya’s eyes
-as to why Rimsky appeared at the bakery.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old cigarette-seller prowled in through the door
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>and stumbled over loose wood in the hall till he came to
-the great room where the bakers were working. A big
-man, bare to the waist, was drawing huge loaves from
-the stone stove with a wooden shovel. His damp skin
-shone in the dancing light. A group of men and women
-was sitting on benches in the dark side of the room about
-a samovar. A ball of dough was smoking on an iron
-sheet laid on the shoulder of the stove.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There had been the murmur of voices till Rimsky stood
-framed in the doorway of the room, looking in. When he
-appeared there was a sudden hush and silence, except for
-the grating of the wooden shovel as it drew out the steaming
-loaves and the cracking of the fire in the fire-pit.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God’s blessing on those who labor for us,” said Rimsky,
-crossing himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Some one gave a muttered reply. The man drawing
-the loaves turned and peered at Rimsky and then went on
-deftly pulling out the bread, puckering his face against
-the heat.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A man came clumping down the hall and fell over the
-wood. Rimsky stood aside from the door, and the light
-from the fire revealed the man with a face shrouded by
-long and unkempt whiskers, and on his head a sheepskin
-cap black with dirt. He wore a ragged old coat with a
-rope turned round his middle several times as a belt.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So this is my old friend, Ilya Andreitch!” exclaimed
-Rimsky. “It is long since I have seen you. Perhaps
-you can tell me of the friend I am looking for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya ogled him suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What has gone wrong that you should be here?”
-he growled. He had a healthy fear of Rimsky and wanted
-to forget the business of the holy medals.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Can you tell me where I can find Vanusha?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are chasing ghosts,” grumbled Ilya, crossing
-himself at mention of a dead man. “That man is dead.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>Or is it that you are looking for souls for the devil?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Dead!” exclaimed Rimsky. “Now that is a pity.
-I came to get a drinking friend, but now I shall have to
-go and have a glass of vodka by myself in his memory.
-He owed me two rubles but he was a good man, I can say
-that for him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Better than I can say for you,” Ilya called out into
-the dark yard after Rimsky, who had retreated abruptly
-from the hall. “He never drank his vodka alone, for
-one thing, like others I know, and they not far off. He
-was civil to his friends, I can say that—and when you
-are dead you had better take care that folks say the
-same of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you didn’t learn your manners from him,”
-retorted Rimsky, stopping in the court. “You swing
-your tongue too much for an honest man—or to have
-it wet with vodka. When I drink I wish to be merry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are an old wolf with the fleas!” called Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky laughed at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“May you die blind!” bawled Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, come and warm your belly with a sup of vodka,”
-said Rimsky, “unless you think that if you turned good-natured
-you would come down with a distemper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya ran after him and the pair walked down to the
-little restaurant kept by a one-eared gypsy from Bessarabia
-where in the old days the thieves gathered to dispose
-of their loot to Chinese.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There were but a few people inside the place. A
-Buriat, who had probably sold some cattle, was lying
-across a table in a drunken stupor, his purple conical
-cap on the floor under his feet. A crippled beggar was
-drinking soup from a bowl with a wooden ladle, and a
-Chinese peddler of charms was gambling in a corner with
-a Mongol holy man.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky led the way to a table distant from the others
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>and called for the serving girl. He was in good humor
-and ordered a whole bottle of vodka, swearing that he
-would take only the best and would break the tax seal
-with his own fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Something has turned your way, you old shark!”
-said Ilya. “Or perhaps this is your name day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, it is that I am getting old and may as well
-spend my money before it falls into the hands of robbers,”
-said Rimsky. “Soon I shall go to meet the dead.
-I pick up a few rubles a day. What is the use of keeping
-them these days? I want to spend them with my friends,
-and you are a good fellow and a great joker, Ilya Andreitch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, I can make jokes if I have the wine,” said
-Ilya, and hastened to take a swig from the first glass
-poured.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>They proceeded to talk of nothings, and finished the
-bottle.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Fetch another!” Rimsky called to the girl, “and
-I’ll drink a health to the rings in your ears, my damsel.
-When you were—what am I saying?—when I was
-younger you would not have escaped without a kiss.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You had better be putting your grandchildren to
-bed,” retorted the girl, but she brought the bottle.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya was suddenly filled with a desire to be modest in
-his drinking. He felt it would not be wise to abuse such
-a show of hospitality on the part of Rimsky. And the
-<i>moujik’s</i> crafty brain suspected that there was a purpose
-behind Rimsky’s unlimited generosity. Folks were not
-so free-handed without having good cause, he reasoned.
-So for every full glass that Rimsky drank, Ilya managed
-to dispose of but half a glass. He had a notion that if
-he could get Rimsky drunk there might be part of a bottle
-left which could be made away with and the joyous occasion
-could be carried on alone into the night and perhaps
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>the following day. Also, he took good care that
-Rimsky always paid in advance by making a joke with the
-gypsy girl that Rimsky had no more money. Rimsky’s
-generosity made Ilya suspicious.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Pooh! Money!” said Rimsky, when the third bottle
-was brought. “I have enough money to buy all the
-vodka in the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That’s the vodka talking,” sneered Ilya. “I feel as
-if I could buy a farm, but it would be another matter for
-me to find the money. That is the way with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Don’t go on so with big talk,” warned Rimsky, “or
-I will begin to talk of the holy medals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Talk and the devil take you!” cried Ilya, thumping
-the bottle down on the table angrily. “If you do I’ll go
-my way and wish a curse on you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Sit still!” commanded Rimsky. “I’ve money
-enough, I tell you. If not, I can go and borrow from my
-rich friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya laughed so loudly at this that he disturbed the
-drunken Buriat, who lifted his black head from the table
-and glared about the room. He looked like a mandarin,
-with his long thin drooping mustaches.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I tell you I have rich friends,” insisted Rimsky.
-“I could go now and get a hundred rubles if I needed
-them—yes, twenty and a hundred and no interest. Kirsakoff
-would let me have them, and no questions asked, and
-nothing about when they should be paid back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What!” exclaimed Ilya, staring at Rimsky. “You
-say the old Governor would lend you twenty and a hundred
-rubles! <i>Tfu!</i> That’s crazy talk!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes! You think I don’t know the old Governor, eh!
-Well, Kirsakoff is a friend of mine, you had better know
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Pooh!” snorted Ilya. “You are an old mud-head!
-You don’t even know where the old Governor lives in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>city, and you sit there telling to me that he is your friend!
-Oh, ho, ho!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps you think you are the only one who knows
-where Kirsakoff lives? You are a fool who thinks he is
-wise, and that’s the worst fool of all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya was cautious at once. He gave Rimsky a careful
-look, but Rimsky paid no attention to the look.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who told you I said I knew where Kirsakoff lived?”
-demanded Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You said it yourself. I heard you say it last Butter
-Week in the bazaar. You were drunk and you went
-boasting about to the old man from Pischenko with the
-red boots. I heard you say it, Ilya Andreitch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya ruffled his brow and tried to remember when he
-had been talking to a man with red boots from Pischenko.
-He knew no one in that town who had red boots—unless
-it was the butcher’s assistant who married the cake-maker.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” said Ilya. “I might have known then where
-Kirsakoff lived. I don’t deny it. Perhaps I was drunk
-Butter Week. It wasn’t my fault if I was sober. But
-that was a long time ago as time runs now—and I don’t
-know where Kirsakoff lives now. And if I did, I wouldn’t
-tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky laughed good-naturedly. “Let us have another
-drink. You are a good fellow. Of course you do
-not know where Michael Alexandrovitch lives. If you
-did, you could have money, as I have. It is worth money
-to know where the old Governor lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya saw that Rimsky was getting very drunk and
-seeking an argument.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If you knew where Kirsakoff lived, who would
-pay?” asked Ilya, becoming greedy at the mention of
-money.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who? There are many. That is something I do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>not want to talk about, Ilya. Hold your tongue,” and
-Rimsky picked up his glass and filled it again.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya drank with sad mien, turning over in his mind Rimsky’s
-statement that it was worth money to know where
-Kirsakoff lived. If that were true, Ilya argued to himself,
-he should have the money, for he knew where Kirsakoff
-lived with his daughter in an old log house in the outskirts
-of the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I don’t intend to hold my tongue,” Ilya announced.
-“What I want to know is who would pay money to know
-where Kirsakoff lives!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky was startled by the suddenness and vigor with
-which Ilya had put the matter before him. And Ilya
-leaned across the table, with a big and dirty fist thrust
-forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who?” asked Rimsky. “Why do you ask me that?
-What is there to fight over? We are good friends—we
-are—you are friend to me, or——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky swayed in his chair and could not finish. He
-made an effort to rally his drugged brain, but slipped
-deeper into the chair and his eyes closed on him despite
-all he could do to keep them open. His right arm flopped
-across the table limply, as useless as a dead seal’s flipper.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Everybody knows where Michael Kirsakoff lives,”
-went on Ilya. “Why should any one pay money for
-what every one knows. That knowledge is not worth a
-beggar’s kopeck.” Ilya lied, but he sought to learn all
-he could before Rimsky got too deep into drunken slumber.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” muttered the befuddled Rimsky. “You talk
-true talk, Ilya Andreitch. But why do you fight with
-me when I can’t see? What did I say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You talked about there being money in knowing where
-Kirsakoff lived,” accused Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky tried to remember why he had said any such
-thing. The matter must be as Ilya said—no one would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>give a beggar’s kopeck to know where Kirsakoff lived.
-For that matter, Rimsky cared about nothing. The
-world was a very pleasant place for all people said about
-bad times. He could feel himself slipping away into a
-delicious unconsciousness, and he talked aloud the thoughts
-which crossed his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There is something wrong about this,” he confided to
-himself, unaware that Ilya could hear what was said.
-Then he went on, head on chest, and almost under the
-table, muttering into his whiskers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The American officer—no, a Russian—well, the
-American officer—he wants to know where Michael lives.
-And he—will pay well. Didn’t he come to my place asking
-about the old Governor? And where did he go?
-Yes, the Dauria, I remember, even if I am drunk—to the
-Dauria, where the Bolsheviki smashed all the windows. I
-know. I remember the time my father’s cow fell in the
-river. Was Ilya there? No. How could Ilya be there—I
-am dreaming now. Let us all—be merry, for this
-is Carnival. Am I not a young man? That is right—dance—dance——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rimsky began to snore softly. The gypsy girl came
-and grinned at Ilya, who reached out unsteadily and
-plucked the flame from the candle.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Let him sleep,” said Ilya to the girl. “He is a good
-fellow,” and putting the cork back into the vodka-bottle
-which was half full by the best of good luck, he slipped
-it into his pocket, pulled his ragged old coat about his
-shoulders and tightened the rope belt. Then he slipped
-out of the restaurant, chuckling at his cleverness at putting
-Rimsky under the table and learning something which
-might put money into his own purse. Besides, he had
-the half-bottle of vodka.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He made up his mind to go at once to the house of
-Michael Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff and sell the news he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>had heard—an American officer was at the Hotel Dauria
-and wanted to find the old Governor. Perhaps Michael
-would give five rubles for that news—if not five, then four,
-anyhow, a piece of boiled partridge. But Ilya decided
-that he would do his best to get five rubles. Michael
-Kirsakoff had plenty of money, and who was he anyway?—once
-a Governor, true, but no better now than Ilya
-Andreitch.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>VIII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>PETER LAYS HIS PLANS</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER went back to the Hotel Dauria after his
-talk with Rimsky. The sleepy-eyed youth who
-had promised a room, carried Peter’s baggage to
-the upper floor, where Peter signed the register in a cage-like
-little office.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Then they went on down a hall past a dining room
-which was deserted. Peter looked in. It was filled with
-battered tables, tubbed rubber plants in the window sills,
-and crazy chairs which had been used in defense and had
-legs in splints.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The walls had been stripped of paper. The mirrors of
-the buffet-counter at one end of the room had been
-smashed out and triangles of broken glass still stuck in the
-frames. The curtains had been pulled from the poles
-over the windows and the doors. Painted decorations on
-the wainscoting had been smeared with the contents of
-catsup and vinegar bottles, which had burst against the
-walls like star shells and the acids had discolored the pictures
-of the crude drawings so that the wall was spotted
-and leprous-looking.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was taken to a large room at the end of the hall.
-It had three double windows overlooking the end of a
-side street that ran into the Sofistkaya, with a view of
-the latter. He could see the old post-house and the roof
-of Rimsky’s hut sticking up between two higher buildings.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There was an iron bed without bedding. There was a
-standing screen in front of it. The chairs had been
-broken but were repaired. There were slashes in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>woodwork about the door where bayonets had evidently
-been thrust at former guests. And some of the guests
-had fared badly, judging by the dark stains on the old
-oilcloth which covered the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The plaster of the walls was pitted with bullet-holes,
-especially opposite the windows, and the panes of glass
-were newly puttied and still marked with the thumb-prints
-of the workmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Can I have my meals served in the room?” asked
-Peter. The youth yawned.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes. If you pay extra. Ring this bell three times
-for the samovar girl,” and he pointed to a button in the
-wall near the door, and the youth departed, as if afraid
-that he would be asked to do something.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There was an electric drop lamp on a writing table,
-and running water in a little sink against the wall behind
-the screen. There was a tall wardrobe set against a
-second door which evidently led to another room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was hard for Peter to realize that Chita could be so
-modern. And the room, poor as it was, seemed like a
-palace to Peter. His mind had been readjusted to the
-things he had known as a boy by his visit to Rimsky.
-Peter Petrovitch Gorekin would have thought himself a
-king to have a room like this one in which Peter Gordon
-was to live.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But there was no Peter Gordon now. Peter Gorekin
-was back in Chita. The scene which opened to him from
-the windows had been for twenty years in the back of his
-brain. The little hut, the post-house, the Sofistkaya!
-He found it hard to believe that he had ever been away
-from Chita at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He sat down by the window. The mild heat from the
-radiator had thawed away most of the frost in the panes
-and he looked out over the city. Things that had been
-but memories were now real, truly existing before his eyes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>in spite of his years of trying to blur their images out of
-his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old superstitions of peasants and exiles which he
-had learned in his father’s hut as a boy returned to his
-mind—tales of werewolves who took the shapes of men
-for diabolical purposes. Was there not something in it
-all? Was not he himself something like a werewolf?
-Was he not a Russian in an American coat? Michael
-Kirsakoff would never suspect an American officer of being
-the son of a dead exile. Nor would Kirsakoff suspect
-an American officer of being the same poor boy who
-had been thrown into prison for a whim—now come for
-vengeance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The mysticism inherent in his race, the queer inarticulate
-yearnings and the dissatisfactions of the Slavic soul,
-came to the surface in Peter’s consciousness. But now
-he had knowledge of things, and power, and the means
-of carrying out his own ends. He would play the game
-carefully to an end in Chita, and then go on to Irkutsk
-without any one’s suspecting that the American officer
-had killed Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He began to think of his return to Chita as a holy
-mission. Affairs had turned out well for him from the
-first. He had managed to get to Siberia instead of going
-to France. He had managed to get himself ordered to
-Irkutsk, and had slipped away from his Russian orderly
-with no one the wiser that Peter Gordon was really a
-Russian. And there was every evidence that Kirsakoff
-was still alive and that he was still in Chita. The reticence
-of Rimsky in discussing Kirsakoff was proof enough
-to Peter that the former Governor might be found somewhere
-in the Valley of Despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He took off his tunic and rang for a samovar. A slattern
-of a girl, dirty and unkempt, came trembling to the
-door to ask what was wanted. She was not more than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>fifteen—round-cheeked, with scared blue eyes, and brown
-hair down her back. She was wearing men’s cast-off old
-shoes. Peter looked at her with pity.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Will you bring me some spice-cakes and a samovar?”
-he asked gently.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, master,” she said, and turned to escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Don’t be frightened,” said Peter. “I am an American.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, master,” she repeated. But she had no comprehension
-of what he had said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Here are five rubles for you,” said Peter, holding out
-the note to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But she fled through the door as he moved toward her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The same old system working,” thought Peter, as he
-watched the poor girl running down the hall. “The poor
-people frightened out of their wits by the ruling class!
-Damn such a country!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He closed the door. He realized now that oppression
-was not dead in the country. His years in America had
-dimmed his memories of such scenes. He had begun to
-think that the revolution had bettered conditions for the
-people, that in the twenty years since he was a boy in
-Siberia there had been improvement.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old rage began to grow in him again. He lusted
-to kill. He wanted to help the people, aside from his
-own blood vengeance. He wondered if his dead father
-had not been able to help in having the son return to
-Chita. His return might be in the nature of a destiny
-which it would be sinful to avoid, even divine in its workings.
-It was all as if some controlling star had put power
-into his hands, and had swung him back to the land of his
-boyhood. It would be impossible to go against fate. He
-felt that no man could stand out against what had every
-sign of being a directed destiny.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was filled with a strange exaltation, a very frenzy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>of joy over the thought that it would now be possible to
-pay off his old debt of revenge against Michael Kirsakoff.
-The words of an old folk song began to run through his
-mind and he hummed it gently, pausing to catch some of
-the almost forgotten words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He got out his razor and shaved himself before the big
-wall mirror between the windows. The peace and quiet
-of his room were luxuries after the days and nights of
-living and sleeping on the pounding train among the
-Czech soldiers. He had time now for careful planning,
-and he desired to make the acquaintance of Kirsakoff at
-leisure, arrange the details of how the Governor should
-be killed and then carry through the project with all
-possible skill so that his tracks might be covered. There
-would be many pitfalls to avoid, many nicely balanced
-circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It would not be enough for Peter merely to kill Kirsakoff.
-The Governor must know who brought death to
-him, must understand before he was sent into eternity
-that it was Peter Petrovitch Gorekin, son of the bootmaker,
-who took vengeance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The girl came with the samovar and the cakes and left
-them on the table. She fled again without taking the
-five-ruble note which Peter had left upon the table for
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter sat by the window and ate and drank. The sun
-dropped behind the rim of the hill and twilight came
-swiftly. In the street below a line of rude carts passed,
-drawn by frosty ponies with their drivers plodding along
-behind the carts. They walked like men in their sleep,
-oblivious of everything about them and steeped in the
-torturing cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Farther up the street four men were drifting about
-aimlessly, tipsy with vodka. They drew together at times
-to engage in maudlin argument, and staggered about like
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>clumsy bears, lurching at one another in wild plunges
-and falling in the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The four roisterers disappeared. A squad of Japanese
-soldiers came stumbling down the street, evidently
-going on guard at the station for the night. They appeared
-to be half frozen, but they doggedly maintained
-some semblance of military formation. Their heads were
-so wrapped in cloths that they could hardly see their
-way, and the fur straps across their faces were white with
-frost from the moisture of their nostrils. Their big shoes
-were stuffed with straw, which hung out over the tops.
-The agonizing cold, despite the heavy clothing of the men,
-had penetrated to their bodies and had chilled them to a
-condition akin to lethargy. They walked as if through
-semiliquid air which impeded their movements.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter remained by the window smoking, while the frost
-gradually grew up the windows. He was wondering how
-he could find Kirsakoff. It would not do to make direct
-inquiries. It might be possible to draw more from Rimsky,
-but it would be wise to wait before pressing the cigarette-seller
-to talk about Kirsakoff. The graybeard would
-be suspicious—he was already suspicious that Peter had
-some other motive in going to the hut than buying cigarettes.
-Yes, it would be safer to keep away from Rimsky
-for a few days, and perhaps wise not to move about the
-city too much and start gossip. He might be watched at
-first, but after a few days his presence in the city would
-be taken as a matter of course. Then he could begin his
-quest for Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>With this decision for the future, Peter prepared for
-bed.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>IX<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>ILYA USES HIS WITS</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>ILYA ANDREITCH, having left Rimsky in a state
-of gorgeous befuddlement at the gypsy’s restaurant,
-hurried up the street to the house of Michael Kirsakoff
-and his daughter. It would be great news, the coming
-of an American who wished to find Kirsakoff. It
-might be a government matter, for as everybody with an
-ounce of brains in his head knew, the Americans were
-going to take full control of Russia—some wise folk
-even said that the Americans would annex Russia as a
-province of America. Others said the Czar had gone
-to America and had conquered it, including Venice.
-Those were matters which Ilya considered in spare moments;
-just now he felt that this news of the American
-needed full attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya could see the glowing coals of a sentinels’ bonfire
-up near the church. Also, there were sounds of
-music and singing in the direction of a barrack, and the
-rattle of a droshky coming across the little bridge over
-the Ingoda. So he did not feel too lonely. There was
-no moon up yet, but the stars were out and hanging low.
-The thin, sweet air drenched his lungs, and cleared his
-brain somewhat.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Now he heard a man walking near by. Ilya stopped
-to listen, cocking his head to one side. But when Ilya
-stopped, the man stopped also—and then Ilya realized
-that it was his own footsteps which he had heard, crunching
-the hard snow musically. He laughed discreetly,
-taking care that the sentries should not hear him, and
-started on again toward the outer rim of the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>But he was a little afraid that he might not get past
-some of the sentry groups without being stopped and questioned,
-or perhaps arrested. He got off the hard walk
-and into the center of the sandy street, so that his boots
-would not make a noise. He got out his bottle—the
-bottle which he had taken from the restaurant table—and
-had a swig from it to give himself courage. It would
-be no simple matter to go talking to Kirsakoff, who,
-though an Excellence, was a cruel old bones of a man.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Ilya reflected that times had changed. He was as
-good as anybody now, and knew as much as anybody.
-The revolution had done that for him, and a revolution
-was good fun. Was not even Rimsky, who had once held
-himself to be better than a <i>moujik</i>, now buying vodka for
-<i>moujiks</i>? Hurrah for the revolution! And as for that,
-hadn’t he fooled Rimsky and drawn from him the news
-that the American had come to see Kirsakoff? That was
-proof enough as to who had the better wit. Ilya gave
-himself credit for the manner in which he had handled the
-whole matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Kirsakoff should give at least five rubles for the news,
-not a kopeck less. Ilya settled that to his own satisfaction,
-took another swig, and went on. A wolf howled
-in the hills above the city, and Ilya crossed himself
-against the wiles of the devil.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He passed the black dome of the church. The air was
-like crystal and nothing cast a shadow, not even the iron
-fence about the old cemetery of the church. And when
-the stars are so bright and hang so low that nothing
-throws a shadow, there are witches about.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya hurried on, getting more nervous with every step,
-till he was in the outer limits of the city. Then he crossed
-some old gardens to get in among the log houses which
-stood at the end of the street. In that way he avoided
-a group of sentries who were singing about their fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>He located Kirsakoff’s house. It stood on a corner of
-two streets, with a log wall enclosing the <i>dvor</i>, or courtyard—the
-garden, the well, the wagon-sheds. The windows
-let out no light, but stood out like tablets of ivory
-set into the dark house, their frosty panes glistening under
-the stars.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya went round to the great gate. Some old water
-casks were lying about it in disorder. One of them was
-close to the wall of the court. Ilya moved it a little, and
-mounting it, reached up to some old cords and dead vines
-running along the top of the logs. He took off his mittens
-and felt for a cord that had tied in it a certain number
-of knots. He pulled it thrice, and then climbed down
-from the cask, and stood in close to the wall, so that any
-person looking up the street would not see him, for his
-figure would be merged with the dark background of the
-wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A sentry-fire burned redly out in the end of the street.
-A few dark figures were visible about it. Somewhere
-Ilya heard a Cossack challenge, and the rattle of a riflebolt
-in the crisp air. A pig began to squeal away in the
-direction of the Chinese quarter. Ilya missed the friendly
-barking of dogs, for the dogs of the city had somehow disappeared
-since the troubles came and many people were
-starving. The unnatural stillness of the night held a
-covert menace, as if all creatures, humans and wild beasts,
-were walking about on their toes in dread, or crouched to
-spring upon some lurking enemy. It was likely that hill
-tigers were about. The occasional howl of a wolf seemed
-to be tinged with a note of triumph, as if they were waiting
-for their old wilderness to be restored to them by
-men. The wolves were once more hunting close to the
-city and getting arrogant and fat. Men were too busy
-hunting each other to waste time or ammunition on the
-great packs of timber wolves.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>A small door in the wall, close to where Ilya stood, opened
-inward a few inches, slowly and cautiously, for the
-frost cracked the ancient hinges with sharp complaints.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is Ilya—Ilya Andreitch,” he whispered into the
-aperture of the gate.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are a fool to come here in the starlight,”
-growled Wassili. “Are you blind, that you cannot see
-the brightness of the stars, or have you a mole for an
-uncle?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What does it matter?” whispered Ilya easily. He
-did not mind being insulted by Wassili, knowing in time
-that he would have the laugh on Kirsakoff’s <i>moujik</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The gate opened a few more inches, and Ilya needed
-no greater hint, but slipped through, and the gate closed
-after him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You smell like a <i>kabak</i>,” grumbled Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is why you opened the gate,” said Ilya with a
-chuckle. “You have a nose for vodka, even if you are
-not civil to your friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But you will be seen by enemies, to come here so
-boldly,” went on Wassili, not so easily altered in his
-temper.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I? No one saw me. I am as secret as an owl.
-Those fools of soldiers are all drunk and talking in their
-sleep. They shoot their guns at the moon every night,
-to scare honest folk away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What brings you?” demanded Wassili. “Am I to
-stand here freezing because you want to gossip?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I came to talk with Michael Alexandrovitch,” said
-Ilya with pomposity. He swayed unsteadily on his feet,
-for the vodka he had drunk was again asserting its potency
-because he had been standing still so long outside
-the gate. He blew gently down into his whiskers to melt
-away the ice which had formed in the bristles from his
-breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>“Hmf!” growled Wassili. “Perhaps you think Michael
-Alexandrovitch has baked a pig for your coming?
-Have you forgotten that Michael Alexandrovitch is an
-Excellence?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am as good as he, Excellence or no Excellence,” retorted
-Ilya. “What I remember is the revolution, and
-that Ilya Andreitch is as good as the Czar. But I have
-brought news for the Excellence. Are we to stand here
-warming the night with our breaths, when Michael Alexandrovitch
-would be glad to know what I know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He could salt his porridge with what you know,”
-scorned Wassili. “What news do you bring?” He was
-still doubtful of the legitimacy of Ilya’s visit, and suspected
-his coming to be a desire for drunken argument.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“When a man brings news in these times, he might have
-a glass of hot tea,” hinted Ilya. “It is about government,
-and I have come with big news about what is being
-done outside this place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have brought a monkey with you, that is what,”
-muttered Wassili, meaning that Ilya was foolishly drunk.
-But he fastened the bolt of the gate. He was now shivering
-with the cold and sulky about it, though he did not
-dare risk sending Ilya away if there was any chance of
-valuable information’s coming to the attention of his
-master, Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Whoosh! Is not a monkey smarter than a fox?
-You old pothead, you sit here all day looking at your
-feet, while I learn government news and risk my neck to
-bring it here and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Be still!” commanded Wassili. “You can be heard
-to the hills a night like this! You smell of fresh-killed
-pig and vodka, for all your government talk. Is that the
-way to come to the house of Excellence? Follow along
-with that noisy tongue of yours, but keep your fingers on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>it, for it wags too freely and you will lose it along with
-your head, if you are not careful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, and I’ll bring a drink of vodka along for you,
-if you have a fire in your samovar, you old spider.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is good you bring something besides talk,”
-grumbled Wassili, as he led the way under the overhanging
-roof of the shed and along through the gloom to the
-door of the kitchen. Ilya stumbled along after him,
-blundering among the kettles and other gear and making
-such a racket that Wassili cursed him for having too
-many legs. But Ilya, in a gay mood, chuckled into his
-beard and was only concerned lest he lose his footing and
-have a tumble that would break the precious bottle in his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>They entered the kitchen, which had its windows hung
-with old blankets to keep the light hidden. There was a
-wall-stove and a cooking stove with ovens built of stone.
-A candle burned on the table. There were partridge
-feathers in a sink and the remnants of cabbages that had
-been cut up on a board. A big earthen jar of gooseberry
-jam stood open on the table and beside it a fat
-yellow bowl full of white honey, which gave off a sweet
-odor and made Ilya think of bees in the fields in summer.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili sat down and rested his elbows on the table.
-His pockmarked face had a glum look, and his pale yellow
-whiskers bristled with belligerency for Ilya, as if the
-<i>moujik</i> were in for trouble unless his story should be of
-sufficient import for the visit. Wassili’s blue caftan, pale
-and washed out like the garment of a Chinese coolie, was
-strapped about him with a bit of scarlet cloth which had
-once been embroidered. His feet were wrapped in skins,
-ready to be slipped into the big boots standing limply by
-the bench upon which he sat. He had not put them on
-when he went out to admit Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Let us be merry while we can,” began Ilya, anxious to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>improve the atmosphere of the kitchen as represented
-by the scowling Wassili. So Ilya threw himself down
-sprawlingly on a bench opposite Wassili, and loosened
-the old rope about his coat. Then he pulled his bottle
-from his pocket with a flourish of good-fellowship and
-slammed it down upon the table with a thump. “We will
-all be dead in time that will come soon enough, so I will
-have a glass of tea and a spice-cake before I talk with
-the Excellence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The wind is full of news,” said Wassili sadly, but the
-sight of the bottle put him in slightly better humor. He
-leaned down and squinted across it, to gauge its contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How is the health of Excellence?” asked Ilya, his
-courage bolstered by a sudden remembrance of his own
-importance and a desire to return to the subject of statecraft
-in connection with Michael Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Without answering, Wassili poured himself a generous
-draft from the bottle into a thick glass, and nodding to
-Ilya in place of speaking a health, tossed the liquor off
-with a clicking sound in his throat and a harsh appreciative
-grunt.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Bring the spice-cakes and the glasses for tea,” he
-called out to the other room. An old serving woman
-peered into the kitchen, appraised Ilya with critical eyes,
-and then shambled away for the cakes and glasses.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya’s yellowed teeth grinned across the table at Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Now when am I to talk with Michael Alexandrovitch,
-eh?” he demanded, crossing his legs importantly and rubbing
-one knee with his paw of a hand. “Don’t forget
-why I have come, Wassili, and that my business is with
-the master.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You will see Excellence when you see him,” said Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True!” said Ilya. “But I shall not leave that to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>you, if I have to hammer him up myself. This is a matter
-of government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There is no one in the house but the old woman and
-myself,” said Wassili, with a flourish of his arm. “Excellence
-is gone, and your whiskers will be longer before
-you see him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“May the devil tear out your tongue, for it does not
-speak the truth,” said Ilya without anger. “This is not
-a time for lying, when your master is waiting for news
-from me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili flourished his arm as an expression of his annoyance,
-and blurted out surlily, “Then go above for
-yourself and see, if you know better than I.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old woman shuffled into the room, and put the
-glass and a plate of cakes before Ilya, giving him a suspicious
-eye, and glancing disapprovingly at Wassili for
-permitting what she regarded as a dangerous intrusion.
-But she did not linger at the table longer than was necessary
-to throw down the plate and the tea-glass.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya picked up a spice-cake and inspected it carefully
-by the light of the candle, the maneuver being nothing
-but a way of delaying his speech till the old woman had
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have come with news about an American who is in
-the city,” he began, and bit into the cake.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili turned upon him quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are a liar!” he exclaimed with ferocity. “There
-are no Americans in the city here—they are only in
-Vladivostok, and you are blowing a trumpet in this house
-while you eat our cakes.” Wassili’s attitude was almost
-ferocious.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you know better than I,” said Ilya, blinking at
-him across the table and munching the dry cake.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are drunk, and you dare come here in these
-times and put a fool’s cap on me—and the master!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>“True, I am drunk,” replied Ilya through a mouthful
-of dry cake. “And I hope I’ll die drunk and go to
-heaven. But do you think I’m fool enough to run my
-legs off and come here, risking bullets in my back when
-I might be sitting by the fire with my bottle? Do you
-think I come here just to look at your old mud-head?
-I cared nothing for your master before the revolution,
-but now that I’m as good as he, why should I not do him
-a good turn if I can—and he has a few spare rubles to
-make it worth my time?” Ilya blew crumbs of dry biscuit
-at Wassili with the words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Don’t come here and preach at me like a pope!” cautioned
-Wassili, who was puzzled by Ilya’s newly acquired
-attitude of independence. Ilya was evidently sure of his
-ground—or gone mad entirely.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What!” cried Ilya. “You talk to me like that!
-And I have come to tell the master news! Very good. I
-know the way home again, and may your bones never know
-what it means to be buried.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Where are these Americans you talk about?” demanded
-Wassili, as he saw that it would be wiser to let
-Ilya have his say.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya snorted, but showed his teeth in a grin of triumph.
-“I shall go and tell the American officer that Kirsakoff
-and his daughter have gone, eh? That is what you say.
-Very good. That will be all right, I suppose—till it
-happens that way, and then Excellence will kick you till
-you squeal. Then you will wish that you had listened to
-Ilya Andreitch and had not tried to make yourself into
-an Excellence with big manners.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come, come,” protested Wassili amiably. “Let us
-not argue. Tell me what you know and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall tell Excellence myself,” broke in Ilya. “I
-am a free man. What good is a revolution if one man
-cannot speak to another? Go and tell Excellence that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>Ilya Andreitch, who cut wood for him in the year of the
-pestilence, has come with news.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili laughed, and taking advantage of a fit of sneezing
-suffered by Ilya from having breathed particles of dry
-cake, helped himself to another draft from the bottle of
-vodka.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps I had better tell Excellence that a Grand
-Duke has come to see him, eh?” and Wassili reached
-across the table and poked Ilya in the ribs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Am I not as good as a Grand Duke?” demanded Ilya.
-“I am alive to enjoy my vodka and many a Grand Duke
-would like to be able to say that, you old fish-gut! Go
-and tell the Excellence that I have come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili got up. “See that you don’t finish the bottle
-while I’m gone,” he warned Ilya, and disappeared through
-a door into a hall, and Ilya heard him climbing a creaky
-stairs.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>X<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>“AN AMERICAN HAS COME!”</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>MICHAEL KIRSAKOFF was seated at a table
-writing a letter by the light of a candle when
-Wassili knocked at the door of his room. The
-old general’s eyes lifted to the door and made a pair of
-gleaming points against the gloom behind him. The
-broad gold straps on the shoulders of his uniform jacket
-set off his white old head so that it appeared to be resting
-on a golden tray which threw out a quivering sheen of
-yellow light with the trembling of his shoulders. His thin
-white hand dropped the pen. He motioned to Katerin to
-move behind him so that she stood in the shadow of his
-body, and recognizing Wassili’s cautious knock, he ordered
-the <i>moujik</i> to enter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Master, Ilya Andreitch has come with news of the
-government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who is Ilya Andreitch?” demanded the old general.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ilya, he who once cut wood for the Excellence. I
-know the man well. He has often bought food for us in
-the bazaar since we came here. He helped me to bring
-many things to this house from the other, but he is drunk
-to-night. Yet he vows he has news of the government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old general was puzzled. Katerin stepped into the
-light and looked at Wassili eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is the news Ilya brings?” she asked gently,
-afraid that her father might say something which would
-discourage Wassili from permitting Ilya to tell his story.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There is an American officer come to Chita to find the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>Excellence,” said Wassili, with a bow. “I do not know—it
-is Ilya Andreitch who says it and he——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin struck her hands together and gave a cry of
-joy. “An American!” she cried. “Can it be, my father,
-that our friends have at last sent help to us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You say an officer?” exclaimed Michael, his eyes on
-Wassili, and burning with an eager light.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So it is said, master.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“By the Holy Saints!” exclaimed Michael. “We
-shall escape Zorogoff if this is true! Who else can have
-sent him but our friends?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin was crying with joy. She threw her arms
-about her father’s neck and kissed him. Till now she
-had restrained her emotions, hidden her fears, and faced
-death calmly, but the news that aid was at hand released
-all her terrors and flooded them with a burst of happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, our friends have got our letters and have sent
-an American to save us!” she exclaimed through her tears.
-“God of the heavens is good to us, and has answered our
-prayers at last, so that we shall have peace and safety.
-This is the end of your tortures, my father!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is of you I think, Katerin Stephanovna,” said Michael,
-and he grasped her hands and pulled them to his
-mouth to kiss them. “What I have suffered I have suffered
-for you, for death means nothing to me if you can
-be safe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Tell us, Wassili,” urged Katerin. “Did the American
-officer bring word from friends? Is he to come here
-for us and take us away? And did he say who sent him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The gray old head of Michael snapped forward, the
-wisps of white hair waving gently. His eyes bored into
-Wassili while waiting for the <i>moujik</i> to answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ilya Andreitch told me but little, master. At first I
-thought he was drunk and did not trust him. And when
-I told him that he must tell me, he said he would talk with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>no one but Excellence, and that it was secret. Thus I
-would not bring him up till you had given the order for
-his coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then he is below now? Bring him up, and hasten, for
-we have no time to lose. Zorogoff may be here again with
-the light of morning and I am but now writing what shall
-be done when he has killed me. We must see this American
-officer with all speed before the Ataman is able to
-balk him. By the Holy Saints! This will save my
-daughter from death—for she will die before she submits
-to the will of this Mongol brigand! Go! Bring
-Ilya Andreitch before me and we shall hear his say!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili ran out into the hall and down the stairs, well
-pleased with the results of his report to his master, for
-he had feared that he had made a mistake in admitting
-Ilya at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael and Katerin could scarcely wait for Ilya to
-come up. The news of deliverance from their dangers—safety
-so close at hand after long weary months of hiding
-and worry—came like a pardon to two who were condemned
-to death. It had been five days since the Ataman
-had left them. He was still torturing them, for his
-threat against Katerin would undoubtedly be carried out
-unless she killed herself. They knew that Zorogoff would
-attempt to take them to his “palace” in revenge for their
-insults. And they had planned to die together rather
-than to permit the Mongol to carry out his evil purpose.
-That was the only way in which they could defeat him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Our letter to the Baranoffs got through,” said Michael.
-“It is they who have sent this American.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And do you think he will come here—to-night?”
-asked Katerin, her pale, drawn face alight with the joy of
-escape. “I cannot believe yet that we are to be safe
-again! God has answered my prayers! My father, I
-had given up hope!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>“Perhaps Ilya brings a letter from the American officer,”
-said Michael. “If he has sent word to us by
-Ilya, he must have also given Ilya something so that we
-shall know the American comes from friends. We cannot
-delay. If the Ataman should hear of this American——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“They are coming up,” said Katerin, and they heard
-Wassili and Ilya mounting the stairs. Soon the light of
-a shaking candle appeared down the hall, and Katerin
-threw open the door of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili blew out the candle when he entered, and thrust
-Ilya in ahead of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Here is Ilya Andreitch, master,” said Wassili, and
-Ilya blinked at the candle on Michael’s table, bowed, and
-stood nervously fingering his cap.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You bring us news, Ilya Andreitch,” began Michael
-when Katerin had closed the door. Michael’s thin, weak
-voice took on some of the relief he felt at knowing that
-help was at hand after months of danger in a world which
-had apparently gone mad, and he spoke somewhat in his
-old manner of authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I?” asked Ilya. “Yes, Excellence. I bring good
-news to your house—and to the mistress.” He bowed
-again, this time to Katerin, who had gone to her father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Wassili says an American officer has sent you,”
-prompted Katerin, seeing that Ilya was perturbed and
-might be stricken dumb by fear of being before the former
-Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He is at the Dauria, mistress,” said Ilya faintly, and
-turned to Wassili as if he expected the <i>moujik</i> to take up
-the story now, and go on with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“At the Dauria Hotel,” agreed Katerin. “And you
-have brought a message from him to us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya looked round the room wildly, seeking some escape
-from the eyes of Michael which bore upon him steadily.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>“Have you a message from the American?” asked
-Katerin gently.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I?” Ilya looked at her in amazement, and turned
-toward the door. Then he bowed again to Michael and
-Katerin to cover his confusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What did the American say?” urged Katerin, and
-Wassili gave utterance to a faint snort of disgust and
-prodded Ilya in the back.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What did the American say? Who knows?” asked
-Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The fool is drunk!” growled Michael. “Come!
-Speak up! Or have you drowned your tongue in vodka
-and come here to make fools of us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya’s face began to perspire, and he twisted his cap
-into a rope.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have no fear, Ilya,” said Katerin soothingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“May God smite me!” cried Ilya. “It was Rimsky
-who told me about it and I ran here to tell the Excellence!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And who is Rimsky?” demanded Michael. “Where
-did he learn of the man who has come to see me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya brushed his brow with the back of his hand.
-“Rimsky is an old friend of mine—a good man, Excellence,
-who means harm to no one and is a loyal man to
-his Czar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what did this Rimsky tell you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That the Excellence would pay me well to bring the
-news.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael laughed and his irritation disappeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So you have a friend named Rimsky who gives away
-my money, eh? And so I will pay you—if we can dig
-the news out of your skull. Now tell us what it is that
-the American said.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya began to twist his cap into a rope with both
-hands, and swallowed spittle.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>“Excellence, I have done no harm,” he began. “I
-am a poor man. I once cut wood for the Excellence. I
-am very secret. Rimsky tried to fish it from me where
-the Excellence was living, but I did not tell him. I left
-him drunk, and he does not know that I know where the
-Excellence lives, and he does not know I have come to the
-house of Excellence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya looked triumphantly at Katerin after this speech,
-and bowed again, feeling that he had handled the matter
-well, though he sought a sign of approval from the daughter
-of the Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What has all this to do with the American officer?”
-asked Michael. “That is what we are talking about,
-Ilya. You are very smart to have done what you did—now
-tell us more of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Rimsky sells cigarettes in an old <i>isba</i> in the Sofistkaya,”
-resumed Ilya. “He told me it was a pity he
-did not know where the Excellence lived, and he fished me
-for it. That is all. And I have come to tell Excellence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael expressed his dismay by a look at Katerin.
-He believed now that Ilya’s visit was only some drunken
-foolishness, or probably a trick.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“They have told this to Ilya so that they might follow
-him here. This is the work of enemies,” said Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Master!” began Wassili, holding up his hand, and
-then turning to Ilya, said, “You told me it was a matter
-of government. You said there was an American. Tell
-the master, as you told me, fool!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“May God smite me, it is as I say!” retorted Ilya
-to Wassili with a show of anger. “There is an American
-come for Michael Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff, the master
-general and Governor. It is truth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You say it, but how do you know it?” asked Katerin.
-She was beginning to feel that her father was right—that
-there were no grounds for their hopes other than a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>desire of this crafty <i>moujik</i> and some of his fellows to
-squeeze money from her father. But she concealed her
-disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Rimsky told me, mistress, that is how I know,” said
-Ilya with a bow.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And it was Rimsky who sent you to this house?” said
-Michael. “Now, the truth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya stared at the floor and tried to think. In a way,
-it was true that Rimsky had sent him to the house, and
-yet it was not true in just the way that Michael was saying.
-The <i>moujik’s</i> brain was not equal to a quick and
-accurate reply when folk of education twisted things up
-so.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I? No, master. Rimsky does not know I came to
-this house. How could he send me here when he has no
-knowledge of where the Excellence lives? I told no one
-because I am very secret, master.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then the American did not send you?” snapped Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Ilya turned to Katerin. “There is an American, mistress,”
-he insisted.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You know nothing of an American but what this fool
-Rimsky told you?” insisted Michael. “Come! You
-have not seen the American?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How could I see him, master?” asked Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael gave a snort of disgust and leaned back in his
-chair. “It is nothing,” he said sadly. “Send Ilya
-away,” with a look at Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can see the American, mistress,” pleaded Ilya,
-aghast at the idea that his visit had come to nothing and
-fearful of what Wassili might do once they were in the
-courtyard again. “I speak truth! There is an American
-officer come seeking the master general!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ilya Andreitch, I will give you fifty rubles if you
-will find this American,” said Katerin, hopeful again as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>she saw that Ilya was in earnest—at least she was determined
-not to make the mistake of sending Ilya away
-without making sure of what he did know. She knew that
-he was frightened, and that behind his fear there was more
-information than he was able to put into words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can find him, mistress, if he is at the Dauria—I
-know the place well. I was there but yesterday with pig-livers.”
-His eyes glittered with the richness of the reward
-promised.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This is a trap of Zorogoff’s to get us to leave the
-house,” growled Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Not if there is an American in the city to see us,”
-said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Some spy got Rimsky to tell this story to Ilya and
-then watch him to see where he went. I do not like it.
-Or perhaps they want you to go to the hotel seeking this
-mythical officer and seize you there. I tell you it is a
-trap, my daughter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Katerin picked up the pen on the table and wrote
-on a sheet of paper this note in Russian:</p>
-
-<p class='c023'><i>The man who takes this to you can find us again. Time is
-precious for we are in great danger. Be discreet. Say who
-sends you that we may know you are from friends.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c024'>She did not sign the note, but dried the ink over the
-candle, folded it, and handed it to Ilya with a handful
-of rubles which she took from between the leaves of a
-book on the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Give this to the American officer if you find him at
-the Dauria. If he has come for us, let him tell you so.
-But you are not to come back here to our house—Wassili
-will meet you at the <i>sobrania</i> at midnight, and you are
-to tell Wassili what the American says. Do not tell the
-American where we are but let him send a message and
-the name of the friend who has sent him. That will be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>our proof that he is not an enemy. Talk with no one
-about this—and when you have told Wassili what the
-American says, go home to bed and do not drink. If
-you give a true message to Wassili you shall have fifty
-rubles more to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He will be drunk as an owl ten minutes after he gets
-to the Sofistkaya and the first <i>kabak</i>,” grumbled Michael.
-“And if he finds this American, how is the American to
-read Russian?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If he come from friends, he must know something of
-Russian, else he would not have come by himself—and
-perhaps he has with him some man who can read it for
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are wasting your breath and my ink,” said Michael.
-“I think nothing of this business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God’s blessing on you, mistress,” said Ilya, crossing
-himself twice and turning to follow Wassili out of the
-room. “I shall be very secret and do as you command—and
-I shall not go drinking wine with the money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili lighted his candle from the flame of the one
-burning on the table and opened the door. Ilya went out
-before him, and they both descended the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is all a trap, as I have said,” Michael went on
-again, staring disconsolately into the flame of the candle,
-his head bent forward on his breast. “This is the Ataman’s
-work—and he will come again in the morning to
-mock us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have faith that God has saved our lives,” said Katerin.
-“If an American is in the city who seeks us, I
-shall go to him myself in case Ilya fails us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you would be going to your doom, my daughter,”
-and Michael dropped his face into his outspread
-arms upon the table to conceal the dejection which had
-come over him again since he believed that Ilya had come
-on a fool’s errand.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>“Hope is greater than fear, my father,” said Katerin,
-and lifted his head from the table to kiss him. “Who
-knows? By dawn we may be safe with this American.
-We must pray that Wassili will bring us a message at
-midnight which means the end of our troubles. Zorogoff
-will not dare defy an American officer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Zorogoff will defy the devil himself,” said Michael.
-“I put little hope in this fool’s tale, but if it will make
-you happy, I will hope and believe till we know that there
-is nothing to be gained from this Ilya and his foolishness.
-And what you have just said about going to the
-hotel yourself—that must not be. I shall not let you
-out of my sight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then perhaps we may both go,” said Katerin. “We
-would be in no greater danger if we tried to find the
-American than if we waited here for Zorogoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall stay here,” said Michael. “I am too old
-and wise to be fooled by Mongol tricks. If I knew you
-could be safe I would be happy to say farewell to you
-forever—but God tells me that we are in greater danger
-now than ever, and we must trust no one. Come! Hand
-me my pen again, that I may write down the things you
-should remember when I am dead.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XI<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE FLIGHT</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>WASSILI lurked in front of the <i>sobrania</i> from
-midnight till near morning. There was a
-ball going on inside the building and many
-people coming and going during the night, mostly officers
-of Zorogoff’s forces and their women. But Wassili
-saw nothing of Ilya, though he gossiped with the droshky-drivers
-about the <i>sobrania</i>, warming himself against the
-biting cold by frequent drinks of tea at a restaurant
-across the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When he had almost decided to return to Kirsakoff and
-report that he had not seen Ilya, he heard that Ilya had
-been killed. Then Wassili gathered such details as he
-could, and along toward morning hastened homeward with
-his story.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin saw the disaster in the <i>moujik’s</i> face when he
-appeared at the door of her room, breathing hard from a
-run up the stairs. His hands were covered with candle
-wax as a result of their shaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What news, Wassili?” she cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Cossacks killed Ilya soon after he left this house,
-mistress,” panted Wassili. “He crossed an old garden
-to evade the sentries, and did not stop when they halted
-him. He fell with six bullets in him—and they say in
-the city that he was a spy, for he carried a secret message.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Your message to the American,” said Michael, who
-had waited up for the return of Wassili. “It is as I
-said—Ilya was bait for the Ataman’s trap. There is no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>American. If you had gone with Ilya you would have
-been seized, my daughter, and if I had gone, I would have
-been shot down. We are lost—the story about the
-American was a myth to draw us from the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But, master, there is truth in what Ilya told us,” put
-in Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What?” cried Michael. “You, too? Are you fool
-enough to believe now what Ilya Andreitch said?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin had sat down on a bench when she heard that
-Ilya had been killed, her hope crushed again. Now she
-sprang up at Wassili’s words, waiting for him to go on.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is truth, master,” insisted Wassili. “I had the
-news in the city, so what Ilya said must have been true.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who told you?” cried Katerin. “Did they say he
-had come for us? Is he at the Dauria? Did you see
-him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili was overwhelmed by such a volley of questions,
-and he paused to catch his breath and assort his information
-from his memory before he should reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come! Come! Rattle your tongue, Wassili!” commanded
-Michael. “Sit here and talk!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili sank upon the bench while Michael and Katerin
-hovered over him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“An <i>iswostchik</i> told me,” began Wassili. “His father
-was in the Siberian Rifles with mine and I can trust his
-word. He told me that he drove an American officer to
-the Dauria—two days ago. If the American officer is
-there now, I cannot say. But there is none among the
-<i>iswostchiks</i> who has taken him back to the station. That
-I know, for I asked many of them—and they would know
-if the stranger had been taken away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thanks to God!” cried Katerin. “Then though
-poor Ilya is dead, there is still hope for us. We must
-pray that he spoke the truth. Tell us more, Wassili.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It came about this way,” resumed Wassili. “I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>heard my friend boasting of how he had brought a rich
-American to the Dauria—this officer—and how he paid
-double fare in Imperial rubles without any complaint.
-Not knowing what was the right fare, and not knowing
-that Imperials are worth thrice the money now in this
-city prove him to be a stranger. That he was an American,
-my friend is sure, for he was in Vladivostok last
-month and smuggled opium in here for the Chinese when
-he came up by the train. Why, he even knows the Americans
-so well that he speaks American. He cannot be
-fooled—he got rich in Vladivostok changing money for
-Americans.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But does the American seek us?” urged Katerin.
-She was anxious to establish the fact that the American
-had come to help them escape the Ataman.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I heard nothing of that, mistress,” replied Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael pondered the matter carefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It all means no good for us,” he said finally. “This
-officer may have sent Ilya to us, but why was Ilya shot?
-I say it looks like a trap.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But Zorogoff’s spies may have known that the
-American sent Ilya, and may have killed Ilya so no word
-could go back from us,” said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I grant that, yes,” said Michael, but still he had his
-doubts, and shook his head sadly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And if Zorogoff knows that an American officer has
-come, then the Ataman will not dare persecute us further.
-Did you hear the name of this American, Wassili?” asked
-Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Mistress, I know nothing more. I did not dare go to
-the hotel when I heard that Ilya had been killed, but came
-back here for the orders of Excellence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And that was right,” said Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Shall I go now to the American officer, master?”
-asked Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>“Let me think on it,” said Michael. “They killed
-Ilya and they may also kill you. It is dangerous business
-and we must be cautious. If it is true that an American
-has come, then the Ataman will do one of two things—strike
-speedily or leave us in peace. I believe that he will
-destroy us. I wish my wits were equal to telling me what
-I should do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We must not leave it to the Ataman,” declared Katerin.
-“The time has come for us to make our decisions—we
-it is who must act and not wait for the Ataman to
-make up his mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We! What do you mean, my daughter? What is it
-we can do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do something before the Ataman returns.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What? What is it we can do, surrounded as we
-are?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There was a new look of determination in Katerin’s
-face. “The time has come to be bold,” she said. “If
-Zorogoff expects us to wait here for his will or his coming,
-we must surprise him—we must go straight to this
-American officer and ask him to help us to escape the city,
-even if he has not been sent to us by friends. But I’m
-sure we will find that he has been dispatched here to rescue
-us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael put his hands to his face and stared at Katerin,
-aghast at her suggestion. He turned and sat down in
-his chair as if he had no strength to remain standing
-longer. “What in the name of God are you saying?”
-he whispered. “Do you mean we should put ourselves at
-the mercy of the Ataman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Are we not now at the mercy of the Ataman? Are
-we not waiting for his men to knock at the door? How
-much worse off will we be if we make an attempt to reach
-this American?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And how much better?” asked Michael. “Will it do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>us more good to be shot down by the sentries as was Ilya
-than to remain here waiting for some turn of fortune
-which will save us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Fortune has made the turn,” replied Katerin.
-“What more do we ask than that an American officer
-be in the city?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But if we never reach the hotel? What good would
-a regiment of Americans do us if we are shot on the
-way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We must take the chance and get to the hotel,” declared
-Katerin. “Surely, you must see that it is better
-to risk ourselves for the short time necessary to get to
-the Dauria than to remain here and wait for certain
-doom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Madness!” exclaimed Michael. “What we would be
-going to would be death in the dark.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall go by the first daylight, while the sentries
-are being changed in the streets,” said Katerin quietly.
-It was plain that her mind was settled upon the
-thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael peered at her across the candle flame as if he
-doubted her sanity. But Katerin looked back at him
-without the slightest sign that she wavered in her determination
-to abandon the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I see what you mean,” said Michael sadly. “You
-prefer to die by bullets rather than by the poison. Perhaps
-it is the better way—and I shall go with you and we
-shall die together.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin went to him and took up his hands. “I shall
-not cross the threshold of that Mongol’s house alive, my
-father. I prefer to chance death—and if we fail—then
-we are with God and have died as Russians. It is
-better to die by the bullet of a soldier than by my own
-hand. Remember the threat of Zorogoff and consider my
-reasons for not fearing death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>Michael gave the table a mighty thump with his fist.
-“Truth, by the Holy Saints!” he exclaimed. “But I
-am the one to make the attempt to get to the hotel—and
-find the American. I cannot see you walk into the streets
-with such wolves about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Katerin, “I do not wish you to go alone.
-We shall go together—and if we must, we shall die together.
-But we cannot go against the designs of God—if
-the American officer has been sent to this city by friends
-to save us, we must not lose a minute in making ourselves
-known to him. The Ataman said he would come back—and
-he will come. He knows what I fear more than death.
-Very good. We must not wait here for him to come—It
-is not in us to lie hidden here like jackals in traps for
-the pleasure of the Mongol dog. We must flee with all
-possible speed toward the American.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are right,” agreed Michael. “Zorogoff will lose
-no time if he learns of this American—and perhaps he
-knows of the stranger now. At least, as Wassili heard it,
-it must be common gossip in the city. So whatever Zorogoff
-plans against us he will accomplish without delay.
-But how are we to escape from the house? Are we to go
-out openly, as we are?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall escape through the servants’ gate,” said
-Katerin, her eyes on the candle as she planned. “It will
-be safer to wear the clothing of peasants. If there is a
-morning fog, it will help to conceal us. The greatest risk
-is in being seen as we get into the street. We cannot
-know how closely the house is being watched. But once
-clear and into the street, who is to think that two poor
-peasants are Michael Kirsakoff and his daughter—unless
-we should be stopped by soldiers and made to tell
-what our business is, where we came from, and who we
-are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, that is the difficulty,” said Michael. “But as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>you say, if we once get to the hotel, Slipitsky, the old
-Jew, if he is still alive, will take us to the American. Do
-you know if Slipitsky is still in charge of the Dauria,
-Wassili?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“When I heard last, master, Slipitsky still lived,” said
-the <i>moujik</i>. “Am I to go with the master and the mistress
-and do what I can to protect them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Katerin. “You would be recognized and
-betray our identity to observers. You are to stay here
-with the old woman, and if we die, you shall be rewarded
-for your loyalty. Bring us old boots—the worst you
-can find—and cabbages to carry in a bundle, that we
-may appear to be peasants come in from the country to
-market.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili went out and at once Katerin began plans and
-preparations for their flight from the house. By the
-time the morning sun revealed a white fog over the landscape
-everything was in readiness. An old shawl had
-been filled with packets of rubles wrapped in old newspapers,
-and on top had been put her sable coat and other
-clothing. But before the shawl was tied up at the corners,
-three cabbages had been put in on top so that they
-showed through the openings.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The thick fog of morning gave promise that they could
-get away from the house without being observed, unless
-there were sentries close by the servants’ gate.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When they were ready to depart, Michael put on the
-ancient gray coat—that one which was padded with
-paper rubles. He belted the shabby garment about him
-with an old rope and dropped his pistol into a side pocket.
-A dirty old sheepskin cap covered his head and a long
-muffler was wound about his neck, the ends trailing over
-his back. With the muffler pulled up over his face he
-could see through the mesh of the fabric, but his face was
-concealed. He also carried a short-stocked whip with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>dozen lashes, such as the farmers carry with them. In
-such attire it was hard to believe that he had been a general
-of the Czar and once Governor—now he was but a
-bent old <i>moujik</i> who thought of nothing but his crops and
-what money he could get for the few provisions he was
-carrying into the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin wrapped her head in an old shawl, tied a raggy
-towel across her nose against the cold, and drew the shawl
-down over her brow so that she peered out through a narrow
-slit. Her chin was concealed in the collar of a dirty
-and torn coat which had been mended with many faded
-patches. She wore a discarded pair of Wassili’s boots,
-which had been retrieved from the wagon-shed, where they
-had been hung up to be used for hinges or pieces of leather
-for repairs. But she also took with her in the bundle
-her light shoes and her slippers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When she finally picked up the bundle with the cabbages,
-she was a poor farmer’s daughter come in from the
-plains to sell her cabbages and buy salt and candles in
-the bazaar—and say a prayer at the church.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Before they set out from the house Wassili was sent
-into the street and pottered about the casks at the small
-door in the wall to see whether the house was being closely
-watched. He came back soon and reported that he could
-see no one.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old woman who had been doing the cooking stood
-crying and rubbing her eyes with her red hands as she saw
-the mistress ready to go forth and face the dangers of
-the city. She cried and prayed by turns, being sure that
-disaster awaited them both. Michael quieted her by a
-plentiful handful of rubles and an assurance that if they
-made to the hotel safely, she should be provided for before
-they escaped the city—but the old woman was disconsolate.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God go with you, master and mistress,” said Wassili,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>as he said farewell. He stood in the kitchen door and
-watched Michael and Katerin slip through the gate, bent
-on reaching the hotel and seeking the help of the American
-officer against the menace of Zorogoff.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>HIDDEN AGAIN</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>MICHAEL trudged along stolidly through the
-dirty snow in the middle of the street, his head
-bent against the cold in peasant style. Katerin
-followed him, close behind, carrying the bundle which
-showed the cabbages.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Once away from the house they felt they had a chance
-of getting to the hotel without being halted if they did
-not appear too eager. So they proceeded without haste,
-plodding along as if weary after a long walk in from the
-plains. To any one who might watch them they were apparently
-heedless of their surroundings and concerned
-only with where their feet were to be planted for each step,
-but they were really watchful through the cloths which
-hid their faces. It was not possible to see more than a
-hundred yards in any direction, for the fog shut them in
-and helped to conceal them from observation.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>They had not gone far before they made out the glow
-of a sentry-fire. Having planned carefully what they
-should do in various circumstances, they had no intention
-of attempting to avoid any soldiers, so Michael bore
-straight for the group about the fire. The soldiers looked
-up and scanned the approaching couple for a minute, then
-resumed their talk. Michael turned out just enough to
-pass them, lifted his head to stare at them through his
-muffler, gave them a gruff good-morning, and passed on.
-The four men about the fire supposed that the man and
-the woman must have passed through the outer cordons
-of sentries and given a satisfactory account of themselves.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>So Katerin also walked past them with a friendly
-nod, and though she was nervous for a few minutes after
-she had turned her back on them, they said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As the two drew in toward the business section of the
-city they passed people who peered suspiciously at them.
-There were times when Michael feared that they were being
-followed, but in time the supposed followers turned
-up side streets and went about their business.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Then a band of roistering soldiers swarmed out of a
-<i>kabak</i> and bore down upon the father and daughter. The
-men were tipsy after a night of drinking and were singing
-wild songs and indulging in pranks among themselves.
-They hailed Michael with pleasantries but made way for
-him, and were respectfully silent when they passed Katerin,
-willing enough to let peasants go on without being
-molested. Had they known that the two “peasants”
-were General Kirsakoff and his daughter their attitude
-might have been entirely different.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin struggled along, the great boots tiring her,
-for they were heavy and ill-fitting, and where the snow
-was packed hard at the street crossings, the boots slipped
-under her and with the heavy bundle she found it hard to
-walk. But she knew her father could not help her if they
-were to keep up the pretense that they were peasants.
-But Michael slowed his pace at times to let Katerin come
-up with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>They reached the church, and stopped before it a few
-minutes to rest. They prayed and crossed themselves and
-lingered as long as they dared, for though they were both
-tired and cold, they hoped to get to the hotel before the
-fog was dispersed by the sun. They were fortunate that
-so few people were abroad.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have good heart,” muttered Michael. “It is not
-far now to the hotel, and the roads will be better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The boots make me slow,” whispered Katerin. “But
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>do not think of me. Save your strength, for I can walk
-all day. And we must not appear to be in a hurry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is plain that no one has suspected us,” said Michael,
-peering back through the fog to make sure that
-they were not being trailed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The test will come at the hotel,” said Katerin.
-“There we may encounter spies, so we must be most
-careful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is too early for many officers of the Ataman to be
-about,” said Michael. “But there is safety in boldness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>They went on. Soon they passed the ruin of the great
-house which had been their home in the years while Michael
-was Governor. Only one wall stood, black and
-charred and penciled with white in crevices of the timbers
-where the powdered snow had sifted in. The vacant windows
-yawned upon them, showing a dismal background of
-drifting fog. In that house they had lived as rulers of
-the Valley of Despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In time they came to the upper end of the Sofistkaya
-where a road turned off to the prison on the hill. They
-moved down past the big store which had been looted thoroughly
-by the Bolsheviki and the exiles who had been freed
-from the prison after the fall of the throne. The great
-windows along the street were boarded up, and a pair of
-Japanese sentries stood by the entrance. From the roof
-flew a red and white flag which marked the headquarters of
-the Japanese commander.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Next they passed the wrecked bank. It was there that
-Michael’s partner had been slain while attempting to save
-what was left of the bank’s money after the first big raid.
-The windows were also boarded, so that in case of another
-uprising by revolutionists the building could not be used
-as a rifle-nest for snipers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Now there were more people in the streets. But every
-one was going about his business and paid little attention
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>to Michael and Katerin. Such soldiers as they saw ignored
-them. They reached the bridge over the Ingoda,
-and now could see the front of the Dauria, not far ahead.
-They soon gained a position on the street opposite the
-entrance to the hotel, and crossed in the middle of the
-street after the manner of people from the country. Michael
-paused before the door, and waited for Katerin to
-come up with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This is the place,” said Michael gruffly, and then he
-pushed open the door. He was afraid that there might
-be a group of people inside, but his fears were relieved
-at finding a sleepy-eyed youth drowsing by a fire-reddened
-stove on a bench.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Once through the door, Katerin let her bundle drop to
-the floor. It was so warm inside that she began to worry
-lest they be expected to uncover their faces, and in that
-case, if they did not find Slipitsky at once, they might be
-recognized by some casual passer-by who would carry
-the news of their arrival at the hotel to some of Zorogoff’s
-spies.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The youth by the fire roused himself reluctantly and
-gave an angry look at the intruders. It was plain he felt
-that people so poorly dressed had no business in the hotel.
-He eyed the bundle which Katerin had put down, and then
-motioned them out of the door with an angry gesture.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Get away with your cabbages!” he snarled. “This
-is no public place where people can warm themselves.
-This is the best hotel in the city and only for rich people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael bowed abjectly. “I have come to pay to Mr.
-Slipitsky money which I owe him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The youth stared the harder. The heat from the stove
-was oppressive after the cold of the streets, but Michael
-and Katerin made no move to uncover their faces.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You can give me the money,” said the youth, holding
-out his hand, though he did not rise from the bench.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>“Slipitsky is not here and if he were, he would have no
-time to bother with you. Come! Hand the money to me
-and get out!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Slipitsky not here?” demanded Michael. “But he
-told me to come. You mean that he has gone away?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I said he is not here,” said the youth curtly. “I
-have other things to do besides answer questions. I’ll
-take the money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, no,” said Michael. “Mr. Slipitsky must sign
-the paper if I pay him the money—it is always so. I do
-not know who you are. I must see Mr. Slipitsky, I tell
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The youth got to his feet and looked closely at Michael,
-as if suspicious of his purpose. He had probably been
-shrewd enough to understand that Michael did not talk
-wholly as a peasant. Having scrutinized Michael, he
-turned and looked at Katerin, but she ignored his gaze
-and looked about the walls at the dirty old posters with
-pictures of Russian ships.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Go away!” said the youth finally. “I can’t be
-troubled. This is no time to come asking for Mr. Slipitsky.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I have come twenty versts this morning to see
-Mr. Slipitsky and give him the money and I must get back
-to my cow,” insisted Michael, seeing that he was making
-an impression on the youth despite the latter’s show of
-contempt. “And if I have to go back to my house, it
-will be two months again before I can pay——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A black figure appeared at the top of the stairs while
-Michael was talking, and called down sharply, “Dazo!
-What are you doing? Who is there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I don’t know who it is,” said Dazo. “Some fools
-in from the country who have lost their way and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And is it a grand ball or something you are having
-down there with all this talk I hear, till I can’t do anything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>with my figures?” demanded the one above wrathfully.
-“Who is it come to talk with you so early in the
-morning? Maybe some rich gentleman from Moscow,
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael now recognized the person above as Slipitsky,
-and knowing that they were safe at last, called out, “Mr.
-Slipitsky, I have come to pay you the money I owe to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky leaned forward and peered down the stairs.
-“What! Somebody would be paying me money and that
-stupid goat of a Dazo does not know what is wanted.
-Dazo! Is it money you would let slip away from me in
-these times? Oy! A poor man you would make of me,
-stupid one! Tell the gentleman to come up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Michael did not wait to be urged by Dazo to go
-up. He started at once, and Katerin picked up the
-bundle and followed. Slipitsky remained standing in the
-dim light of the upper hall at the head of the stairs, peering
-down, and as Michael drew near the top, waved him
-forward. “Come this way to my office, please. And
-you—Dazo! Keep the door shut or I shall be beggared
-with buying wood from the Buriats. It is the house we
-wish to warm, and not all of Chita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky trotted ahead of Michael and led the way
-into a tiny room. By the time Michael entered, the old
-Jew was standing behind a desk.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have come to pay me money?” he demanded
-when Katerin had entered the room. “Who is it, I ask?”
-he added, suspicious now because Michael had not uncovered
-his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky was old and bent himself, with long black
-whiskers, a grave and wrinkled face, small black eyes that
-seemed to grasp what they looked at. He wore a round
-black cap on his head, and about his shoulders was a long
-black cape tied in at the middle with a green cord which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>had ended its usefulness as a curtain cord. His brow was
-furrowed, and he had no teeth that were visible, but his
-face had a benevolent expression as if he found it hard
-to be stern with people. There was something about his
-manner as he stood behind the desk which suggested a
-teacher. A wrinkled little smile lurked about his eyes—a
-ghost of a smile which had dissipated perhaps under the
-cruel times that had come. His breath smelled of boiled
-onions and the same odor pervaded the close little room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who is it, I ask?” repeated Slipitsky when Michael
-made no answer but turned to close the door behind Katerin.
-The old Jew was on his guard at once, for he knew
-these muffled figures might be robbers or secret police sent
-by Zorogoff to arrest him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We have come to have a talk with you privately,”
-whispered Michael. Slipitsky’s face was instantly
-screwed up with terror, and his jaw dropped. For an instant
-he was in something of a panic and he drew back
-into a corner, for he knew that no rude peasant would
-speak so correctly as had this stranger before him. And
-whispers always meant secrecy if not imminent danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are not peasants!” mumbled Slipitsky. “You
-have come in here by a trick! You do not speak now as
-peasants! Who has sent you here to make trouble for
-me in my house?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael whipped the muffler down from his face by way
-of answer and thrust his face forward into the light from
-the frosted window so that Slipitsky might recognize him
-without further talk.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Prophets of Israel!” cried the Jew, suddenly relieved
-of his worry as he recognized Michael. “You are
-dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Not yet, by the kindness of God,” whispered Michael,
-and turning to his daughter, said, “Also Katerin Stephanovna
-has come with me. You must hide us both, for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>we are beset by the Ataman and have fled away from our
-house to save our lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True enough, it is Michael Alexandrovitch, his Excellence
-who was Governor!” whispered Slipitsky as if assuring
-himself that he was not deceived by his eyes. He
-clapped his hands over his ears. “It was said that you
-were both dead! Four months ago I heard you had been
-killed! Is it that you have risen from the dead by a
-miracle, my old friends? By the patriarchs! This is a
-sight for me! Both of you—and dressed in poor rags
-like serfs come in from a farm to sell butter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin had exposed her face and smiled joyfully at
-the old Jew.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take care or you will be heard speaking to us and
-we shall be betrayed,” warned Michael. “No one must
-know we are here, or Zorogoff comes——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Enough!” cried Slipitsky, and ran out from behind
-his desk, keys jangling in his pockets, and shot the bolt
-on the door. “As you say, the place is like a beehive
-with spies,” he whispered, turning back to Michael.
-“That rascal, Dazo, below stairs is one of Zorogoff’s
-men, I know! The Cossacks made me make a place for
-him there at the door to watch—but I know he is an underground
-for the Ataman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then we shall be delivered,” said Michael, pulling up
-his muffler over his face again. “If it be already known
-to him that we are here——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We must fool him,” said Slipitsky. “What is the
-good of having a head if we do not use it? You must go
-out again and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But where shall we stay?” demanded Michael,
-alarmed at the Jew’s saying they must go. To be turned
-into the streets again meant certain capture by soldiers
-of the Ataman.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Please, you must hide us for our lives!” pleaded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>Katerin. “If you do not hide us somewhere we shall be
-killed!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall all be killed!” exclaimed Slipitsky. “Take
-off your covering and let me see your face again, mistress!
-Ah, yes, it is you! Can you doubt that I will not
-do what I can for old friends? Be patient.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then we can stay?” asked Katerin. “But what of
-the spy below? Will he not reveal us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We are desperate,” urged Michael. “Zorogoff has
-given us the mental torture—if he finds us again he will
-take my daughter to his palace to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Toosh!” exploded Slipitsky. “Zorogoff is not to
-find you. I have known persecution in my day—who of
-my people have not? And in your time you were good to
-some of my friends. Ah, I never forget, my friend! I
-will hide you well. But if Zorogoff knows, then we are
-all dead together—as dead as the prophets! That
-Ataman is a robber, Excellence! Every week I must pay
-him money till I am beggared. Taxes, he calls it! Is
-the last kopeck from a poor man taxes, I ask? And
-every name that goes in the book he watches, for fear I
-would have a stranger under my roof who might be a spy
-against him! And that dog of a Dazo is his eyes. But
-we must fool Dazo, as you shall see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He will know if we do not go away again,” said Katerin.
-“How are we to fool him on that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Toosh! Who is to suspect that the two peasants
-who came this morning to pay me money were his Excellence
-the General and his daughter? It is how you get
-out again, as Dazo sees it, that gives me troubles. But
-I shall put you in rooms and no names in the book for the
-spies. So we must fool that stupid one below. Wait
-here for me, Excellence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Jew unbolted the door with cautious fingers and
-looked down the hall. Then he went out and closed the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>door after him to look down the stairs. He saw Dazo
-lying on the bench, his back to the stove, apparently napping.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Dazo!” yelled Slipitsky frantically, at the same time
-beginning a wild caper like a dance, “Dazo! Stop the
-two—the old man and the woman with the cabbages!
-Stop them I say, or I am ruined for twenty rubles! Oh,
-oh, oh!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Dazo rolled off the bench and sat up, staring about
-him in bewilderment, startled out of a sound doze by the
-screams of Slipitsky.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is the trouble?” called the youth. “What has
-happened now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Enough has happened!” cried Slipitsky. “The two
-peasants who came in with the cabbages to pay me money!
-Stop them! Oh, I am ruined!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I saw no one!” cried Dazo. “I tell you no one
-has come in or gone out from this place while——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Stop the talk and run!” screamed Slipitsky, wringing
-his hands in agony. “I signed the receipt but the rubles
-they gave me were bad! Twenty rubles, I say, I lose!
-They just went out the door while you were dreaming of
-the wife you beat in Irkutsk! They just went out the
-door! Run for them and drag them back by their hair!
-Run, run—hurry!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are crazy,” muttered Dazo, but he reached for
-his coat to the wooden hook on the wall, not sure now that
-the two strangers had not evaded him while he was asleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am crazy for my twenty rubles!” raged Slipitsky,
-and Dazo pulled on his coat and dashed into the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky ran back to his little office and let himself in.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come!” he commanded. “I will put you in rooms,
-now that I have sent that fool of a Dazo down the Sofistkaya
-looking for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael and Katerin followed him down the long hall.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>The Jew put a big brass key into a door, and, turning the
-lock, thrust Michael into the room and handed him the
-key. “Keep quiet till I come with food, and if any one
-knocks do not answer. We have fooled that fox of a
-Dazo, and we shall fool the Ataman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And the old Jew put his fingers to his lips against
-the thanks which Michael and Katerin would have expressed,
-slipped out through the door and was gone, wailing
-through the hall about the fictitious twenty rubles
-which he had lost by the carelessness of Dazo, the spy.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XIII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>KATERIN PLANS TO MEET THE AMERICAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>SLIPITSKY returned to the Kirsakoffs in an hour,
-bringing with him a small samovar, some bread,
-and a cold partridge. In his pocket he carried a
-bottle of wine for Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You will need something to warm and hearten you,
-Excellence, for there is not much warmth,” he said when
-Katerin had let him in.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael was sitting on the bed, his boots off and his
-eyes blinking, for he had been sleeping, being worn out
-with waiting up for the return of Wassili the night before,
-the preparation for the flight, and the journey afoot into
-the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, that is good!” said Michael. “I am famished,
-though I have had a good sleep—without bad dreams,
-for now we are out of danger, old friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky turned and looked at him in surprise. “Out
-of danger! Do not think my hotel is so safe, Excellence.
-Zorogoff may ask for all my rooms any day for more of
-his officers—and when he takes the notion he searches
-the place. So you are still in danger—unless you have
-a plan for escape from the city. Surely you and the
-daughter must have some scheme for getting out by an
-underground!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, true!” said Michael, taking a glass of wine from
-Katerin’s hand. “That is why we have come—there is
-an American here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Friends have sent an American officer to us,” explained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>Katerin to the Jew. “Is he not here in the
-house?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So-o!” whispered Slipitsky, betraying his amazement.
-“It is you he has come for? And that is why so
-little has been seen of him! Two nights he has been under
-the roof and he has not stirred out, but sits all day smoking
-by a samovar! I have seen him in the hall once—a
-big fellow, maybe a colonel! And he has paid a week in
-advance, too, but I could not read what he wrote in the
-book for Dazo. So he got word to you that he was here—well,
-that is good for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We have heard that he was in the city looking for
-us,” said Michael. “But we are not sure—we must look
-into the matter. But I doubt if Zorogoff will dare interfere
-with an American—or us if the American has come
-to help us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky sat down and pulled his beard thoughtfully
-while Katerin busied herself with brewing the tea at the
-samovar.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is hard for us to tell what that devil of an Ataman
-will do with anybody,” said Slipitsky. “But an American—that
-is different. So your friends have done this
-for you! And the American has sent word to you that
-he is here waiting for you, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We heard it through Ilya Andreitch, a peasant, who
-came to our house last night with the news,” explained
-Katerin. “But when Ilya was sent here with a message
-last night he was killed. But the American did not tell
-Ilya to go to us—Ilya got news from friends of his.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky opened his eyes at that, and rolled them
-thoughtfully. “Then the American did not send the
-word to you by Ilya?” He was puzzled—and troubled
-again. “And Ilya was shot? That is bad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall have to be very cautious about it,” put in
-Michael, “for I am afraid of a trap.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>“Ilya got the news from Rimsky, an old cigarette-seller,”
-said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What!” exclaimed Slipitsky. “From that old liar?
-He will say anything for ten kopecks. What does he
-know about our American? Rimsky has not been here to
-see him. I tell you, there is something wrong about this—it
-may be that Rimsky is a spy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, yes!” said Michael, frowning thoughtfully.
-“What if Rimsky is a spy, as you say, and Ilya was
-fooled about the American’s having come for us? That
-is what I said from the first!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But it may be that the American asked Rimsky about
-us before he came to the hotel at all,” said Katerin.
-“And perhaps Rimsky gave the news to poor Ilya, and
-perhaps the news was truth. Then would it not be
-right?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I would like to see something that is right if Rimsky
-has had a hand in it,” grumbled Slipitsky, who was getting
-more worried as he considered the matter. He was
-reluctant to ask too many questions, for he supposed there
-might be angles to the situation which the Kirsakoffs
-would prefer not to discuss.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Katerin was becoming alarmed by Slipitsky’s
-doubts. She realized well enough that there had never
-been any proof beyond Ilya’s word that the American had
-come seeking them, and that Ilya himself had been dependent
-upon what Rimsky had said. But she did feel
-that there was protection of some kind for them in the
-bare fact that an American was under the same roof with
-them now, and that Zorogoff might not dare persecute
-them openly or take them from the hotel. She was determined
-to appeal to the American, but she wanted time
-to make her own plans. What she feared now was that
-Slipitsky, by his suspicions and doubts, would put her
-father back into his mood of dejection and discouragement.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>So she laughed gayly and served her father with
-tea and the cold partridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall find some way of talking with the American,”
-she declared to Slipitsky. “You must help me in some
-plan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can go to him and tell him that I know where the
-Kirsakoffs may be found,” suggested the Jew. “He will
-tell me, I think, at once, if he seeks you or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am not so sure,” said Katerin. “He may not want
-to discuss a secret with you—he will be suspicious of any
-person who talks with him about us, if he is trying to
-find us unbeknownst to others in the city. He might
-deny that he seeks us, and thus we should be deprived of
-his help.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” said Slipitsky. “The owl says little but
-thinks much, so what he knows is his own, which is wisdom.
-We need not fear the American—I wish there
-were more of them here. But this old fox of a Rimsky!
-It would be well to know what he is at.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Michael. “You cannot go running to a
-stranger and saying you know where we are hidden. And
-we cannot go to him and make ourselves known till we
-know for sure that he is seeking us. The matter will
-have to be arranged with more care.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, Excellence, the wolf knows the forest and its
-ways,” said the Jew. “We must be wise about it, for
-there is no tax on wisdom. It would be well for me to
-bring Rimsky to the house and question him about what
-he knows—and what he said to Ilya.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You say you do not trust Rimsky,” said Katerin.
-“You say he is a liar—and may be a spy for the Ataman.
-Even if the American asked Rimsky about us,
-Rimsky might lie about it—and even if he tells the truth,
-whatever he says we will mistrust it. And we must be
-careful that we do not set his tongue wagging in the city.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>Till we have thought more about it, we must be most
-cautious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then shall I ask the American about it, mistress?”
-asked the Jew.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, thank you—I shall go and see the American
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“See the American yourself!” gasped Michael in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, I shall see him,” replied Katerin calmly. “That
-is the simplest and best way to learn what we want to
-know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is sensible,” agreed Slipitsky.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You mean that you will go and tell him who you
-are?” demanded Michael, his horror intensifying at the
-idea the more he realized that Katerin meant what she
-was saying.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He may know who I am when he sees me,” said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It must not be done, my daughter,” said Michael, his
-agitation only growing. “We can trust no one, especially
-not a strange man who comes from whom we know
-not. This is no time to be rash, and I cannot let you put
-yourself into danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If this American has come seeking Michael Kirsakoff
-and his daughter, will he not have descriptions of us?
-And if he is not seeking us, how is he to know who I am?
-I shall not tell him my name, you may be assured of that,
-unless he knows me—or unless he tells me that he seeks
-us. So what can the danger be, my father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There is some truth in what you say,” admitted
-Michael, as he resumed eating the partridge. “If he
-knows you, he knows, and that would mean he has come
-from friends. But if he does not recognize you, and he
-does not tell you that he is seeking us, what have you
-learned? And how are you to go talking with a man you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>do not know? I tell you you must not take risks on what
-Ilya has said!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is wisdom,” assented the Jew, nodding his head
-slowly. “You must always test the ice before you walk
-upon it, else you will find yourself in the river with the
-fish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Tell me, where is the room of the American?” asked
-Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The other way—down at the end of the hall with
-windows that look up the Sofistkaya, mistress.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Can you put us in rooms near him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, mistress, I could. When Dazo goes out later in
-the day, it can be accomplished secretly. Is it that you
-intend to watch the American? You will see little of
-him if he keeps to his room as he has.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What good would it do us to watch him?” asked
-Michael. “It would tell us nothing to see him going
-and coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Katerin. “But I wish to be near him for
-protection in case the Ataman’s officers come here. Now,
-have you a servant for us who can be trusted not to talk
-about us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, mistress—a sister of my cousin. She waits
-upon some of the Ataman’s officers who live in the house.
-It is she who will bring you your samovars and your food.
-She is safe—not too much sense and little to say to any
-one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then this is my plan,” said Katerin. “If you will
-contrive to put us near the American officer, the next thing
-will be to take care that when the American rings for a
-samovar the girl does not take it to him, but brings it to
-us. And I shall carry the samovar to him. He, thinking
-I am but a samovar girl, may talk with me and I may learn
-if he seeks among the people of the city for a man by the
-name of Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>“A Kirsakoff a servant! You, Katerin Stephanovna,
-a samovar girl in this hotel! How can you think of such
-a thing?” cried Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin laughed merrily and tossed her head, already in
-a mood for the plan which she had evolved. “I would
-not be a samovar girl because I play at it, my father,”
-she said. “What is it but fun? Who can help the Kirsakoffs
-better than God and themselves?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I say you are not to be a servant!” objected
-Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Better a living servant than a dead aristocrat,” replied
-Katerin. “What harm can come of it? Is it not
-wise to be known here as a servant? We have come here
-as peasants and wish to be known as such for safety.
-Look at my old black dress! I have on my slippers—see—and
-I can let down my hair. How will an
-American know that I am not a samovar girl—unless, as
-we have said, he recognizes me at once as a Kirsakoff?
-And I can talk with him, perhaps. He will not be afraid
-of saying things to a girl who is a servant which he
-would keep from others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what then?” asked Michael with a frown. “Do
-you think that this American is going about telling his
-secret business to any samovar girl? Fi! You must
-take him for a fool before you have seen him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am afraid that he will know you are not a servant,
-if I am allowed to say my opinion, mistress,” said the Jew
-dolefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But he is an American,” persisted Katerin. “He
-probably knows little Russian. But what I wish to
-learn at once is whether he will know me for a Kirsakoff.
-And if he does not recognize me, and yet sees that I am
-not of the servant class, all the more reason why he should
-suspect that I might know the Kirsakoffs. So he might
-ask me if I know them. Why should he not ask a samovar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>girl, when he has asked old Rimsky for General Kirsakoff?
-Do you think I will only take his food to him and then
-run away without a word?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what else can you do?” asked her father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall talk to him—of the weather, and the troubles
-that have come upon the people. And if he does not tell
-me why he has come to Chita, I shall try and learn it from
-him. Can he speak Russian, do you know, Mr. Slipitsky?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He must speak a little,” said the Jew. “He is alone,
-and he has made his way about. He talked with Dazo,
-who knows nothing but Russian, the stupid ox. But the
-American wrote in the book in English and I could make
-nothing of it—just a scrawl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then he will be able to talk a little with me,” said
-Katerin. “At least, enough so that I may gain his confidence
-and be able to talk with him in a way of gossip
-about General Kirsakoff who was Governor here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“By the Prophets!” said Slipitsky. “The mistress
-Katerin Stephanovna should be in the secret police, Excellence!
-It is all a good plan, and the mistress should be
-allowed to have her way in it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I wish there were some other way to go about it than
-this business of being a samovar girl,” said Michael as
-he lighted a cigarette. “We shall know how wise it all
-is when we see what we shall learn by it. But I shall not
-prevent its being done, for we are in danger enough, and
-making danger for you, my friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Think not of my danger,” said the Jew.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then I shall do it,” said Katerin. “We cannot delay,
-and we cannot take outsiders, like this man Rimsky,
-into our confidence. Our safety now depends upon keeping
-secret where we are, and upon making the best of
-such time as we have. Who knows when the Ataman
-will learn where we have gone from the house? And you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>shall be well paid for your help, Mr. Slipitsky, and for
-what you have done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, it is not for money,” said the Jew. “When are
-you to begin as samovar girl, mistress? I must make the
-arrangements and be sure that everything is ready.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The morning is the best time for me to go to the
-American,” said Katerin. “I shall take his morning
-samovar to him, the girl bringing it to me first. And
-I shall go on serving him till I have learned what I need.
-And if he should not tell me before he is to leave the city,
-I shall tell him that we wish to escape the city under his
-protection. Surely, we need not be afraid of an
-American!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” agreed Michael. “He cannot be from enemies
-if he is not from friends. But it is best to learn what we
-can first, and you must have a good rest before you begin
-a battle of wits.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Jew left them again, and later in the day he put
-Michael and Katerin into two rooms next to the room in
-which Peter was resting and planning how he should deal
-with Michael Kirsakoff if he could be found in Chita.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XIV<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE SAMOVAR GIRL</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>IT was nine o’clock by his wrist-watch when Peter got
-out of bed that morning. From what he could see
-of the city through the frosted windows, it was a
-cold gray day, with the position of the sun above the
-ridge of hills marked by a yellow blotch through the scattering
-fog.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The room was cold and he dressed rapidly. He rang
-at once for a samovar, and began shaving. He had made
-up his mind to make definite efforts this day to trace
-Michael Kirsakoff, for he was now rested from his journey
-on the train. He thought of Rimsky. It might be wise
-to go in and see the graybeard again, and pick up once
-more the conversation and the gossip. In time Rimsky
-would be willing to talk more freely, Peter was sure.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The samovar girl was slower than usual in coming.
-Peter rang again—three times, and with as much insistence
-as he could put into the pressure of the button.
-He finished shaving, and had a mind to go out to the
-dreary dining room and see what could be done about
-getting some hot tea there. It was apparent that the
-stupid and slatternly girl who had been serving him could
-not be depended upon for prompt service—and he was
-beginning to suffer from the cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When he had decided that he should wait no longer,
-there came a knock at the door. He opened it—and
-stared! For instead of the peasant girl who had been
-serving him since his arrival at the hotel, there was a tall
-young woman with a beautiful face—a patrician face,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>the face of a woman of noble lineage! And he was
-startled, though he was too well trained in his business
-to reveal his amazement to her. Still, he paused for an
-instant, not sure that she had not mistaken the room and
-had not come in response to his ringing. He looked at
-her over the top of the big brass samovar which she bore
-on a tray before her, and her keenly intelligent blue eyes
-met his with a self-possessed and frank gaze. He half
-expected her to mutter some apology and go away. Instead,
-she stood gazing at him, waiting for him to make
-way for her, and the trace of a smile came into her eyes,
-as if she felt like saying to him, “Here is your samovar!
-How do you expect to get it if you stand all morning in
-the doorway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter bowed slightly, and said good-morning with an
-effort to be casual. In the second which he had stood
-stock still looking at her, a suspicion had crossed his
-mind—this well-born woman had not taken the place of
-his unkempt serving girl without good reason. It was
-quite possible, and quite in the Russian style, to send an
-attractive woman to serve him and spy upon him. Very
-well! He decided that he should play a little at that game
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Good-morning, master,” Katerin replied modestly,
-and came through the door when Peter stepped aside to
-admit her. She smiled as a matter of duty, and went
-about her business of placing the samovar and the breakfast
-things on the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter went before the big mirror on the wall between
-the windows and pretended to be combing his hair. He
-wished to conceal from the new samovar girl his close observation
-of her, and he could watch her image in the
-mirror without appearing to pay any special attention to
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin wore her old black dress. Peter knew at once
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>that it was not a cast-off garment such as might be given
-to a serving girl by a woman of the upper class—it was
-obviously her own garment, cut and made especially for
-her. Though the material was old, he knew it for fine
-stuff, probably imported. A real American might have
-been deceived into the belief that this woman was nothing
-but a servant; Peter, however, knew that such a delicate
-face, such fine features, such a carriage of a proud head
-were to be found only among the nobility of his native
-country. If she had been sent to watch him, he knew
-that whoever had sent her could not know that he was a
-native Russian—it was presumed that he was an
-American so unfamiliar with Russia as to be easily misled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He smiled as he watched her. She handled the crude
-dishes as if they were of the most fragile china or of
-fine glass. She put down the heavy blue sugar-urn
-gently; she transferred the tea-glass, which was made
-from the bottom of a bottle, from the tray to the table
-with infinite care. She laid out the old brass spoon beside
-the heavy plate on the dingy cloth as if instead of
-being brass it were of the finest silver.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He noted her hands. The fingers were slender—and
-clean. The nails were polished. Her black hair, braided
-down her back and tied with a bit of velvet black ribbon,
-had a sheen which indicated the care which had been
-given to it. And the low collar of her gown revealed the
-fine texture of her skin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Having arranged the dishes on the table, Katerin stood
-with her back to Peter, hands on hips and watching the
-teapot atop the samovar. This was all in startling contrast
-to the abrupt manner of the other girl, who had
-dumped the things down upon the table and departed.
-This new girl seemed suspiciously solicitous about the comfort
-of the American—and was possessed of plenty of
-time for lingering in the rooms of guests!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>Peter walked to the table, and sat down with his back
-to the window. She remained standing before the
-samovar in thoughtful attitude, disregarding him. He
-saw that her face showed traces of strain—a pallor
-which was not natural to her skin and a gauntness about
-her eyes which gave her a sad and melancholy expression.
-Presently she picked up the blue sugar-urn as if to put
-it better within his reach.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah!” said Peter, rubbing his hands and smiling up
-at her. “On cold mornings like this one the song of
-the samovar makes pretty music in our ears!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was an old saying of his father’s—and Peter spoke
-the Russian words with casual rapidity, for he wanted to
-see what she would think of him—an American who spoke
-Russian as only one born under the Czar could speak it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The sugar-urn slipped from Katerin’s fingers and
-crashed down upon the metal tray, spilling the sugar.
-And he heard her give a startled gasp. A look of utter
-astonishment came into her face and she gave him a
-frightened stare. The Russian words had put her into
-a swift panic—she was more than astonished—she was
-actually alarmed at hearing her own language flow so
-freely from the lips of a man she supposed to be an
-American.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have I frightened you?” he asked, looking at her
-with feigned concern, and speaking gently. “Do you
-fear the sound of your own language?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are Russian,” she said simply, but with the
-faintest trace of a question in the words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, no, I am an American,” he replied easily.
-“True, I am of Russian blood.” He smiled at her, and
-she looked away from him swiftly, renewing her efforts
-to save the sugar which had been spilled from being wet
-in the bottom of the tray. He saw her fine white skin
-show a sudden flush of color that rose from her throat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>and mounted slowly to her cheeks, tinting the pale skin
-under her eyes. He thought now that she was more
-beautiful than he had at first realized.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Is it because I am Russian that you show fear?” he
-went on.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She tossed her head a trifle, as if in defiance. “I do
-not fear you,” she said lightly, and gave him a shy smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I would be sorry if you did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is very pleasant—that we may speak to each
-other and understand. I was surprised—yes. Now,
-there is your sugar, and I must go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, please!” he objected as she turned as if to go
-to the door. “Everybody is surprised to hear the American
-officer speak real Russian, but no one stops to talk
-with me—and I am hungry for talk—talk in Russian.
-I have only just come, and the other girl would say only,
-‘Yes, master’ and ‘No, master,’ and run away frightened,
-just as you are about to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I am not frightened,” she said, pretending to
-bother with the teapot on the top of the samovar.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But just now, at hearing your own language, you
-dropped the sugar dish. Is it not true?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was joking her now in an effort to get on friendly
-terms with her. But she still appeared a bit distrait,
-as if she had not yet recovered from the shock of hearing
-a foreigner speaking the Czar’s Russian.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, I was startled,” admitted Katerin, and now
-smiled at him frankly, though she gave him a searching
-look—the silver bars on his shoulders, the buttons of his
-blouse, the circle of brown tape at the cuffs of his tunic.
-“And you would be surprised, American, if a samovar
-girl should speak to you in perfect English.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Probably I should,” said Peter. “As it was, you
-surprised me this morning—I was expecting the other
-girl to come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>She said nothing to that. She realized now that it
-would be foolish to expect him to think of her as of the
-servant class, and had already given up all ideas of making
-a pretense.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And as for Peter, he was beginning to abandon his
-theory that she was a spy. There was probably some
-other reason for her being a servant. He was chiefly concerned
-now with making her a friend, for the thought
-crossed his mind that this girl might be able to give him
-information about Kirsakoff, though the subject of the
-former Governor would have to be approached with great
-caution.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The other girl could not come this morning,” she said.
-“But I shall not always bring your samovar—my work
-is on the other floors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I hope you will, though it is too bad that you have
-to work as a samovar girl.” This was direct angling for
-enlightenment as to why she was serving as a samovar
-girl—he wanted to give her a chance to set herself right
-with him. If she did happen to be a spy, it would make it
-easy for her to improvise a history for herself and so
-find it easy to talk with him and deflect his suspicions—if
-she thought he was suspicious of her true status. He
-knew it was quite possible that she was a refugee who had
-turned “worker” for protection against the wrath of
-the masses toward the wealthy.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“People once rich are now poor,” said Katerin, and
-looked at him significantly. She was hoping that he
-might take this hint, and by a closer scrutiny, recognize
-her as Kirsakoff’s daughter. In that case, he would make
-it known to her that he had come from friends to find her
-and her father. But, as a matter of fact, Peter had forgotten
-that Kirsakoff had a daughter—except for a
-little girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And it is necessary now that you work?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>“It is most necessary. I must have food and shelter
-by some method.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are working here—as a samovar girl—for
-food and shelter? Is it as bad as that with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Why not I as well as others?” she asked simply, with
-a shrug of her shoulders. “And others have fared worse.
-What better could I do while I wait—for friends—to
-send help to me—and my people?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Once more she gave him that steady gaze which she
-thought would add meaning to her words, but though his
-face was serious, not a glimmer of understanding did she
-see in his eyes. She thought it strange that if he had
-been sent to rescue her father and herself he could not
-grasp the meaning behind her words and her glances.
-Surely, he would have been shown a picture of her, or
-have a description of her from friends which would cause
-him to recognize the daughter of Michael Kirsakoff easily.
-There were not so many young women of her age, education,
-and appearance in Chita, she knew.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She turned her eyes from his, and colored again, embarrassed
-by having looked so long and steadily into the
-eyes of a stranger. She drew him a glass full of hot
-water from the samovar for a fresh glass of tea and by
-this means covered her sense of having appeared too bold
-with a strange man.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So you are waiting for help to come to you, eh?”
-asked Peter. He pitied her—yet he was still reserving
-his judgment about her. It was possible that her story
-was only to mislead him as to her real motive in bringing
-the samovar to his room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin smiled sadly. “Yes, I wait for a chance to
-get away from the city. We have sent letters to friends
-in Harbin and in Vladivostok—weeks ago, months ago.
-We are not sure that they got the letters, for we have had
-no answer. Yet we hope some one will come to help us.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>Perhaps—<i>they will send some one to us</i>,” she added with
-special significance and looked at him again with intent
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was puzzled now. He saw that she was trying
-to make him understand something without putting it into
-words—it might be that she was seeking to learn for
-some other person what his object was in coming to Chita.
-Or he had been mistaken for some other person who was
-expected.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Why do you not go to Vladivostok yourself?” he
-asked, evading saying anything that bore upon what he
-was thinking. “The trains are running. Is it lack of
-money that prevents you from going?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, not money,” she said, and then with a glance at
-the door, she lowered her voice to almost a whisper. “Do
-you not know about the Ataman Zorogoff who is in this
-city?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, I have heard of him. I hope to know more about
-him. The Americans want to help the people. Perhaps
-you will tell me about Zorogoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter thought that was enough for him to say about
-Zorogoff. He did not care to commit himself on the subject
-of the Ataman—did not wish to betray any antagonism
-toward the Mongol ruler. The Ataman was a
-man to be wary about, and Peter had no intention of taking
-this girl into his confidence as to where he might stand
-in any matter which involved Zorogoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin suddenly clenched her hands. “Do the
-Americans think they can help us if they remain in Vladivostok?”
-she demanded with passion. Then she lapsed
-back into her easy manner as suddenly as she had blurted
-out her feelings, and turned as if she would go.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Please wait!” he commanded. “This is something
-that it would be well for me to know.” Then dropping
-his voice as she paused and looked back at him over her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>shoulder, he went on, “You mean that the people are
-oppressed by the Ataman Zorogoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She returned and stood before the samovar, as if settling
-in her mind what her answer should be.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I think I had better not talk about the Ataman,” she
-said finally. “He is not a safe subject for discussion by
-a poor and helpless samovar girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Tell me,” he urged, bending forward and speaking
-confidentially, “are you in danger from the Ataman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She gave him that quick look again, as if she were not
-quite sure that he could be trusted. “It is better for
-me not to talk of the Ataman—but I am a samovar girl
-here for my own safety—till some one comes for me—<i>and
-my father</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Once more he understood that he was to get some meaning
-from her words. He noticed that a sudden change had
-come over her—there was a softer look in her eyes, as
-if she had abandoned all thought of using any artifice with
-him and was on the verge of giving him her confidence.
-Her eyes seemed to burn with a kindlier light for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was right about Katerin. She was at that time
-strongly tempted to tell him who she was. She watched
-him with a quivering expectancy, waiting for him to whisper
-to her that he was the man who had been sent by her
-friends to find her and Michael Kirsakoff. But when he
-said nothing and observed her without any sign that he
-had comprehended her meaning in words or looks, she
-felt a fear that perhaps she had gone too far in her attempts
-to enlighten him as to her identity.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you live here—in Chita?” he asked. It was in
-his mind that this was a good time to test her as to whether
-she might have any knowledge of Kirsakoff. He realized
-that if she had her home in Chita, she was of the class
-who would know the former Governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin’s lips moved as if to reply, but she did not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>speak. She had recovered her caution. She wanted to
-evade the answer, for once more she had built up a mental
-resistance against him and was beginning to be afraid.
-She realized that if she pretended to be a stranger in the
-city she would defeat his purpose if he had really come
-from friends, by misleading him. If she told him that she
-was a stranger in the city he would be thrown entirely
-off the track and never suspect that she was Katerin Stephanovna
-Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have been in Chita long enough to know it well,”
-she said. “And I have been here long enough to be willing
-to go, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you have friends here,” he said. “You must
-know many of the people—the wealthy people, that is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“They are almost all gone—or dead. Most of them
-are in Vladivostok, or in hiding here. But we cannot get
-away now—it is impossible for us to leave by ourselves.
-We wait for our friends—<i>to send us help</i>.” That should
-be plain enough for him, she thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How would they send help?” he asked. “You mean
-that they would send soldiers?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps they would send a man who would be able
-to take us away from the city—they might even send a—foreigner.
-A man Zorogoff would not dare to hinder
-from going with us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter now had full understanding of her searching looks,
-her broad hints about help, and her surprise at finding
-that he spoke perfect Russian though supposed to be an
-American. Also, he saw her reason for coming to him as
-a samovar girl—unless she was really a spy delving into
-his object for being in the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am sorry I have been so stupid,” he said. “You
-must think I am a fool—but I am not a messenger sent
-by your friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin was standing at the far end of the table from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>him, close by the door. He saw her turn pale, either with
-sudden fear of him, or great disappointment that she had
-revealed to him that she was expecting a messenger. She
-was calm enough, but he saw that his admission that he
-was not the expected messenger, chilled her with some
-unaccountable terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was this that had terrified Katerin: This American
-now denied that he was seeking her father—but where
-had Ilya gotten the word that an American was hunting
-for Michael Kirsakoff? And this American was really a
-Russian! Could it be that instead of being a friend, or
-from friends, he was in reality an enemy? What could
-this man want with her father? she asked herself. He
-could not have come from friends, else he would have easily
-recognized her. And if he had asked Rimsky for the
-whereabouts of Michael Kirsakoff and was willing that
-the old cigarette-seller and Ilya Andreitch the pig-killing
-<i>moujik</i> should know that he was seeking Kirsakoff, why
-was he not willing that she should know of his quest?
-She saw that he was willing to ally himself with peasants
-but withheld the object of his coming to the city from
-aristocrats. She saw that she had failed in misleading
-him as to her class. He gave his secrets to peasants—thus
-he must be an enemy to her father and herself!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She laughed suddenly, as if all that had passed between
-them had been a joke. She must change her tactics and
-get his secret. She must not arouse his suspicions as to
-her identity now, but baffle him in every way, for if he
-were not a friend he must be a new menace to her and her
-father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Of course you are not the messenger,” she said, and
-returning to the samovar, took down the teapot, shook it
-swingingly and looked into it. Her face was flushed
-again under the excitement of what she had discovered
-about him. “Come! Have another glass of tea, please—<i>master!</i>”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>She gave a joking twist to the last word,
-and threw back her head and laughed gayly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But it is too bad if you have been expecting a messenger,”
-said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, it is nothing. Everybody in Siberia is waiting to
-hear from friends! You Americans! You are too serious
-about everything—what does it matter if you be
-not the man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Peter <i>was</i> serious. He almost wished now that he
-had led her to believe that he was a messenger. For he
-was afraid that she would go away and he would see her
-no more. He wanted to see her again and again, and in
-time bring their conversation to the subject of the former
-governor and get from her some information as to where
-he might look for Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Is it true that you are in danger?” he asked. “That
-you must get away from the city?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We are all in danger here,” she retorted. “Trust
-no one—the city is full of spies, and you must be careful
-what you say—even what you say to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I think I could trust you,” he said conciliatingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Please don’t trust me. I would rather not have any
-secrets. The greatest danger in this city is in having a
-secret which some person wants. I prefer to know nothing
-and be safe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps I could be of help to you,” said Peter, having
-an idea that by offering protection he could gain her
-confidence and learn from her where Kirsakoff might be
-found. “I am an American officer, and if I should employ
-you for my government no one would dare threaten
-your safety.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps you could help me,” she said thoughtfully.
-“But I know little about you—what part of Russia are
-you from?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter hesitated. It would not do to tell her he had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>been a boy in Chita for that news would start gossip, and
-he would be under suspicion at once if Kirsakoff were
-killed. He drank some tea before he answered the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, I have not been in Russia for years—I left Kiev
-when I was a boy. Come! What is your name? We
-must be friends if we are going to go into these matters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is your name?” she countered.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Call me Peter—that is my name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Peter! That is no name for a Russian. What are
-your other names?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Peter Petrovitch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She laughed at him with a touch of saucy insouciance,
-and lifted her shoulders as if she put small faith in the
-name. “What is your generic name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Gordon, but I hoped you might call me Peter Petrovitch—it
-has been many years since I heard it thus.
-You make me forget that I am an American, I, who am
-Russian.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She turned toward the door. “I am afraid that I
-must go now,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He rose from his chair and moved after her. “But
-you have not given me your name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Call me Vashka.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But that is no name for a Russian,” he insisted.
-“The generic name, please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That will do for now—it is good enough for a samovar
-girl.” She moved toward the door, but lingeringly,
-as if she had other things she would say but refrained from
-saying them at this time.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, but I know you are not really a samovar girl,”
-he said seriously. “You are a lady, and I shall be happy
-to help you and serve you if it is in my power. Promise
-that you will come back to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps I shall come,” she replied, and smiled over
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>her shoulder at him. She felt unable to cope with him
-at this time, knowing that Ilya had said he sought her
-father. She knew that before she talked with him further
-she must consider the matter and consult with the sagacious
-Slipitsky. “You are very kind,” she said, smiled
-again, and went through the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter bowed as she disappeared, looking back at him
-from the hall as if fearful that he would run after her
-and see where she went. But he closed the door, and stood
-smiling at himself in the big mirror—smiling over his
-thoughts of the amazing samovar girl he had found in
-Chita!</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XV<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE TRAP SHUTS</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>SLIPITSKY was with Michael when Katerin returned
-from Peter’s room. The old Jew was consumed
-with curiosity about the American, and worried
-for the safety of his guests, for he sensed menace in the
-stranger. Schooled all his life in the secret intrigues
-among exiles and living in an atmosphere of spies and
-counter spies, he had an astounding mental perception
-in devious ways. The fact that Rimsky and Ilya, two
-peasants, had knowledge of the American which pointed
-to some hidden purpose in his arrival in the city, was
-proof enough to Slipitsky that something was seriously
-wrong. The chasm of caste in Siberia prevents an officer
-from dealing with the lower class of peasants—unless
-he is using them for an advantage against his own
-class. To the Russian, an officer comes from the upper
-classes, so the idea that Peter could have ever been a
-peasant was beyond the comprehension of Slipitsky or
-Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin slipped into the room quickly and fastened the
-bolt of the door. Slipitsky rose from his chair and
-turned to her inquiringly, but she put her finger to her
-lips for caution. Michael was sitting on the bed. He
-saw the trouble in Katerin’s face, and knew that she could
-not bring the good news which they had hoped for—that
-the American had come from friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is the word?” whispered Slipitsky. “What
-says the American?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>“He is a Russian!” said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Holy Saints!” gasped Michael, astounded, and his
-head began to shake with excitement.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Russian!” exclaimed Slipitsky, looking at Katerin as
-if what she had said exceeded all probability. “How
-could he be a Russian? Is it that he has come to my
-house dressed as an American and is really a spy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“All I know is that he speaks the Czar’s Russian,” said
-Katerin. “He has not come from friends,” and then she
-went on and hastily told them how she had given Peter
-every hint that she dared, so that he might understand
-who she was, and that he had denied being sent to Chita
-to help anybody.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then that fool of an Ilya was lying!” said Michael
-wrathfully. “He has made fools of us! We came here
-expecting to find a dove and we have found a hawk. Ilya
-had sand in his brains! It was all done to fool us and
-get money! An American who is a Russian—what good
-can he do us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Hah! A riddle!” said the Jew, and he rubbed his
-hands and drew himself a fresh glass of tea. “Now we
-must consider what it all means, Excellence! The rope
-is tangled and we must find the end of it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael sat for a few minutes with his eyes screwed up
-against the light from the window, his wrinkled old face
-twitching nervously. Presently he got up and began to
-pace the floor in his stockinged feet, hands behind his
-back, his shoulders bent forward in dejection. His weak
-knees bent beneath him as he shuffled about. His body
-quivered with excitement and his eyes glowed as if he
-were racked by a fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin sat down by Slipitsky, and stared at the floor
-in reflection, seeking to piece together in her mind again
-the whole time of her visit to Peter and to gauge the value
-of what both of them had said. If only Ilya were still
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>alive and could be questioned as to how he had learned
-that the American wanted to find her father!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He knew at once that I was not of the servant class,”
-said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Only a Russian could do that,” mused Slipitsky. “It
-is all very strange,” and he wagged his head slowly and
-thoughtfully as he puzzled over it. “Did he tell you why
-he had come to Chita at all?—did he say nothing of his
-mission to this place?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Nothing. Yet if Ilya spoke the truth, Rimsky was
-told why the American had come. Why does he trust a
-<i>moujik</i> and hide his purpose from me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It would not be wise to have too many in the secret,”
-said the Jew. “He knew you were not what you pretended
-to be, and was careful. The man who rides a tiger
-cannot get off, and this Peter Petrovitch from Kiev is not
-too trusting. I give him credit for that, though we would
-like to know his business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He is an enemy!” declared Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then we shall know in good time,” said the Jew.
-“An awl cannot be hidden in a sack.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A Russian from America—the worst of all,” said
-Michael into Slipitsky’s ear, as the old general came and
-hung over the Jew’s chair. “They come back here from
-America with their accursed ideas of liberty! And what
-do they do? Kill the Czar and ruin the country—turn
-it over to the Mongols! Old friend, we have an enemy
-on our hands who is a greater danger than the Ataman.
-And we have brought trouble to you and your house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We are all in the same boat, Excellence. If we lose
-our wits, we are lost. I am no worse for your coming,
-and you are no worse. The thing to do is to weigh and
-consider—and in time settle with this fellow who calls
-himself an American officer but hunts with peasants.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin was discouraged. She had set her hopes on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>the American’s coming to solve their problems and relieve
-them of the danger from the Ataman. But now they
-were involved in a new puzzle, and could not see their way
-out of it. For more than two years she and her father
-had managed to save themselves, but now it seemed that
-all their bravery, all their devices and stratagems had but
-pushed them further into a trap. Life had become an
-intolerable nightmare, and the trifles of daily existence
-had become a burden. It seemed easier to die than to
-go on with the struggle against the madness which had
-come over their world.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael went roaming about the room again while
-Katerin and Slipitsky sat in thought. He gazed abstractedly
-at the furniture, as if he expected to find in it
-some astounding quality which he had never noticed before.
-After he had walked about in this way for several
-minutes, he returned to his position between the chairs of
-his daughter and the old Jew, and leaning down between
-them, whispered, “We must rid ourselves of this man!
-We cannot live here under his nose and wait for him to
-strike. He is a Russian hunting me. That is no new
-thing—but it proves he wants me for no good. We must
-poison him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, no!” said Katerin, taking her father’s arm and
-pulling him toward her. “We cannot kill a man just because
-Ilya said Rimsky told him the stranger was seeking
-you—we must learn from Rimsky what we can, as
-much of the truth as we can get.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I say that, also,” declared Slipitsky. “It must be
-done. I shall send for Rimsky and question him so that
-he will not know the reason for my questions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What! You will let Rimsky know that we are here?”
-asked Michael, alarmed at the idea.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, Excellence. But I can comb him for what he
-knows. A few drinks of wine and he will be as putty in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>my hands. You must trust to me to solve this riddle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then it is well,” said Michael. “But I am resolved
-upon one thing—we must do away with this American,
-no matter what Rimsky says.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall send for Rimsky at once,” said the Jew, rising
-and going to the door. “Be careful till I have had
-a talk with the old liar.” And with a gesture of caution,
-Slipitsky drew the bolt and disappeared in the hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin secured the bolt, and sat down again, her hands
-clenched in her lap. She felt that she was at the end of
-her resistance. Yet she went on trying to think of some
-way in which to learn from Peter the truth of why he
-had come to Chita. There was no reason to fear him,
-so long as he did not know who she was. And there was
-a chance that the talk that he had come for her father
-was all foolishness, or a shrewd scheme to play upon the
-fears of herself and her father and gain money. In that
-case, she saw that the American might be a protection—that
-he might take them from the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall go back to him and talk,” she said to her
-father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You shall go back to poison his samovar,” said Michael.
-“I have a feeling that this man knows already
-who you are, and is blinding your eyes. You must end
-his life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Would you have me murder an innocent man on the
-word of Ilya?” she asked, making talk now only to keep
-her father’s mind engaged and prevent him from the despondency
-which threatened him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This man is an enemy!” insisted Michael. “We cannot
-risk such a menace. We have trouble enough with
-the Ataman, and I speak only for your own safety. Oh,
-Katerin Stephanovna! I care nothing for my own life!
-It is you I would save. I would sell the days I have left
-to live if they could be turned into years for you, my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>daughter. I would die this minute, if I could loan you
-life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old general put his hand on her head and caressed
-her gently, his eyes full of tears and his body shaking
-with his sorrow for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I know, little father,” she whispered, taking his hands
-in hers and kissing the withered skin. “But your life is
-dear to me—so dear that I would do as you say to save
-you to me. But I cannot believe that this young man intends
-to harm us. He is a Russian, true enough, but
-have you lost faith in all of our people? And this Peter
-Petrovitch appears to be kind and gentle. You and
-Slipitsky think in the old ways—only the old thoughts
-of violence and death. This man has been to America
-and he may not be an enemy at all. But if it is true that
-he is seeking you out for evil, then we must be sure of that
-before we do anything against him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And how are you to find it out? Can you go to him
-and tell him that I am in the next room and ask him what
-he seeks me for? Do you forget that he is using peasants
-to trace me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall learn his secret,” declared Katerin. “A
-woman has her own ways for such things—if he hunts
-you, he shall first tell me, and the why of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, you women trust too much,” said her father.
-“This is a matter in which no time must be lost with wiles.
-We must know before the Ataman finds——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I, too, think of the Ataman,” put in Katerin. “What
-if the American, though an enemy, should protect us
-from the Ataman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael gave her an incredulous stare. “Impossible!”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But it is not impossible,” insisted Katerin, who already
-had the inspiration of a sudden way out of the
-difficulty. “What if I should tell this American that I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>am seeking Michael Alexandrovitch? Would he not confide
-in me then? And if both of us are seeking you, it
-is not likely that he will keep his secret from me—especially
-if I should admit to him that I plan to have your
-life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael sat down upon the bed, speechless for a moment
-at the boldness of the plan.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Holy Saints!” he whispered after a minute. “You
-would do that, Katerin Stephanovna? That is something
-worthy of the best of the Czar’s police! Ah, but
-you will be playing with fire—you will need your wits at
-every instant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, I shall need my wits,” said Katerin. “I am
-willing to play with fire, and match my wits against the
-stranger. And when I learn what I want—then we shall
-need our wits all the more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am old and my head is addled,” said Michael.
-“Sometimes I think I must be going mad—here I am,
-who was governor, hiding in my own city, helpless and
-with——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There came a cautious knock at the door. Katerin
-went to it, and heard Slipitsky’s voice outside. She let
-him in—and with him was Wassili!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You stupid one!” exclaimed Michael at sight of the
-old <i>moujik</i>. “Why have you come here? The Ataman
-will——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky made frantic signals for quiet, and when he
-had shot the bolt behind him, threw up his hands in an
-attitude of resignation.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili was wrapped to the eyes against the cold, and
-stood dumbly waiting till he should be asked what he had
-come for.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This is the last of us!” whispered the Jew. “We
-shall all be killed now! Zorogoff has been to your house,
-Excellence—and he told Wassili where you were—here
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>in my house—the floor and the room! So poor Wassili
-has run away with the warning that you are discovered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael’s head sank upon his breast, as if he now submitted
-to fate.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We must go at once!” said Katerin. “We cannot
-let you draw the wrath of the Ataman because you are
-hiding us, our friend! We shall prepare to go at once!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Go!” said the Jew. “You shall not till I am dead!
-We can all die together, mistress. Let the Ataman come,
-I say, and may he die with ten thousand devils dancing
-before his eyes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Truth! Let him come,” said Michael. “You are
-here, Wassili, now stay with us. Let Zorogoff come, and
-by the Holy Saints he or I shall be carried out of the
-place on a board!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And perhaps the American will be glad to meet the
-Ataman, eh?” said Slipitsky. “We may as well bring
-him to the test, now that the Ataman knows where you
-are. We are riding a tiger, and we may as well pull his
-ears!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XVI<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>KATERIN’S STRATAGEM</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER found himself enmeshed in a maze of conjecture
-about Vashka. He knew that she was
-not a samovar girl, yet it was quite possible that
-she had been compelled to become one for her own safety.
-But whatever her purpose might be, it was apparent to
-him that she had expected to find in him a messenger—and
-that the expected messenger would be an American
-officer.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As Peter studied the matter, he saw that she would not
-know the expected messenger by sight, but would have
-to submit him to some test. It was plain enough that
-she had been greatly disappointed in Peter, for he had
-seen in her face signs of actual terror when she realized
-that she had blundered with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was the possibility that some other American officer
-was expected in the city which worried Peter. Such an
-event might well interfere with his plans for killing
-Kirsakoff. Peter did not want it known to the American
-army that he had stopped in Chita—at least, only casually.
-He did not want his presence in the city, nor the
-time, established too well. He hoped to flit away to
-Irkutsk and report himself there without any mention of
-having been in Chita. Then he could come back, report
-himself in Chita and go on to some other city. In this
-way he wanted to establish the fact that he had been in
-Chita, but make it appear that his time in the city had
-been after Kirsakoff had been killed rather than during
-the period of the former Governor’s death.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>But it might take Peter a week or more to find Kirsakoff,
-and then it would take time to work out the details
-of the affair in such a way that there would not be the
-slightest indication that the American officer who had been
-staying at the hotel had had anything to do with it. But
-another American officer in the city would complicate the
-business. The newcomer would expect to keep in close
-touch with Peter, and would probably expect to share his
-room—and the stranger might have a Russian-speaking
-orderly with him. And that would mean that Peter’s
-facility with the language would be discovered, his request
-to be sent over into Trans-Baikailia would become significant,
-the leaving of the orderly at Nikolsk would build
-up a chain of circumstantial evidence. All that might
-be awkward for Peter if some slight trifle connected Peter
-with the killing of Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter wondered if he would see Vashka again. It
-seemed a remote possibility that she would return. Why
-should she? She knew now that he was not a messenger,
-and to visit Peter again could do her no good and might
-reveal to him the line on which she was working. There
-was a slight chance that she might be in the American
-service, but he dismissed that thought, for she had given
-him no sign that she was a member of the military secret
-service. His mind being occupied along a certain channel,
-he had no basis on which to begin to analyze the aims of
-Vashka. The key to the solution of the problem, for him,
-was old Rimsky. But that Rimsky was in any way concerned
-with the visit from Vashka, was as remote from
-Peter’s mind as would be a suggestion that the samovar
-girl was the little daughter of Kirsakoff. That little girl
-still lived in Peter’s memory as a child sitting in a sledge
-the morning Peter’s father had been killed. His mind
-held that picture—held it without change. It was a
-picture which did not take cognizance of the passage of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>years, a butterfly caught in amber, say, through the ages.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>If Vashka did not return, Peter resolved that he would
-go out and try his hand again with Rimsky. The old
-cigarette-seller might be induced to tell something which
-would afford a clew of the whereabouts of Kirsakoff.
-And it might be wise to loaf in the restaurant of the old
-post-house, and strike up an acquaintance with anybody
-who would talk. There was no time to be lost, if Peter
-was to find Kirsakoff and get about the business which
-had brought him back to the Valley of Despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When noon came, he rang for a samovar. Before long
-he heard some one moving in the hall, and after a short
-interval, there came a gentle tapping at his door.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come!” he called, and turned his head. “Vashka”
-entered with the samovar, pushing the door open before
-her with the forward end of the metal tray.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, I am sorry,” he said, rising from his chair. “I
-did not expect to see you—I thought the other girl
-would come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She smiled at him, quite gay and playful now, with a
-trace of coyness in her manner. She seemed amused at
-him because he had not expected her to return.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Would you feel sad if I never came back? Would you
-miss me so much?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Of course I would miss you,” he replied, not sure what
-else would be safe to say. He would have preferred some
-light pleasantry which would answer her more in keeping
-with her mood, but he was afraid that she might resent
-gayety on his part, even though she affected it herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then I may presume to say that I am the favorite
-samovar girl of the American.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And it would not be presumption at all,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He moved and closed the door after her, while she
-busied herself at the table with the samovar. He had a
-mind for an instant to lock the door and to demand that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>she give an explanation of herself and her reason for
-coming to him in the guise of a servant. But he smiled
-at his own Russianism—his impulse to do the dramatic
-thing. He decided to draw her out in a more careful
-manner. One thing he was determined upon—to settle,
-as far as possible, her motives in playing servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How long since you have seen Zorogoff?” he asked,
-going close to her and standing so that the light from
-the window fell across her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I? Why, not so long ago.” She looked at him with
-curiosity as to why he had asked the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have you seen him since you were here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She laughed lightly. “If I had, it is quite likely that
-I would not have come back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then I’m glad you did not see the Ataman. And
-please don’t see him, if it is going to mean that you will
-come no more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you,” she said. “I don’t know what you
-mean—but it appears that there is an implied compliment.
-Do you mean it as a compliment?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What other things could I mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You might mean many things.” She shrank away
-from him now the least bit, as if she distrusted him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter sat down in the chair at the end of the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what might I mean, for one thing?” he asked
-with a quick glance at her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You—you might mean—that you are suspicious of
-me, and that would make me feel sad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She stood, as if half intending to flee from the room,
-and observing him in wonderment.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Suspicious! Why should you be under suspicion?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Everybody is under suspicion—no one trusts another
-here,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No doubt you have suspicions of me—because I
-speak Russian,” he countered.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>“I am not sure of you,” she said frankly. “What have
-I but your coat to prove that you are an American
-officer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have no more than I have to prove that you are
-a samovar girl. Oh, come now! Let us not play with
-words! What did Zorogoff say when he learned that the
-American officer speaks good Russian?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She straightened up suddenly and her body seemed to
-grow rigid. He heard the hiss of her breath, and then an
-hysterical laugh came gurgling from her lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So that is it!” she cried. “You think I am a spy
-for Zorogoff!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There was no mistaking the revulsion which she felt.
-Peter knew now that she was sincere.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I don’t think so now,” he said. “But if I trust you,
-I must know that you are not a spy. You know that I
-am not the messenger you are waiting for, yet you have
-come back to me. I am glad that you came—but why?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Because death threatens me,” she replied. “And
-Zorogoff is my danger. I seek your help.” She uttered
-the words in a low monotone, but with an intensity of
-feeling which startled Peter. He got up and went to the
-door quickly and turned the big brass key in the lock—and
-pocketed the key.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Does that mean I am your prisoner?” she demanded.
-But there was no fear in her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Sit down, please,” said Peter gently, ignoring her
-question. He made a gesture toward the chair at the end
-of the table opposite his own.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin—“Vashka”—obeyed, willingly, it appeared.
-But her readiness to obey was not so much submission to
-his will as he supposed. She knew now that Peter had
-come seeking her father, though the reason was still a
-mystery. She was determined to solve the mystery and
-learn his secret.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>Slipitsky had gone to Rimsky shortly after Wassili
-arrived at the hotel with the news that Zorogoff knew
-where the Kirsakoffs were hiding. The old cigarette-seller,
-alarmed by the fate which had overtaken Ilya,
-went into a panic of fear when Slipitsky charged him with
-knowledge of the American officer’s purpose in coming to
-Chita.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Jew charged Rimsky with knowing more than Rimsky
-did—and Rimsky lied. He attempted to put the
-burden of the affair on Peter. Ilya was dead, so Rimsky
-felt safe in lying. And, in fact, he did not know exactly
-what he had said to Ilya over the vodka. So to clear
-his own skirts, Rimsky made the flat statement that the
-American had asked directly where Kirsakoff might be
-found. It was a lie—yet it was the truth in so far as
-Peter’s purpose was concerned.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Thus the story of Ilya was verified. Katerin and her
-father knew Peter sought them. And Katerin had been
-tempted to reply to Peter’s demand as to why she had
-returned to his room, by demanding why he had come to
-Chita. She refrained because she did not expect that
-Peter would tell her the truth in case he was an enemy.
-She intended to get at the secret by more devious methods.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Now, you must trust me,” he began, in tones barely
-audible to her. “You have already told me that you
-are in danger from Zorogoff—which indicates that you
-do trust me to some extent. Why do you fear Zorogoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Because he has already threatened me with death—and
-worse,” she replied, calmly. “He is half Mongol.
-I do not fear death itself, because if he should take me
-from this place, I have poison——” She slipped back
-the cuff of her sleeve, and showed Peter two white capsules
-held in the hem of the cloth by thread sewn in loosely.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So that is it!” said Peter, looking into her eyes and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>seeing the truth in them. His face began slowly to change
-from an expression of startled comprehension of her
-plight, to anger; he drew his lips back upon his teeth, and
-the rising anger glittered in his eyes. “The Mongol
-dog!” he whispered. “Can he dare—with a Russian
-woman—a woman like you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He saw relief from strain come into her face, and she
-clasped her hands together in a quick gesture of joy
-at his understanding and sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So that is why I came back here to you. You were
-a Russian, and I knew you would understand—and an
-American officer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He took her hands and kissed them, with head bowed,
-after the Russian fashion, as an act of fealty and respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I don’t know what I can do,” he said after a minute.
-“But I do know that if Zorogoff dares touch you, I
-shall stand in his way. True, I am a Russian—as this
-Mongol shall learn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you,” she said simply, withdrawing her hands.
-“You cannot fight an army, and Zorogoff has many men
-to do his bidding. You would be helpless against him.
-He is not a man to allow a single American to thwart
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I do not fear him,” said Peter. “I doubt if he would
-dare kill an American officer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She smiled at his belief that Zorogoff could be checked
-by any fear of the American army.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who would know who killed you, or when?” she
-asked. “No, you must not risk your life for me. Zorogoff’s
-hand would not be known if you were destroyed—and
-I would not be any the better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Does he know you are here—in this hotel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, he has traced me. The city is full of his spies,
-and there is a Russian behind his power—a Russian of
-the old régime who is advising Zorogoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>“Who?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, you would not know him,” she said, with a shrug
-of her shoulders. “I fear him more than Zorogoff, for I
-know that that this Russian is a part of Zorogoff’s government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I should know,” insisted Peter. “If I am to
-help you, I should know all the facts in the case, so that
-I may inform my superiors. Who is this Russian?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He was a Governor here in the old days—before the
-revolution.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter leaned forward across the table, keenly alert,
-though he attempted to conceal his interest. “A Governor
-of the old days,” he said slowly and softly, so that
-the sentence was akin to a caress. “That is interesting.
-I wish you might tell me his name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She brushed her hand across her brow. “It is a dangerous
-secret,” she warned.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He laughed lightly. “Dangerous secrets are my business,”
-he said. “Learning them—and sometimes keeping
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“As I am in great danger because of having this secret,
-you also would be in great danger from Zorogoff if you
-had it. Remember, I caution you—Zorogoff will do
-all in his power to prevent you from escaping Chita if he
-learns that you know who is behind him and his government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I accept the danger,” said Peter. “Come—we shall
-be in danger together! What is the name of this former
-governor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“General Kirsakoff.” Her eyes held his as she spoke
-the name. She saw his eyelids lift swiftly, and heard him
-draw in his breath slowly. His hands began to close into
-fists, and the strong fingers sank into the palms while
-the knuckles grew white as the skin was drawn tautly
-across. He leaned back in his chair, and the little muscles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>of his jaws stood out under the skin of his cheeks as he set
-his teeth together. And there crept into his face a look
-of exultation, of infinite satisfaction—she saw him
-thrilled with the joy of the hunter who at last gets sight
-of his prey.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter turned away from Katerin and glanced at the
-window, but without seeing it. His face softened into a
-smile, and he got up from his chair, crossed the room, came
-back, and sat down again before her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Tell me more about this Kirsakoff,” he urged.
-“What is his name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Michael Alexandrovitch,” she said. “He is a man of
-noble family—of old boyar stock. He ruled here many
-years before the revolution.” Katerin pretended not to
-notice the smile which was still playing at the corners
-of Peter’s mouth—she looked at him casually as he sat
-down again, but busied herself making squares and circles
-on the tablecloth with her finger.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Is Kirsakoff in the city—now?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I presume so. He spends most of his time here, but
-he keeps well hidden.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you know where he may be found? Where he
-lives?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It could be easily learned. What would be the good
-of knowing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It does not matter,” he said. “Still, it might be of
-use to know. Do you think you could easily find out
-whether he is in the city or not? How would you go
-about it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father was an exile here,” said Katerin. “He
-was transported ten years ago, and I followed from Moscow
-and lived in the Street of the Dames. My father was
-a political—and he knows too much now about Kirsakoff
-for our safety.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then your father is in the city?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>“Here in the hotel with me. We came here and hid
-against Zorogoff—and Kirsakoff. That is why I came
-to you when I heard there was an American staying here.
-We knew we could trust you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She went on and told him how Zorogoff’s soldiers, and
-the Ataman himself, had given her and her father the
-mental torture with firing squads; of the threat of the
-Ataman for revenge upon her for her insults, and the
-flight from the house to the hotel when they heard that
-an American was at the hotel. But she did not mention
-Rimsky or Ilya.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And you have no way of escape from the city?” asked
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is impossible,” said Katerin. “Some of our
-friends got away. But Zorogoff put the cordons round
-the city after that, and then Kirsakoff joined with Zorogoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What kind of man is this Kirsakoff? What does he
-look like?” asked Peter, set upon getting all he could
-about his enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin looked over Peter’s head, toward the window,
-and thought for a second as if recalling the appearance
-of her father. “He is a tall man, strong but not heavy,”
-she said slowly. “A face inclined to redness—and black
-mustaches. He is a soldier, of course, and stands very
-straight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Of course,” said Peter. He recognized the description,
-for Katerin had described her father as he had
-looked when he was in his prime. “Does he go about
-the city? Could I recognize him by his uniform?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He was eager but cautious.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He might be found at the <i>sobrania</i> late at night,”
-said Katerin. “But he will be well guarded. You
-should be careful in approaching him, for he has a secret
-bodyguard, as well as the officers who generally are drinking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>wine with him. He does not wear a uniform, but rich
-furs, and he wears his pistols out of sight. He does not
-always dress the same, for he has been a cruel man, and
-is much hated by many people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you know where he lives?” asked Peter, who was
-taking care to conceal his eagerness to get all possible
-details. He asked his questions with an assumed indifference.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, I cannot say. But I am sure my father knows.
-But what good would it do you to know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Not any,” said Peter. “Yet I would like to find this
-Kirsakoff. Where is your father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Here—in the hotel,” said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps it would be as well if I were to ask the Ataman
-about Kirsakoff,” said Peter. “Yet I would like
-to talk with your father, if he would see me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“By all means talk with my father,” said Katerin hastily.
-“It would be fatal for you to admit to the Ataman
-that you had ever heard of Kirsakoff’s ever being here,
-or concerned in the government of the Ataman. That is
-a secret they will conceal at any cost—and that is why
-we are in danger, my father and I.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But Zorogoff would not know how I had learned about
-Kirsakoff. And I might plead ignorance—I might even
-test the Ataman by asking him if he knew where Kirsakoff
-might be found.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have put my life in your hands,” said Katerin
-earnestly. “If you mention Kirsakoff to the Ataman, he
-will know that you have been talking with us here in
-the hotel. And Zorogoff’s soldiers will come for us at
-once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She rose, rather agitated by Peter’s idea of talking with
-the Ataman. The effect upon her was exactly what Peter
-sought—for he wanted to talk with her father. If she
-feared that Peter would go to the Ataman instead for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>information, she would make it possible for Peter to learn
-more of Kirsakoff and his haunts.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I do not intend to increase your danger,” said Peter,
-also rising. “Have no fear on that score. But I am
-bound to find Kirsakoff in some way—unless your father
-can help me I shall have to make inquiries in my own way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It can be arranged that you talk with my father,”
-she said, moving toward the door. “Is it really necessary
-that you find Kirsakoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Not necessary, perhaps,” he said. “But I strongly
-desire to find him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I—I would like to know the reason.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I will tell you that when you tell me where he may be
-found,” said Peter with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She stood for a time looking into his face. He saw that
-she was pale, and far more excited than her restrained
-manner revealed to the casual glance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I will ask my father if he will see you,” she said presently.
-“He is very old and ill—he has been shot by
-sentries—a bullet through both his cheeks, though he is
-nearly recovered now from that. He is suspicious of all
-strangers, and you must be patient with him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I promise to be patient,” said Peter. “If you will
-arrange it for me——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ring for the samovar at five,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter held out his hand quickly, as if there were a compact
-between them which must be affirmed. She gave him
-her hand, and he bowed and lifted it to his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Vashka,” he whispered, “do you wish to leave this
-city?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If I could take my father with me,” said Katerin,
-“yes, I would be glad to escape the dangers here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If your father will tell me where Kirsakoff may be
-found—I shall take you both away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, then we shall find Kirsakoff!” she said with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>sudden return of her gay manner. “Please! I am your
-prisoner here! Allow me to return to my father!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter unlocked the door, and she smiled over her shoulder
-at him as she ran down the hall.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XVII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>SETTING THE SNARE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_5_0_7 c022'>KATERIN returned to her father. She found him
-sitting by the table playing a game of solitaire,
-and he looked up from the patterns of the cards
-with blinking, questioning eyes. She did not speak at
-once, but her face was eloquent of the surprise and shock
-she had suffered in her talk with Peter. She was coldly
-calm, as if she knew now something of what was before
-them, and was ready to meet the issue. A plan had already
-formed in her mind, but it was not yet clearly defined
-and she wanted time to think and prepare for whatever
-was necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What have you learned?” whispered Michael, leaning
-toward her from his chair. “I can see that you know
-much—and I doubt that it is good. Do you know why
-this man has come?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, I know,” she said, and sat down beside him and
-drew herself a glass of tea. Her hands shook for all her
-resolution not to betray to her father the fact that once
-more they were blocked in their hopes of escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael waited till she had refreshed herself, and
-Wassili, who had been making Michael’s bed and pottering
-about the room in pretended busyness, came and stood
-close to Katerin with anxious face, keen to hear what
-the mistress would have to report of her visit to the room
-of the American.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then Rimsky spoke the truth?” pressed Michael.
-“It is true that the American came seeking me?” He
-had already divined it from Katerin’s manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>“Yes, Rimsky spoke the truth,” said Katerin slowly,
-and Wassili crossed himself and uttered a smothered exclamation
-of satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what did the American say?” urged Michael,
-impatient to have the whole story. “Come! You hold
-it back from me! Is his quest evil?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He is most eager to find you,” said Katerin, who was
-reluctant to give the full story too abruptly. She was
-trying to devise some way of giving the facts to her father
-which would not be too abrupt and alarm him to rashness.
-And she wished to have her own plan worked out
-mentally so that she might have it to offer against the
-startling import of what she had learned from Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“For what purpose?” insisted Michael. His head was
-beginning to shake faster, as it always did when he was
-in an excited frame of mind. He reached for a cigarette
-from a tin box, and his hands shook so that he dropped
-the tiny tube of tobacco.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am not sure yet,” said Katerin. “That is something
-I have still to learn. All I know now is that he is
-not a friend—that he means evil to you and we must
-be careful. We must do nothing to stir his suspicions
-of who we are, till we have gone to the bottom of what
-brings him here and what he hopes to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We know enough!” said Michael. “He comes for
-evil—and I shall kill him!” The old general’s agitation
-disappeared as if by magic. The scent of danger steadied
-him, he thrust his chin out and squared his old shoulders,
-sitting back in his chair as if it were all settled now and
-all that remained for him to do was to go out into the
-next room and kill Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, no,” said Katerin hastily. “Nothing must be
-done too soon! First, we must learn more about him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He is an enemy, that is enough,” said her father.
-“Wassili, a match!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>“Yes, he is an enemy,” admitted Katerin. “But we
-are not in a position to attack an enemy now; besides,
-what good would it do us to kill him, if we do not know
-anything about him? First, as I said, it is my business
-to draw his secret from him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili held a flaming match forth to Michael. “Master,”
-said the <i>moujik</i>, as he applied the flame to the cigarette
-between Michael’s lips, “I am quick with the knife—I
-can strike a good stroke, and no one will be the wiser,
-for I can have the body carted into the forest. Then
-you and the mistress will be free from his danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If we do well, we can use this man to protect us from
-the Ataman,” put in Katerin. “Though he seems to be
-a menace, he may in fact be so twisted to our use that he
-will be our salvation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A man who is an enemy! Protect us? Are you
-talking madness, my daughter, or have my wits become
-addled by age? I shall not allow a man who is my enemy
-to save me even if he would or could. No, no, I say it—this
-American—this Russian who calls himself an American—must
-die. And no time lost in the matter, let
-me say!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I say you are wrong, father,” insisted Katerin,
-putting her hands on his knees. “If he does not know
-who we are, what difference does it make to us or him if
-he is an enemy. The thing for us to do is to make
-friends with him—and fool him into the belief——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But he will know me!” protested Michael. “You
-expect him to talk with me—even see me—and not
-know who I am? That would only be putting our heads
-into the maw of the lion! I can tell you this, my daughter—I
-shall strike first, while the advantage lies with
-me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Truth!” exclaimed Wassili excitedly. “The master
-speaks truth! And I am the one to attend to the task!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>“But he will not know you,” pleaded Katerin. “He
-thinks of you as you were years ago, in the days
-when you were Governor, while now you are an old man
-in the rags of a peasant, with——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, he will know, he will know! We must not trust
-to ice so thin! I shall not turn my horse loose too soon
-when danger is over the hill. I may be old, but I have
-not lost my cunning with my enemies, I hope.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You forget that our lives depend upon our deceiving
-this Peter Petrovitch, my father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I think our lives depend upon his not seeing me till
-I am ready to strike,” argued Michael. “What would
-our lives be worth if he were to come in here now and
-see me? A beggar’s kopeck—the turn of a hand, the
-call of a quail in the brush! P-fooh! I know!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But we have no time to spare. The Ataman’s men
-may be at the door at any minute. Before that we must
-win this stranger to our side, and before he can discover
-who we are, slip away with him to Vladivostok—to Harbin—to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Vladivostok! You expect an enemy to take us to
-Vladivostok? To Harbin? Why, I would sooner, than
-that——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“He wants to find you. What if I tell him you may
-be found in Harbin? Or Vladivostok?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael thrust aside a cloud of smoke that had gathered
-before him, and squinted his eyes at his daughter, as if he
-really doubted her sanity now.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And how could you find me in Vladivostok, when I
-am here in this rat-hole in Chita? Truly, my ears
-hear strange words. They are not worth a last year’s
-egg.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You do not understand. If this stranger looks to
-me to help him find Michael Kirsakoff, and he does not
-know you for Michael Kirsakoff, what is to prevent our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>telling him that we can take him to some other city—to
-find you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael cocked his head to one side and pursed his
-lips. Then a smile broke over his face as he began to
-comprehend.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We have no time to spare,” pressed Katerin. “It
-must be done before he can learn by any mischance who
-we are. Once we are free of the city, his chances of discovering
-our ruse diminish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But how can he take us away, even if what you say
-is true? The Ataman would prevent us—he would betray
-us. There would be some slip—and we would be
-in the hands of our enemy, or delivered into the hands of
-the Ataman. We double our danger and gain nothing,”
-objected Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Ataman would not dare stop an American officer.
-We must chance that. This stranger would give his eyes
-to find you. Very good, then! We shall fall in with
-his desires and turn them to our advantage. We must
-take him away under the pretext that he is to find you,
-then in reality he will be aiding our escape from the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, but he would get to know me in time. My voice,
-my looks, my way of speaking. If he has ever seen me
-at all, he will know me. He may have my description—do
-not be trapped by him. The wolf knows the color
-of the hare he pursues.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I told him how you looked——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What!” cried Michael. “You told him how I looked
-and you expect him not to know me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How you looked twenty years ago, my father. And
-he did not know the difference.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That was to blind your eyes to his purpose,” said
-Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And I shall blind his,” said Katerin, with sudden resolution.
-“Wassili! Fetch me the cover of the pillow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>from the bed! And a knife—with a sharp edge!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili, with a puzzled look upon his face, turned away
-to obey her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what is all this?” demanded Michael. “Am I
-to be wrapped like a mummy and put into a bundle? Am
-I to be carried about with a rope to my middle like a
-handle?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall make sure that the stranger does not recognize
-you—leave it to me, and we shall outwit this stranger
-and come to safety.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you had better take good pains with it,” said
-Michael, “for if he gives the glimmer of an eye that he
-so much as thinks I look like myself, I shall kill him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If that must be done, then it must,” admitted Katerin,
-as she cut the edges of the pillow and began ripping it
-into long strips. “But your face must be hidden from
-him, for he might see something in you that would remind
-him of you in the old days. We must take care against
-such betrayal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what are these rags for?” demanded Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A bandage about your face to conceal you further.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, p-fooh!” said Michael disgustedly. “What nonsense
-is this, that I should be wrapped up like a Turk?
-How the devil am I to talk or breathe or eat my soup?
-I’ll have none of it—I, who was a general of majesty!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have had a bullet through both cheeks,” said
-Katerin. “Come, please! Hold up your head—these
-cloths will only keep your teeth warm against the cold.
-That is my dear father—and remember, it is to save us.
-Better this chance than to sit here and wait till the Ataman
-sends Shimilin for us again. Come!” She held up
-a strip of the cloth.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Are you going to tie up my face as if I were an old
-beggar with boils?” demanded Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>“Trust to me, my father. When the lion is stricken he
-must still roar, that his enemies will be misled. You have
-said that to me many times. Trust to my wits—and
-we shall see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He puzzled over it for a minute, and then threw back his
-head in submission. “I shall not stand in the way of
-your safety,” he said. “I leave it in your hands. My
-heart is brave, but the years have put chains upon my
-body,” and he sighed wearily.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Without more ado, Katerin wrapped the grizzled old
-face with the strips of cotton. They passed over the top
-of his head and down under his chin. His eyes, nose, and
-mouth were clear of the cloths, and his ears stuck out
-oddly behind the wrappings. The white hair on his chin
-gave him a more aggressive look than usual for his beard
-was thrust forward by the bandage. The scant hair on
-the top of his head stuck up, and wavered as he moved,
-like the crest of a bird.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin leaned back and studied him with critical eye
-when she had finished.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It will serve well enough,” she said finally. “If he
-knows you now, he would know you in spite of anything
-we could do. And now listen to my plan. You have
-been a political here for the past ten years—and you
-hated General Kirsakoff, who was a cruel Governor
-and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael gave a snort of wrath and wrested the bandage
-off over his head and threw it upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I will have nothing more to do with this madness! I
-was not cruel—I was but just! And I shall not blacken
-my own character! Not an inch shall I give to my
-enemies on that score—I, who was a general in the army
-of majesty!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin laughed heartily, and picked up the bandage.
-She knew better than to take her father seriously when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>he was in such temper, and she also knew that she should
-gain her end if she were patient with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I only say what the American thinks,” she explained.
-“If he already thinks that of you, you do not damage
-yourself. And what a joke! A joke that will save us!
-General Kirsakoff telling how cruel Governor Kirsakoff
-was! Would you not fool this stranger now, to laugh at
-him after we have lost him in Harbin where we are safe?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili sneaked away into a corner to laugh discreetly,
-his shoulders heaving with suppressed merriment over
-the wrath of Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Be still, you, Wassili,” growled the old man, turning
-to look after the <i>moujik</i>. “By the Saints!” he cried
-to Katerin. “You see how it is? Am I to be made into
-a buffoon for my servants in my old age? Am I to be
-turned into an actor in a play, a silly clown of a fellow
-to make the country folk giggle into their drink? Am I
-to forget what figure of a man I was——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You forget my danger,” she chided gently.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I forget nothing!” he retorted. “It is I who am
-remembering that I once was Governor here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you remember the Ataman Zorogoff?” she asked,
-with sober face.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, and I’ll dance on his grave—but I’ll not have
-my head wrapped up like an old woman doing a penance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Very well, then we shall do nothing more, but wait till
-the Ataman comes. Then we can take the poison of
-honor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin sat down by the table and threw the loops of
-the bandage from her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael looked at her, and an expression of infinite
-tenderness and love came over his face. His lips quivered,
-and he struck several matches violently without getting
-a flame. He threw the last one to the floor, and held out
-his hands to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>“Forgive me, Katerin Stephanovna—I did forget.
-But now I remember, and I see what you are striving to
-do. It is true, what you say, and we must play with this
-American. And if we take good care, it may all come
-out as you say—it will be a way out of our danger and
-our troubles. Come, please! Put on the rags, and I
-shall be the best old exile ever was seen, one who is fleeing
-from the wicked Governor—from Kirsakoff! Please!
-Again the bandage, and I’ll be good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, little father, there is another way to fight without
-using swords and guns. There is a way to gain your
-ends without your enemy’s suspecting that he is pushing
-your cart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She gave her attention to putting the bandage back.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I grant the truth of what you say,” said Michael.
-“But what will Slipitsky say to this? He is a shrewd
-fox, and there is many a twist in a game of this sort that
-he knows—he has helped many a man to escape from me,
-for all his friendship for me in the old days. Never did
-I dream that we should have to resort to his cleverness—but
-the fox takes his wisdom where he finds it, and that
-is why we say that he is wise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It does not matter what Slipitsky thinks of it. We
-cannot leave all the tricks to our enemies. And you
-must have faith in me, if I am to work this out so that
-good will come of it, and we get away from the soldiers
-of the Ataman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I’ll trust you, my daughter. By the Saints! You
-should have been a man, Katerin Stephanovna!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And perhaps if I were a man, we should both be dead
-by now,” said Katerin. “This is a war of wits, and we
-women have had to use our wits for many years. And
-if those in the high places had heeded the women, Russia
-might not have come to what she has.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is good that there are wits between the two of us,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>for mine are gone, my daughter. I am a hindrance. I
-am but a millstone about your neck, else you would have
-escaped from Chita long before this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You won’t be a millstone if you will obey what I
-advise in this affair with the American officer. If we
-cannot go through with this thing, it is better not to try
-our hands at it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have no fear—I’ll say black is white if it does you
-any good,” said Michael, now once more with his face
-trussed in the bandages.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Listen well to what I say,” cautioned Katerin. “And
-you, too, Wassili. For if we fail, we have not one enemy,
-but two—this stranger as well as the Ataman. And
-if we succeed, we have none, for one will save us from the
-other. What better can we ask than that a man who is
-an enemy should deliver us from danger?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Give me two enemies, if that can be done,” said
-Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Mind what must be done. Our name shall be Natsavaloff.
-You were banished for plotting against the government
-of the Czar. First, we must learn why the
-American seeks Kirsakoff—for he may not be alone in
-his reasons, but have others who are equally dangerous.
-We must get to the bottom of why he seeks you, though
-the reason does not matter for our purpose. We shall
-have Slipitsky’s advice, too, before we bring the American
-to this room to learn where Kirsakoff may be found. And
-we are not to tell the American where Kirsakoff may be
-found unless he takes us to the city where we shall say
-Kirsakoff is hidden—anywhere, it does not matter, so
-long as we get away from Chita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And how is Wassili to help in all this?” asked
-Michael. “Where lies his task?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“When we bring the American here, Wassili shall stand
-behind his chair. We must be on our guard against the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>stranger every second, and if the American should recognize—or
-make a move to draw a weapon——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili finished the sentence for her in pantomime with
-a quick and eloquent gesture—a short thrust, done
-quickly, and an explanatory grunt.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And you, my father, shall have your little pistol in
-your hand, and the blanket thrown over your knees to
-hide it—so that you shall be able to defend yourself.
-But do nothing rashly—unless he should know you, we
-must not do him harm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili was sent for Slipitsky, and the Jew came. The
-four of them went over the whole plan of escape in case
-Peter should not recognize Michael. They spent the
-afternoon in taking up every possible angle of the situation.
-And on one thing they agreed—if Peter really
-proved to be a deadly enemy, and should recognize Michael—then
-the American officer must die.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XVIII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE TRAIL GROWS HOT</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER spent the afternoon walking the floor of
-his room, his whole being in a glow from the fever
-of revenge which had flamed up brightly within
-him while he listened to “Vashka”—the name by which
-he knew Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Peter’s inner fury was directed against his own
-mental image of Kirsakoff—a picture revivified and given
-new clarity in Peter’s brain by Katerin’s description of
-her father as he had been in the old days. Peter killed
-that man over and over again in imagination. He knew
-that it might take weeks before he could so shuffle the
-combination of circumstances that Kirsakoff might be
-slain with the greatest margin of safety for himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Through the years, Peter’s hope for vengeance had
-become to him a holy mission. There had been times
-during his life in the United States when he realized that
-he might never return to Siberia in time to carry out his
-dream of vengeance. But the old hatred had smoldered.
-Now it was burning at white heat.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>What had been his own selfish desire was now transformed
-into a patriotic fervor to help his own people.
-The old tribal spirit of the Slav had come to life again
-within him when he encountered the mad ecstasy of liberty
-among the people in Vladivostok. He longed to have
-some hand in the great emancipation which had been
-brought about by those of his race. He was determined
-to join the orgy of destruction. And now he saw his
-own personal revenge coupled with the troubles of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>old exile and his daughter. Not only would Peter become
-the savior of the beautiful Vashka and strike a blow
-to thwart the new tyranny of Zorogoff, but his own father
-would be avenged. Katerin personified for him the Russia
-which must be saved, just as Kirsakoff personified the
-Russia which must be destroyed. For Kirsakoff, a survivor
-of the old autocracy, was plotting with the Mongol,
-Zorogoff, to defeat the purposes of the revolution and once
-more bind the people to the wheel of slavery. The old system
-was evil, and no vestige of it must remain. That was
-the aim of the people, and Peter believed in it. His mind
-had never grasped the thought that in the background of
-events there might be a new autocracy throwing sand in
-the eyes of the people to enslave them with new fetters
-which were not yet visible. “Destroy! Destroy all who
-do not work!” was the cry. And as work was defined
-for the mass of the people, it meant common labor—and
-the laborer lacked the ability to think about the consequences
-of killing all who might be able to divine the
-purpose behind the cry for destruction. And Peter was
-trapped into thinking only of the past and its evils, without
-looking into the future of a race which allowed only
-its serfs to live.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He thought only of the fact that he had been rescued
-from Siberia and sent back with the power of avenging his
-own wrongs. And as he prayed for success, he crossed
-himself with both hands, in the way of the people of old.
-The deep well of mysticism and emotionalism which so
-often had swept the Slav into action without the cooler
-previsions of those races which had gained the beginning
-of their freedom in the Dark Ages, now shook Peter’s
-soul. He was living again in the stark horrors of his
-boyhood—living over again the bitter morning when
-his father had been struck down in the street. These
-memories he hoped to blot out by slaying with his own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>hand one dragon of the old autocracy—Michael Alexandrovitch
-Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael would be well guarded, and wary. But his
-vigilance might be relaxed by artifice. Peter had not
-yet formulated his plan, but there would be many pretexts
-for getting closely in touch with Kirsakoff. Peter
-might even represent that he had come to enter into
-secret negotiations with Kirsakoff on behalf of the American
-government. That was one of the many possible
-plans which flitted through Peter’s brain. But the business
-would require care in preparation and good judgment
-in its execution. All impulses toward prompt decision
-must be put aside—it would be a patient waiting
-for the minute which promised success without attaching
-the slightest suspicion to Lieutenant Peter Gordon of the
-American army.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>That could be done only after a period of slowly acquiring
-the confidence of Michael. Peter would have to build
-up a pretended sympathy with the old régime and its
-adherents, and show a willingness to aid Zorogoff and
-Kirsakoff in gaining the friendship of the American forces—even
-plan to aid in betraying the people of Russia in
-their aspirations for freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter saw himself dining with Kirsakoff as a guest of
-the general; he built in his imagination a succession of
-secret conferences with Kirsakoff, and then, perhaps during
-an evening over wine and cigarettes, a whisper to
-Michael, “Do you know who I am in truth? Peter Petrovitch,
-son of Gorekin the bootmaker——!” and then the
-bullet and the escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter could see Michael turn his horrified eyes upon the
-smiling American officer who was really the son of an exile.
-Gorekin the bootmaker! Michael might not remember at
-first. How could a Governor be expected to carry in
-his memory a poor unfortunate, and a boy of twenty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>years before? But Peter would make Michael remember.
-There must be time for that so that Michael should know
-by whose hand he died. That would be necessary if Peter
-was to have his complete joy in his vengeance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When the sun had dropped over the crest of the hills,
-and the frost was gradually creeping upward on the panes,
-etching a thick tropical foliage upon the glass, Peter
-went to the window and looked out over the Valley of
-Despair. The little hut of his boyhood was merging
-slowly into the shadows of the taller buildings about it.
-Tiny sparks appeared in the white smoke rising from the
-hut’s stone chimney—Rimsky was evidently feeding the
-fire-pit for the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter stood by the window musing on the bitter days
-and nights of the exiles long dead and forgotten—on the
-staggering columns coming in afoot over the Czar’s road
-to a living death, on the clanking of chains and fetters, on
-the screams in the nights as some cabal of exiles “roofed”
-one who had betrayed some breaking of the rules to the
-guards, on the barking of rifles as fugitives were hunted
-out of the hills.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Chita had become a city. It was built of the tears and
-anguish, of bodies destroyed and minds wrecked, of hates
-and cruelties, all mixed with the bricks and logs of its
-walls. And limitless legions of human beings had been
-poured into the wilderness and their bodies used as fertilizer
-to build up a new empire for the rulers of Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, you cry for justice!” he said to the spirits of
-those who had suffered. “The time has come for justice—you
-have waited long, but to-morrow will not be as
-yesterday!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He turned from the window and took his belt and pistol
-from the writing table and strapped them about him.
-Then he turned on the shaded droplight. It threw down
-upon the cloth of the writing table a yellow cone of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>radiance. It was now five by his watch. He rang the bell
-thrice—the signal for Vashka, as Katerin called herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He sat down by the table and waited. The sound of
-people walking about in the hall furtively, came to his
-ears, with the careful opening and closing of doors and
-snatches of conversation. He heard the strains of an
-old Russian air played on a violin by some one on the floor
-above, and the regular pounding of feet as if the steps
-of a Cossack dance were being tried intermittently.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It was the hour of the evening when the people in the
-hotel began to bestir themselves for the gay times of the
-night. They kept hidden during the day, and went
-abroad under cover of darkness to the restaurants of the
-city, to return to their rooms in the early morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The men who lived in the hotel were mostly officers who
-were attached to the Ataman’s army, judging from those
-Peter had seen about the halls. The women were a flashy
-lot—women who had drifted up the railroad from Vladivostok
-or Harbin, and women of the sort that has the
-best of everything in times of famine and disorder. They
-were the parasites who seem to thrive best in times of
-disaster, and who get the most out of life when there are
-no laws of restraint. When they have acquired some
-amount of treasure, they are robbed and abandoned.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin was at the door in response to the signal by
-bell with amazing promptitude. She entered without
-knocking, and closed the door behind her softly. She
-stood for a minute, a vague shadow in the gloom outside
-the zone of the shaded lamp.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter rose and moved toward her. “Thank you for
-coming,” he said in a low voice in keeping with her
-secretive entrance. “Have you persuaded your father
-to tell me what I wish to know? Will he help me in my
-quest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If you still wish it,” she replied. “Please! Take
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>the shade from the lamp—the darkness is not pleasant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter caught a note of melancholy in her voice. She
-seemed to be discouraged, and his own hopeful attitude
-was somewhat chilled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Has anything gone wrong?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, not unless it is wrong for us to involve you in
-the same dangers which face us. My father appears reluctant
-to put you into a situation the full danger of which
-may not be apparent to you, a stranger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter laughed merrily to cover the sudden fear which
-he had felt that she might recede from her promise to help
-him find Michael Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have no fear,” he said. “There may be danger,
-but I am glad to help you. I shall attempt to find Kirsakoff
-in any event—and may well run into more danger
-than if your father should tell me how to go about the
-job. So when it comes to that, my danger is only increased
-if you do not help.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps you are right,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He went and lifted the shade off the lamp, and stood
-revealed in his uniform in the flood of light. The silver
-bars on his shoulders glittered as he leaned over the lamp,
-but Katerin’s eyes rested upon the brown boxlike holster
-at his hip.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He swung round upon her, smiling. Now he saw that
-her gay mood of her former visit had vanished—her
-eyes seemed sadder and the light revealed the pinched
-pallor of her face. She was suffering from strain long
-endured, he saw, and a twinge of pity tugged at his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He went and pulled down the decrepit window shades,
-and then slapped his pistol. “Here we have the power
-of America!” he said. “Behind me is an army. Come!
-It is not a time to be sad! America is here, and that
-means justice to the oppressed!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>She sat down in a chair, and smiled at him, in a brave
-attempt to be merry with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“America must be a wonderful land,” she said. “I
-have heard much about it, and read much about it. But
-there are many who say it is no better than our own
-Russia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What!” cried Peter. “You must not be misled.
-America is a land of magic! Look at me, a poor Russian
-boy who was the son of an unfortunate here in the Valley
-of Despair, and in a few years it transformed me into an
-officer, and sent me back to help my own people—and
-to help you, Vashka.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And in time you will go back to America,” she said.
-“Like all Russians who have been there and return to
-their own land, you will once more go to America.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, yes. I shall go back when Russia has her freedom.
-But what did your father say? Have you persuaded
-him to help me about Kirsakoff? You have not
-told me that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father is discouraged. You must not be annoyed
-if he is slow and cautious with you, who are a stranger.
-He has said that he doubts if one American officer can
-fight the army of Zorogoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But he must remember also that I am a Russian.
-Does he think I will hide behind my American coat, and
-allow Kirsakoff and Zorogoff to destroy you? I may be
-only one, but behind me is the American army, and Zorogoff
-must give heed to that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But if Zorogoff’s men should kill you? We have
-seen terrible things here—men are shot down crossing
-the street if they are opposed to Zorogoff. And who is
-to know who fired the shot if you should meet such a fate?
-Then, if it were known to Zorogoff that we had helped
-you, it would be the worse for us, with no one to protect
-us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>“True,” said Peter, “but it is one thing for Zorogoff
-to terrorize a girl and a helpless old man, and quite another
-for him to frighten or kill an American officer—or
-defy the American army. He is aware of that, and he
-will be careful with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But your soldiers are in Vladivostok.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is near enough to make Zorogoff think twice.
-In time he would have to pay the shot. And once we have
-found Kirsakoff and I have attended to my business, we
-shall leave the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are brave,” she said simply, with a look of
-admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He shrugged his shoulders. “It is you have been
-brave. It is easy for me to talk, with an army at my
-back. Please—tell me one thing—are you expecting
-an American officer to come here and meet you and your
-father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She looked at him in surprise, as if trying to understand
-what meaning might be behind his question. She locked
-her fingers together, and took her time before replying.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, we are not expecting an American officer. Our
-friends may send help to us. That is why I came to you—any
-newcomer in the city might bring word from friends—might
-be seeking to get news to us from friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She laughed suddenly in comprehension of his meaning,
-and went on hastily. “We who are beset clutch at any
-straw—and you were a straw. Yet was I not wise?
-For you have said you will save us—you would even take
-us away, or——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin stopped abruptly, and looked into the light of
-the lamp. Her eyes showed more animation now, and
-Peter found himself admiring the patrician poise of her
-head. She turned away from his gaze, and shivered
-slightly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Or what?” he prompted.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>“Or you would even kill Kirsakoff for us—rid us of
-one of our enemies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s eyes narrowed, and he smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What makes you think I would kill Kirsakoff?” he
-asked. “Have I said anything to make you believe
-that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” she admitted, returning his gaze for an instant.
-“You have not said that. But if my father is to help
-you find Kirsakoff, you must first convince us that you are
-an enemy of Kirsakoff. It will be a secret for a secret, in
-the old way of bargaining among the exiles. We have
-trusted you much, but how do we know what your purpose
-is in finding Kirsakoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter frowned at the floor and considered what she had
-said. He had not counted on having to take any one into
-his confidence. He did not doubt that he would be able
-to find Kirsakoff on his own account, if he had plenty of
-time. But his time in Chita was not at his own disposal.
-An American officer might come through the city and
-report that he had seen Peter; before very long, Peter
-would be compelled to go on to Irkutsk and report himself
-from there, or go down the line of the railroad. And
-once in touch with Vladivostok, he knew that orders might
-come from headquarters which would compel him to
-appear in some other city without delay.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And what damage could be done by telling this girl and
-her father his reasons for wanting Kirsakoff? They,
-themselves, feared and hated the Governor, who was again
-in power. They could be trusted not to betray him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What you say is fair enough,” he said finally. “I
-think I can convince your father that I am the friend
-of anybody who was an exile, and that——” He was
-about to add, “I am an enemy of Michael Kirsakoff.”
-But he refrained. There would be time enough for that
-when he talked with her father, and he was determined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>that before he told his story, he should meet and judge for
-himself the measure of confidence to be given to the old
-man who had been an exile.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I should like to know your full reasons—for wanting
-to find Kirsakoff,” suggested Katerin. She, too, was
-wary.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You shall hear,” he said, “when I talk with your
-father.” And he spoke with finality, as if there were no
-use in going further with the subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She went to the wardrobe against the wall, and turning
-to Peter, said, “Move this away from the door which
-leads to our rooms—I got the Jew to bring us near to you.
-Now we can pass from our rooms to yours without going
-into the hall. It will be safer, for we cannot tell who
-will see us if we have to use the hall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That was wise,” he said, and going to the wardrobe,
-he put his shoulder against it, and steadying it with his
-hand, shoved it aside far enough to clear the door which
-it concealed. When he had finished, she picked up the
-shade of the lamp and slipped it back over the globe.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We are not known to the servants,” she said. “You
-must be careful with our names—which are—Natsavaloff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps it will be well to avoid using any names,” said
-Peter. “It might increase your danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It would, indeed,” she agreed. “Now, I shall go
-round and free the bolt on our side—and take you to
-my father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin slipped into the hall, and Peter snapped out the
-light on the table and waited in darkness. In a minute
-he heard the rattle of the bolt on the far side of the
-door, and then it swung open slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin stood before him, outlined against the dim light
-seeping in from a farther room through curtains hanging
-in a doorway.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>“Come!” she directed in a whisper. “My father is
-eager to talk with you. But remember—he is very old,
-and he is still in some pain from his wounds. And if he
-is querulous, I trust that you will be patient with him.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XIX<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>FACE TO FACE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER stepped across the threshold of the open
-door, and into the shaft of light spilling through
-the partly curtained doorway of the room beyond.
-Looking to the end of this vista of light, he saw the figure
-of a man sitting in a chair by a table. The head and upper
-part of this man’s body were only vaguely visible and
-merged against the dark background of the far wall.
-But his boots were silhouetted in the radiance of the
-beams of the lamp which shot downward under the shade—boots
-that looked grotesquely large and misshapen, for
-their shadows were cast upon the floor in elongated outline.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin stopped at the curtained doorway, and by a
-gesture, bade Peter enter before her. He went on, and
-as he neared the lamp on the table, he saw that the figure
-in the chair was a frail old man with his head tied up
-in a bandage. And behind the chair, better hidden by
-the gloom, was a man standing, whom Peter took for
-a servant hovering over his master with watchful care.
-Only the face of the <i>moujik</i> was plainly visible to Peter,
-and his eyes shining with the reflected light of the lamp,
-like two luminous pin-pricks, were boring across the
-room at Peter. The tense alertness of the <i>moujik’s</i> posture
-suggested an animal crouching for a spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin passed Peter, and approached her father. She
-said, “Our friend has come to us,” and to Peter, “This
-is my father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s heels came together, and he bowed low. When
-he looked at the old man again, the withered head,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>wrapped in the encircling bandage, was nodding gently
-as if with a palsy. And the bent shoulders leaned forward
-under a gray blanket, to peer at the visitor. The
-right hand, hidden beneath the blanket over his legs,
-seemed to be trembling, while his left hand lifted from his
-knee made a motion toward a chair—it was a thin,
-bony hand, more like a claw than a hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I bid you welcome, sir,” piped Michael, hoarsely.
-“But I have little hospitality to offer a guest under this
-roof.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“May God’s blessings fall upon you, sir,” replied
-Peter, his heart quickened by sympathy with this pathetic
-old ruin of a man—a man who, like his own father as
-Peter thought, had suffered the life of an exile under the
-cruel rule of the Governor, Michael Kirsakoff. Here,
-Peter supposed, was another victim, in feeble senility,
-still pursued and threatened by Zorogoff and the same
-Governor Kirsakoff who had brought about the death of
-Peter’s father, and thrown the boy Peter into a big prison.
-And these thoughts fed the inward flame of hatred
-which burned through Peter’s being against Michael Kirsakoff—the
-very man before him, and on whom he had just
-called for the blessing of God! Here was his enemy of
-old, and he looked upon him, yet knew him not.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>For a time the two men peered at each other, one knowing
-that an enemy was before him, and one thinking that
-he was in the presence of a friend. But Peter saw nothing
-in the old man which brought to mind anything of
-Michael Kirsakoff. Katerin, as Vashka, the samovar girl,
-had so arranged the shaded lamp, and the chairs, that
-her father’s face should not stand out clearly in light
-against a dark background. Also the bandage hid the
-jaws and cheeks of Michael in such a way that the old
-man’s facial contour was blurred. Age had done much
-to hide Michael, and Peter’s memory was clinging to his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>own picture of Kirsakoff of twenty years before. And
-Peter had adjusted his mind to the finding of Kirsakoff as
-a result of this interview, and somewhere beyond it, so
-it would have been hard to convince him that Kirsakoff
-was now before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You come as an American officer, yet my daughter
-tells me that you are one of us—a Russian who has
-come back to help Russia,” said Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, and it is twenty years since I saw my native
-land,” said Peter, as he sat down.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, it is a sad home-coming for one of the motherland’s
-children,” sighed Michael. “They say now that
-the people will rule at last.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin stepped to the table to draw hot water from
-the samovar, which was so placed that she stood almost
-between Peter and her father, though without preventing
-them from seeing each other. She did not trust to her
-precautions against Peter’s recognizing her father, knowing
-that there were elements in the situation which might
-bring on some mischance on the side of tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Wassili acted according to his instructions. As
-Peter sat down, the <i>moujik</i> left Michael’s chair, and
-offered the guest a cigarette from a tin box, lighted a
-match—and remained behind Peter’s chair. Thus it appeared
-to Peter that he was being tendered the usual
-courtesies.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is true that times have changed, sir,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ay, they have, truly,” said Michael. “And some
-say for the better. Perhaps. But I’ll not live to see it
-all finished. I shall get no good from it. But we must
-remember those who have died dreaming dreams for the
-future.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” said Peter. “And this ground is full of such—we
-must remember them, and it is our duty to see that
-they did not sacrifice themselves for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>“My daughter tells me that you know our story—that
-I was a political here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“In the time of Kirsakoff, the Governor,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Kirsakoff!” said Michael. “Ah, yes, I had good
-reason to know Kirsakoff. There are many waiting their
-chance to settle with him, and he has but a short time for
-this world. But one of the lessons we learned here, my
-friend, was to bide our time—and I am waiting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And Kirsakoff is in with Zorogoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That Mongol dog!” said Michael. “Have you
-heard that he has visited upon my daughter and me the
-silent torture? And that even now we hide from him?
-Yes. Well, he has buried people to their necks by the
-dozen, and then sent horsemen galloping over the ground.
-But if God is good I shall live to see his head carried
-about on the end of a pole!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And Kirsakoff stands behind him, I hear,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael exchanged glances with Katerin. “True, it
-is Kirsakoff who helps him hold his power.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But it is dangerous to talk of Kirsakoff,” said Katerin,
-as she handed Peter a glass of tea. “That is whisper
-talk, and I warn you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” grumbled Michael. “Your life would be worth
-little if you let it be known that you are in possession
-of that secret. You are playing a dangerous game if you
-wish to get close to Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But if he only knows me as an American,” suggested
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What! You, who speak the real Russian!” exclaimed
-Michael. “Do not be fooled—he will know you
-for a Russian!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can arrange that,” said Peter, with a smile. “If I
-can find him, that is a matter easy enough to be handled
-as the business needs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael shook his head energetically.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>“No, no, my friend! Kirsakoff’s hand is hidden.
-Your life would be in danger at once if you gave a hint
-that you even know that Kirsakoff is in the city. Be sure
-of that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then I can pretend I do not know him,” pressed
-Peter. He was somewhat disappointed by the resistance
-offered by the old man.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You must remember, my father, that our friend has
-reasons of his own for wanting to find the Governor. And
-danger may not be a matter of concern.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter gave her a grateful glance for thus allying herself
-with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If I were to tell you my reason for wanting Kirsakoff,
-I am sure that you would say that it is good, sir. I have
-waited many years to come back—and now I must not
-fail. I shall find Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I should not like to be the one who puts your
-life in danger,” said Michael. “You may not be aware
-of all it means—this business of the Governor is not a
-light subject. You will do well not to cross his tracks,
-for he will strike at you through Zorogoff’s spies, and you
-will never know who struck. One cannot fight an army—and
-Zorogoff will not brook any interference. He will
-destroy you like a fly upon his bread.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I court the danger,” said Peter, sipping his tea, and
-willing to wait till the old man was in a humor to be more
-communicative.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Governor has five thousand rifles at his back,”
-said Michael. “You cannot know yet the full danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall go gladly to meet it,” persisted Peter. “It
-cannot be any greater than my desire to find Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You would risk death?” asked Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Even death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What! Twenty years in America, and you would
-risk death to find Kirsakoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>“What you say is true, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old man studied Peter carefully for a minute.
-“You speak,” he said finally, “as if you had spent twenty
-years in the Governor’s prison, instead of twenty years in
-America.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I spent time enough in his prison,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin uttered an involuntary exclamation of surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Here! You were in the old prison here?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I was,” said Peter, with a grim tightening of his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But you are too young to have been an exile!” gasped
-Michael. “If you had been one of—us, I can well understand.
-There are many who have been here for long
-years—they have known the chains, they have known a
-lifetime in cells. And still, they have no stomach for
-meeting the Governor face to face. That is because they
-know Kirsakoff—and that he is not a man who can be
-hunted like a rabbit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I also knew him,” said Peter. “I doubt if I will
-fear him, even if I come face to face with him—and he
-knows me for a Russian, and by my true name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh! So you knew Kirsakoff?” asked Katerin.
-“Then it will not be so difficult for you to find him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I knew him too well,” said Peter, now beginning to fear
-they would settle themselves against helping him to find
-Kirsakoff, and seeing that he would have to take them into
-his confidence if they were to be of any help to him. “I
-knew him when I was a boy here—and I have an old
-score to pay off. I have come to pay it, and I shall not
-be kept from finding Kirsakoff, even though he were the
-new Czar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You must have been an unfortunate to have been in
-the prison,” said Katerin. She was still gazing at him
-with curious eyes, as if she could not believe that he was
-really telling the truth about himself—as if she thought
-he was making his story fit his necessity for finding Kirsakoff
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>and was making it as serious as possible to induce
-them to help him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father was an unfortunate—a political—here
-in the Valley of Despair.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Indeed, was he?” asked Michael, with renewed interest.
-“You mean that he was here in the time that
-Kirsakoff was Governor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“In the same time—when I was a boy,” said Peter,
-and looked at Katerin. Her face was full of shocked
-surprise. She seemed horror-stricken at the idea, and he
-wondered why she should think it so strange and so
-terrible. He rather expected that she would see that they
-would all be drawn together in common trouble, and have
-a common hatred for Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How strange,” she said, turning to the lamp. “Then
-you are one of us—no wonder you seek Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ay, that is a new string to the fiddle,” agreed Michael.
-“I can understand now that you should want to find the
-Governor. Perhaps you are right in this matter after
-all—and I must think it over. You have reason enough,
-yet it is a serious thing for me to put you in danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter felt better at this new attitude of the old man,
-and thought that now they regarded him with a more
-friendly eye. He was, in truth, one of them, and there
-is a strong bond of sympathy between exiles and the
-children of exiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And we might have known—could we have known
-your father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You could not have known my father. He died here
-twenty years ago—before I went to America,” said
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Twenty years! That is a long time to wait for vengeance,”
-said Michael. “Many things are forgotten in
-twenty years, and time cures many things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ay, so it is a long time, in one way, and in another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>a short time. It seems but yesterday that I was a boy
-here in Chita. You, sir, have worked all your life to see
-Russia a free land. And like you, I have learned to bide
-my time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Things must look strange to you here,” said Katerin.
-“The city has grown in twenty years.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, outwardly things look different. But the hills,
-the old prison, the streets—I see them as they were.
-During my years in America I never forgot, though I
-confess I had little hope of ever coming back. But the
-war gave me my chance. I was going to France, but
-when the government decided to send troops here, I
-volunteered for service in Siberia. Was it not God-given
-that I should be allowed to come back to my native
-land—and to come to Chita?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” said Katerin, “if the debt, as you call it,
-which you owe to the Governor, is such that God would
-have it paid.” She moved her chair in such way that she
-was nearer the table, and so that she was closer to her
-father. Also, she managed so that she cut more light from
-her father’s face.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what is the debt?” asked Michael. “If it is not
-a secret—if I am to tell you where you may find the
-Governor, perhaps you will see it in such way that you
-can trust me with the secret.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It was Kirsakoff’s orders which brought about my
-father’s death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin’s teeth shut down upon her lower lip, and her
-fingers closed slowly upon the sides of her chair. She
-sat rigid, staring at Peter, and her face became paler.
-Michael did not move, but his breath began to come faster,
-and he wheezed, as if his chest had tightened and he was
-about to cough.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Killed your father?” asked Katerin, in low tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, Kirsakoff did not strike with his own hand,” went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>on Peter, still gazing fixedly at the lamp. “But he
-ordered my father back to the prison, and when my father
-ran after the Governor to beg for mercy, a Cossack soldier
-cut my father down with a sword. And I was thrown
-into the big prison on the hill—I, a poor helpless boy
-who had done nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili moved uneasily behind the chair of Peter, and
-Katerin gave the <i>moujik</i> a glance of disapproval.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you do know,” said Katerin to Peter, “how
-cruel the Governor was to the poor unfortunates. And
-that is why you seek him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What was done to my father and me—what was it?
-Only the ordinary thing of the old days, as you know.
-Yes, that is why I seek Kirsakoff, and why I ask your help
-to find him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And how long were you in the prison?” asked Michael.
-“There must have been a charge against you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I was in prison three months, as near as I can tell,”
-replied Peter. “Three months of hell on earth and in
-darkness, forgotten to the world! It might have been
-three years, or three hundred, measured in my suffering—the
-terrible sounds by day and by night, the rats—and
-I might have been there till now, or dead, so far as
-Kirsakoff cared.” His bitterness was growing, and his
-face was getting livid with rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And for nothing?” asked Katerin. “Had you done
-nothing against the Governor—or the laws of the Czar?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ay, even Kirsakoff would have mercy on a boy,” said
-Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I did nothing, I swear,” went on Peter. “It was the
-orders of Kirsakoff which sent me to prison. It was this
-way—an officer knocked me down in front of the post-house.
-And when my father came to pick me up, the Governor
-ordered both of us taken away to the prison.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You see, my father belonged to the free gang—he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>was a political, as were you. My mother died here, in
-the Street of the Dames. I never knew her. But my
-father was good and kind to me. He was all I had in
-the world, he was all I loved, though in those days (and
-Peter smiled wistfully) I was taught to love the Little
-Father, the Czar.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father was struck down before my eyes, and when
-I was taken to the prison, the officer in charge of the
-books was drunk—and he put my name down in the book
-wrong—put my name down as my father’s—gave my
-father’s name to me, so that the records appeared to
-show that it was my father and not me, the boy, back in
-prison. I did not know what they were doing, and for
-three months it was supposed that it was my father, the
-political, who was in the cell by order of the Governor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then no doubt the Governor freed you—gave you
-the pardon,” said Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Peter. “It was God’s hand that set me
-free. Some convicts escaped one night, and were recaptured
-by the cordons in the <i>taiga</i>. But before the
-soldiers took them, they had waylaid a sledge carrying an
-American fur-buyer to Irkutsk. His name was Gordon.
-The convicts robbed him. When Gordon got back here
-to Chita, he was taken to the prison and the convicts were
-brought out to be identified by him as the robbers. It
-happened that one of these men, named Grassi, had been
-put in the cell with me. When he was taken out into the
-prison yard, I was taken with him. Then it was discovered
-that I was the son of my father, and that there was
-no charge against me. Mr. Gordon, the American, asked
-to take me as his servant. I was released, the prison
-commandant corrected the records, and Mr. Gordon took
-me with him to America.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter paused, and looked at Michael, to see what effect
-the story had had on the old man. But Michael’s head
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>was nodding gently, and he seemed to be turning the matter
-over in his mind, his lips moving as if he were shaping
-words which he did not speak aloud.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin stood up suddenly, and tested the fire in the
-samovar. She seemed agitated, and Peter assumed that
-she suffered with indignation at hearing his sufferings at
-the hands of the Governor. Then she turned to him
-swiftly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What will you do—when you find the old—Kirsakoff?”
-she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall kill him,” said Peter simply, and was aware of
-a quivering hand upon the back of his chair. He turned
-and looked at Wassili. The <i>moujik’s</i> eyes were shining
-like a cat’s before a fire, and there was the look of murder
-in his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Kill him!” cried Michael. “But he did not kill your
-father!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was startled for an instant by the old man’s
-horror, and Katerin’s face revealed the fact that she had
-never dreamed that the American officer was bent on
-murder—she seemed actually to be in terror of him.
-Peter suffered a moment of abashment, and gulped down
-what was left of the tea in his glass. He understood
-that these people did not yet fully appreciate how wantonly
-his father had been killed, nor how little provocation
-there was for the killing. He was determined to convince
-them of the justice of his designs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father and I,” he began anew, “lived in a little
-hut down the Sofistkaya—it is there yet—I can see it
-from the windows of my room. An old man lives in it
-now, a queer old patriarch, who sells cigarettes——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is Rimsky!” exclaimed Wassili to Katerin. She
-nodded, and looked at him so that she checked him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, Rimsky,” said Peter. “That is his name. That
-is where I lived with my father, and where he taught me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>the almanacs. We were happy, for we had a samovar,
-and the ladies of the Street of the Dames came to us often.
-They gave me cakes, and my father money. Of course, I
-know now that he was an underground to the prison—he
-carried messages back and forth between wives and
-their husbands in the prison.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, they had many ways of getting news in and out
-in the old days,” said Michael, with a smile. “But go
-on with your story, my friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter struck a match to light a fresh cigarette, and the
-flame showed his face to be flushed by his emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The year of which I speak,” resumed Peter, “the
-almanacs from Moscow were late. The mail-sledges came
-in from Irkutsk one morning. I ran down to the post-house
-to learn if the almanacs had come. There were
-Excellencies in the sledge. As I remember, the Governor’s
-daughter—Katerin was her name, I think, and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, yes,” cried Katerin, striking her hands together.
-“Katerin Stephanovna! She was the Governor’s daughter—I
-have heard of her! It is said now that she is
-dead!” and Katerin turned to her father, as if to verify
-what she had said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It has been said that she is dead this long time,”
-assented Michael. “Some say that Zorogoff——” He
-checked himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter continued with his tale, warmed to it again by
-the evident interest of his listeners.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, that was the Governor’s daughter. Her coming
-was his reason for meeting the sledge that morning. Well,
-I was eager to be sure that the almanacs had come—and
-a Cossack knocked me down because I called to the
-Governor’s daughter for news of the almanacs. And when
-Michael Alexandrovitch, the Governor, came to the
-sledge he found my father picking me up. I was bleeding
-and stunned from the blow. And the Governor was in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>rage at us—that my father should be making trouble—and
-ordered him to be stricken from the free gang
-and put back in the prison once more—and me with
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But you said your father was killed,” said Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, as I say,” replied Peter. “My father”—and
-Peter inclined his head toward the icon in the corner
-over Michael’s head—“my father was so broken in spirit
-at knowing he was no longer of the free gang and that
-I was to go to prison, that he ran after Kirsakoff. It
-was then that a Cossack ran my father through with a
-saber—and swore that my father had struck at the Governor
-with a knife—a leather knife which he pulled from
-my father’s pocket.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But did the Governor know—could he know—of
-this terrible happening?” asked Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ay, did the Governor know?” echoed Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Know!” cried Peter. “What would he have cared
-if he did know? He had just ordered us both to prison
-for nothing! And did he care enough to investigate the
-case during the three months I was inside a black cell—to
-give me my freedom? No! He forgot all about it
-and me, even if he did know what had happened? Does
-he care now what the fate of you and your daughter may
-be? I tell you, sir, I must find Michael Kirsakoff! And
-you must be the one who puts me on the right road!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, you must find him,” said Katerin. “Now we
-know that you have good reason for wanting him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you,” said Peter fervently. “I knew that
-when you saw my story as I could tell it, you would realize
-that above all things, I must find Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What was the name of your father?” asked Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Gorekin—Peter Pavlovitch—a bootmaker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Gorekin!” gasped Michael, his head snapping back
-in his amazement. “Gorekin!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>“Have you heard of him?” asked Peter, with a quick
-look at the old general.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I thought for a moment I knew the name,” said
-Michael. “But if you say he was a bootmaker, it must
-have been another. No, not if he was a bootmaker—and
-this man I knew less than ten years ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael looked at Wassili, and put a hand upon the
-table beside him, keeping the other under the blanket. He
-began to drum with his fingers, deep in reflection. No
-word was spoken for several minutes. Peter could hear
-Wassili breathing behind the chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have our sympathy,” said Katerin. “And you
-must find the Governor. If you will give me time to talk
-it over with my father——” She gave Peter a significant
-look, which he interpreted to mean that it would be
-wiser not to press now for information about Kirsakoff,
-but to leave it in her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you,” said Peter, and he rose, and bowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You shall find Kirsakoff,” said Michael, staring at his
-hand on the table. “By morning I shall know where he
-may be found—perhaps. We must not act hastily.”
-The palsied head was shaking gently, and the old man
-was lost again in thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, yes,” Katerin put in hastily. Peter saw tears
-in her eyes. She followed after him as he turned to go
-back through the rooms, and they left Michael and Wassili
-alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter stopped at his own door, and looking back over
-Katerin’s shoulder, saw against the light of the room he
-had just left, a shadow cross—and then the figure of
-Wassili peering after them.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Good-night,” said Katerin. She seemed nervous and
-worried. She also had caught a glimpse of the old <i>moujik</i>
-outlined against the glow of her father’s lamp.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter seized her hands in sudden impulse and pressed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>them heartily. “I cannot tell you of my gratitude,
-Vashka,” he whispered. “It was you who helped me in
-this—and I have waited long! You are going to persuade
-your father to tell me where I shall find Kirsakoff!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She gently drew away from him, and he released her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall do what I can,” she whispered. “But take
-care—this house is full of enemies. If we are to defeat
-the Ataman, be wary. Bolt both your doors to-night!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Then she slipped away to her father.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XX<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE BLOW</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER, alone once more in his room, found that a
-strange calmness had come to him once the secret
-of his purpose in returning to the Valley of
-Despair was in the keeping of two other persons. There
-was for him in that fact something of the relief of the
-confessional. For twenty years he had nursed in his soul
-the grievance of his father’s death, and his own imprisonment—nursed
-it most secretly, pent it up within his
-consciousness, till it seemed that his body had become a
-kind of culture tube of germinating hate.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>For the first time since he had left Chita as a boy, he
-found an easement of his soul burden. These people to
-whom he had told his story, understood his deepest emotions
-regarding his father. No American could ever have
-understood fully, Peter was well aware. Prison to an
-American implies disgrace, some sort of stain upon the
-character which is never fully lived down. But to this
-old exile, as Peter supposed Kirsakoff to be, Peter’s story
-was an honor to him. For the old man had suffered the
-horrors of the exile system, mixing, as it did, the highest
-type of Russian with the lowest—the thinker with the
-cutthroat.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter knew he stood better in Katerin’s regard than
-before, now that she knew his story. He had seen in her
-face a deep and profound pity for him. What he mistook
-for pity was her alarmed concern when she discovered that
-Peter sought to slay her father. Peter could not know
-that she had suffered torture while he had sat looking into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>the lamp—that she knew how a look, a word or some
-turn of the head might betray her father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter had always thought that the first assurance of a
-successful end to his quest for Kirsakoff would mean a
-delirious joy. Yet here he was coldly calm, a calm which
-was a steadiness that he ascribed to his own efforts to
-control all outward indications of his grim satisfaction.
-His brain was singing, over and over, in an endless refrain—“I
-shall find Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He turned the light in such way that he could see himself
-in the big mirror between the windows, and smiled at
-himself. His face was slightly flushed from the emotions
-and memories roused by telling how his father had been
-killed before the post-house, and how he himself had
-endured and escaped from the prison on the hill.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>His eyes burned with a feverish light. In fact, he was
-drugged with elation, strangely soothed, much as a man
-is lulled with wine till his senses are subdued by the poison
-and his reasoning faculties are benumbed. Yet his alertness
-was in no whit deadened. On the contrary, he was
-well aware of what was before him, and he was alive to
-the necessities of the situation. He was approaching his
-long-waited moment of triumph, and he knew that he must
-hold himself against the slightest rashness in thoughts or
-actions. He must, he thought as he surveyed himself in
-the mirror, avoid the look of craftiness which was coming
-into his face—he must feign a bland innocence, and
-dispel everything which savored of eagerness, impatience,
-impulsive haste. He had days, weeks, in which to carry
-out his purpose, and at last he was on the right track.
-Besides, it would avail nothing unless he could accomplish
-the destruction of Kirsakoff without leaving the hint of a
-clew to the identity of the slayer.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He left off studying himself in the mirror, and began
-pacing the floor, head down and hands behind his back.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>There was a strange sense of satisfaction in the knowledge
-that Vashka knew his secret. He felt that it constituted
-a bond between them, a mutual sympathy such as is
-known only among exiles, or the children of exiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In fact, Peter had created in his own mind a vision of
-Vashka that went beyond the time when he would have
-killed Kirsakoff. It was sort of an unformed, inchoate
-dream which consisted of nothing more tenuous than
-mental flits into the future in which he always saw Vashka.
-As she knew the secret of his coming back to Chita, she
-would also hold his secret about who had killed Kirsakoff.
-She would always understand, as she understood now.
-Only a Russian, a Russian girl who knew as Vashka knew
-the terrors of the Valley of Despair, fitted his idea of a
-confidant in this affair. Katerin, as “Vashka,” had done
-her work well!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was now sure that Fate had a hand in everything
-which had brought him back to the place of his boyhood.
-The whole thing had come about with an inevitableness
-which revealed a divinely directed plan. If some force
-had shaped events for him with such unerring accuracy,
-he saw no reason why the final result should not be brought
-about with the same ease with which he had come thus
-far on the way to his revenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He had a feeling that the task he had set himself was
-now accomplished—the finding of Kirsakoff. His mind
-was at rest, and he felt the need of relaxation from the
-strain of wavering hopes and doubts. Also, he suddenly
-felt hungry with that voracious appetite which comes to
-people who pass the crisis of a severe illness and know
-without reservation that they are on the way to complete
-recovery.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The fiddler he had heard on the floor above before going
-to talk with Katerin and her father, had now descended
-to the hotel dining room, and was playing merrily. There
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>were other instruments, too—an orchestra. The music
-was a novelty for the hotel. It lifted Peter’s spirits, and
-dispelled the gloom of the place. For the first time since
-he had arrived in Chita Peter wished to move about
-among other people.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He washed at the little sink, and combed his hair.
-Then he went down the hall to the dining room. There
-were but a few people in the place—young men in Cossack
-uniform, with flashily dressed women, sitting by
-twos at the little tables along the wall under the frosty
-windows. The gloominess of the room was apparent even
-under the lights and the music, but it was the merriest
-scene Peter had seen in the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There were four musicians on a raised platform at the
-far end of the room close to the red-painted buffet-bar
-with the smashed mirrors. And the quartet was clad in
-poor and ill-fitting gray suits—the men were German
-prisoners of war.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter clicked his heels in the doorway and bowed before
-he entered. The officers at the table looked up with
-startled eyes, but inclined their heads slightly in response
-to the courtesy. But it was plain that his American uniform
-had attracted special attention, for the women companions
-of the Cossacks stared at him. Peter wondered
-if there was any resentment because he wore his belt and
-pistol, though he could not understand how he had committed
-any breach of etiquette by being armed, for the
-young Cossacks were all wearing their pistols and their
-sabers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The musicians played a German air, sadly, and with
-good evidence that some of the strings were missing.
-There were two violins, a ’cello, and a clarinet.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A waiter came to Peter. The man was clad in the same
-bluish-gray as the musicians. He also was a war prisoner,
-and clicked his heels and was quite military in his manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>“Have you a ticket, sir?” he asked, speaking in
-English.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Is a ticket necessary?” asked Peter in surprise. “I
-am staying at the hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, sir,” said the waiter. “This is an officers’ mess—officers
-of the Ataman’s army.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then I am sorry,” said Peter, reverting to Russian
-for the benefit of the Cossacks. “I thought this was the
-hotel restaurant. I had no intention of intruding,” and
-he pushed back his chair to rise from the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You speak Russian, sir,” said the waiter, in Russian.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes,” said Peter. “And you speak English surprisingly
-well—also Russian.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Hans!” A young Cossack who sat two tables beyond
-Peter, and faced him, called the waiter away and
-handed him something. The waiter was back to Peter
-by the time he had risen to leave the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Here is a ticket for you, sir. The Cossack gentleman—the
-lieutenant—wishes you to have your supper
-here,” said the waiter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter bowed to the young officer, who smiled across the
-shoulders of the woman with him. He was a thin-faced
-chap, with heavy black hair down on his forehead after
-the Cossack fashion. Gold straps covered his shoulders,
-and a great saber lay outside the table legs, where it
-swung down to the floor from his belt.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter sat down again. It would be in the nature of
-an affront not to accept the proffered hospitality. And
-the waiter brought thick cabbage soup with a yellowish
-scum of fat floating on its surface, black bread, a plate
-of chopped meat, with a mound of boiled grains of wheat,
-and a glass of tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>During the meal the orchestra continued to play. The
-Cossacks and their women talked in low tones. Finally,
-they began to drift away gradually till none was left but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>the young officer who had sent Peter the supper ticket.
-And in time his companion disappeared also. Then the
-young officer approached Peter’s table, and bowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are an American officer, but you speak Russian,”
-said the Cossack. He smiled and clicked his spurred
-heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes,” said Peter, rising and saluting. They shook
-hands formally.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am Lutoff, a lieutenant in the army of the Ataman
-Zorogoff,” went on the Cossack with pride. “I heard
-that there was an American officer in the hotel—and I
-was about to call upon you this very evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is very kind of you,” said Peter, seeing that
-there was some purpose after all in the matter of the
-supper ticket beyond the characteristic hospitality of all
-Cossacks. He saw that he would have to play the game,
-whatever it might be. “My name is Gordon, and I also
-am a lieutenant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff bowed again.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Please sit down with me,” invited Peter, and they
-both sat down facing each other across the small table.
-Peter did not like Lutoff any too well—there was a
-craftiness in his eyes, an insincere suavity in his manner,
-an affability about him that was forced. His friendliness
-lacked a frankness which he did his best to simulate,
-but behind his smiles and his politeness there was a promise
-of lurking menace.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have not called upon the Ataman,” said Lutoff
-lightly, half in question, yet half in the nature of a
-statement of fact—perhaps a challenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Peter. “I was three weeks coming up on
-the train, and my health was hurt—I have been resting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I trust you will feel better soon,” said Lutoff. He
-uttered the words as if he meant more than that—Peter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>caught an implication that it would be well for him not
-to neglect calling upon the Ataman.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Were you intending to pay an official call this evening?”
-asked Peter. He thought it advisable to probe a
-bit after Lutoff’s obscure inferences.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, just for a friendly chat. You speak Russian
-well for an American. You must have been in the country
-before.” Lutoff offered his cigarette case, a ponderous
-silver box covered with semiprecious stones of various
-kinds and studded with raised metal initials—mostly gold—of
-friends who had added to its ornate embellishments.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father was in business in Moscow. I was born
-and grew up there,” lied Peter glibly, as he took a cigarette.
-He had no intention of taking Lutoff into confidence
-about his early life. He considered that none of
-the Cossack’s business, and the personal prying a trifle
-impertinent.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Are American soldiers coming to Chita?” pressed
-Lutoff. It was obvious now that he sought information
-for the Ataman.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, yes,” said Peter easily. “I understand a battalion
-will be coming up the line. That is something I
-intend to take up with the Ataman—how many barracks
-are available in this vicinity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff gave this consideration for several minutes, but
-made no comment. Then he looked over his shoulder
-toward the orchestra to make sure that no waiters were
-within hearing.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“As a friend, I wish to tell you something,” he said
-in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you,” said Peter, but to all intents he was
-indifferent and smoked his cigarette with complacency.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“While I belong to the Ataman’s staff, I am not speaking
-officially,” said Lutoff. “It is merely as one friend
-to another. You understand my attitude, of course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>“Of course. Have no hesitation in speaking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then what I wish to say to you is that if I were you,
-I would not trust civilians who live in this hotel.” Lutoff
-looked squarely at Peter, as if to gauge the effect of the
-advice on him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Civilians!” exclaimed Peter. “Why, I did not think
-of that. I supposed that nearly everybody in the hotel
-was in the Ataman’s service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There are many who are not,” said Lutoff, a trifle
-annoyed by Peter’s coolness. “Surely, you do not think
-that all civilians quartered here are in the service of Zorogoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am not so sure,” returned Peter. “But why
-shouldn’t I trust them? What is there wrong—or dangerous
-about the civilians?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There are spies among them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You mean they are spies for the Ataman?” asked
-Peter, not taking his eyes from Lutoff’s. Peter was
-somewhat amused by Lutoff, and was taking considerable
-delight in beating him about the bush. The whole incident
-was so Cossack-like, so childishly dramatic.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff shrugged his shoulders. “The Ataman has his
-spies, of course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And perhaps I have talked with some of them,” suggested
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps. But that is not what I mean. I only
-warn you to be careful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are very kind,” said Peter. “But have you any
-particular person in mind?” He wondered if Lutoff
-could be working along a definite line.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You would be wise to avoid those people you have
-been talking with,” said Lutoff, and leaned back in his
-chair to blow smoke rings toward the ceiling, thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter laughed quietly. “Rather a vague warning,” he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>said. “I have talked with several persons in the city—just
-as I am talking with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You know the people I mean,” said Lutoff with some
-tartness, still gazing at the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I appreciate your consideration for me, sir. I assure
-you I would be glad to follow your advice if you will
-limit it to the people you evidently have in mind. But so
-far, what you have said might refer to anybody.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff looked at the table, twisted a bit of black bread
-off a slice which lay on a plate, and kneaded the bread
-into a ball of dough on the cloth.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have been talking with people in this hotel,” he
-said presently.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Not many,” said Peter. He was sure now that Lutoff
-was referring to Vashka and her father, and began to be
-disquieted. Did Lutoff know anything, or was he merely
-guessing? Was it possible that a spy of the Ataman
-had heard the conversations with Vashka and her father?
-If so, had the spy heard Peter tell his story and his reason
-for wanting to find Kirsakoff? If the latter was true, it
-was likely that Kirsakoff already knew of Peter and his
-purpose, for according to Vashka, Kirsakoff was hand in
-glove with Zorogoff. Peter was really alarmed now. He
-wondered if Wassili was to be trusted. He wondered if
-Vashka was really a spy. He doubted that, for if Lutoff
-were in the service of Zorogoff, Lutoff would scarcely be
-warning Peter against Vashka. But the situation was
-dangerous, Peter knew well.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, you have not been talking with many,” said
-Lutoff. “But those with whom you have been talking—they
-are not safe for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is quite possible,” said Peter, smiling. “Almost
-any one here is dangerous to a stranger. You see, when
-it comes to that, I am most discreet with you, Mr. Lutoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff bowed his head slightly. “You compliment me.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>But I am not trying to mystify you or to frighten you.
-When a man comes and warns you, you cannot very well
-say he is a menace to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Peter. “But your warning is vague. If
-it is to be of any value to me—who are the people you
-warn me against?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I speak of the old man—and the girl,” said Lutoff
-abruptly, and lifted his eyes to Peter’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The old man and the girl!” repeated Peter, with an
-amazement which was well feigned. “Here in the hotel?
-I am not sure that I know whom you mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And I am sure that you do,” shot back Lutoff. He
-had dropped his polite indirectness and was ready to
-argue with Peter—almost ready, it appeared, to dictate
-to Peter on whom he should talk with in the hotel or the
-city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then you know what you know,” said Peter calmly.
-“But I cannot be sure what you know, unless you tell me,
-thus I cannot be sure that you speak as a friend. First,
-if I am to consider your advice, you must give me some
-assurance that you have knowledge of whom I have been
-talking with—otherwise, my friend, you are seeking
-information rather than giving it.” He had no intention
-of being trapped into admitting that he had been
-talking with Vashka and her father. The Ataman and
-Kirsakoff might suspect what they liked, but Peter was
-not going to tell Lutoff anything.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“These people are hiding here in the hotel,” said Lutoff,
-resuming his kneading of the brown dough on the tablecloth.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Hiding?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“From the Ataman?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff looked up with an angry grimace, and Peter
-knew that he had put one shot home. He had revealed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>some knowledge of the Ataman’s tactics, and he had satisfied
-himself that Vashka and her father were telling the
-truth. He had put Lutoff into something of a hole,
-which the Cossack might find it difficult to get clear of
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You had better keep your hands off this matter,”
-warned Lutoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, is that it?” asked Peter. “Then this is a warning
-about listening to people who have something to say
-about the Ataman, is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You may judge for yourself,” replied Lutoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I already have,” said Peter, suavely. “I judge that
-you are not warning me so much against certain people, as
-that you are warning me to beware of the Ataman Zorogoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If I were you, I would not mix in political matters in
-this city, Mr. Gordon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You must remember that you are talking to an American
-officer,” said Peter. “Am I to understand that an
-officer of the Ataman Zorogoff tells me what I should
-do or should not do in Chita?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I think the Americans wish to avoid trouble with the
-Ataman,” said Lutoff, with a bland smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That remains to be seen—and is somewhat dependent
-upon how the Ataman Zorogoff conducts what he is
-pleased to call his government,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do the Americans intend to tell Zorogoff how he shall
-govern?” Lutoff showed in his face that this was a most
-important question to the Ataman—it was what Lutoff
-was seeking for Zorogoff, and Peter knew it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“They might even do that,” replied Peter. “But it
-might depend upon the wishes of the bulk of the Russian
-people in this district.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff grinned. “The bulk of the Russian people are
-behind Zorogoff,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>“According to Zorogoff,” retorted Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Lutoff rose. “I am not speaking officially,” he said.
-“Is that understood?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is if you say so,” said Peter, also rising. “But
-I am speaking officially. And I wish to thank you for
-sending me the supper ticket, and for your advice. But
-I cannot limit myself regarding the people with whom I
-talk in Chita, even to please the Ataman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Am I to tell the Ataman that?” asked Lutoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You may tell the Ataman what you please of what I
-have said, or I am ready to tell him the same myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Very good, sir,” said Lutoff, and clicked his spurs
-again most formally. “But I can tell you now, sir, that
-you will come into conflict with the Ataman Zorogoff if
-you interfere—if you take any further action with these
-people to whom I have referred. And——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I cannot consider your warning unless you make clear
-to me just whom you are talking about,” interrupted
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You still pretend not to know?” asked Lutoff in surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I want names, not assumptions,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Very good, then,” said Lutoff. “Let us not have any
-doubt about it, and then you cannot plead that you were
-not warned by the Ataman. I tell you not to mix yourself
-in this affair of the Kirsakoffs—old General Kirsakoff
-and his daughter Katerin Stephanovna!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Lutoff bowed again and walked directly out of the
-dining room, leaving Peter clutching at the table as he
-swayed before he sank back into his chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Kirsakoff!” he whispered. “Kirsakoff—and his
-daughter Katerin Stephanovna!” and then his voice rose
-in a hysterical wailing burst of laughter above the playing
-of the orchestra.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXI<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE CAT’S PAW HAS CLAWS</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>THE electric lamp on Peter’s writing table was
-still glowing under its shade, but it gradually
-waned as morning whitened the frost-bound windows.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter sat by the table near the door. He was fully
-dressed, just as he had come from the dining room after
-Lutoff had warned him to have no more dealings with the
-Kirsakoffs. Peter’s left arm lay limply on the dingy
-cloth, his automatic pistol close at hand lying on its
-side. He was wide-eyed awake and staring at the door
-into the hall, as if he were waiting for some one to enter.
-His jaw was set grimly, and at the right side of his mouth
-his upper lip was askew, as if he had spent the night in
-thoughts which resulted in nothing but a cynical smile.
-His face was pale under the night’s growth of beardy
-stubble. The soles of both his boots rested flatly on the
-floor, and were pulled back slightly under his knees as he
-had gradually slipped down into the chair. His shoulders
-were bent forward in a crouching attitude, and his
-chin rested upon the front of his tunic.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>When full daylight finally vanquished the darkness of
-his side of the room, he lifted his head and pulled up the
-sleeve of his left arm to look at his wrist-watch. He
-thought a moment, as if in doubt what to do next, and
-wound the watch. He turned and looked at the windows
-behind him, rubbed his jaw reflectively with the tips of
-his fingers, and got up wearily to look for his shaving kit
-on the shelf under the mirror between the windows.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>He studied himself in the mirror, smoothed his rumpled
-hair with his hand, and went about the business of getting
-out his razors. But he pushed the kit away irritably,
-and returned to the table. He picked up his pistol, took
-a cautionary glance at the catch which was so arranged
-that it revealed the weapon to be ready for firing, and
-slipped the pistol into its holster on his hip. Yet he
-did not button down the flap of the holster, but sprung
-the stiff leather flap back and tucked it in behind the
-belt. This left the butt of the pistol ready to his hand
-for instant use—he could draw and fire it without the
-trouble of unbuttoning the flap.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He went to the little wall sink near the wardrobe and
-dashed water in his face. Drying himself with a handkerchief,
-he went once more to the mirror and combed his
-hair with infinite pains. This done to his satisfaction,
-he stood before the door leading into Katerin’s room, in
-an attitude of listening.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He looked at his watch again after a time, and as if he
-had made a decision, walked to the door and rapped
-gently upon it. He waited, listening. He heard nothing.
-Finally he went to the push-button near the door to the
-hall and pressed it three times in the usual signal for a
-samovar. Then he fell to pacing the floor, head down,
-and his hands clasped behind his back.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>After a considerable delay, the peasant girl who had
-served him when he first came to the hotel brought the
-samovar. She seemed to be still half asleep, and having
-set the samovar upon the table, departed promptly without
-so much as a look at Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He took a few more turns up and down the room till
-the hissing of the samovar drew his attention. He put
-the tea to brewing and waited listlessly till it should be
-ready. He drank several glasses of the steaming tea
-without any apparent relish of it or stimulation from it.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>He seemed in a stupor, as he sat staring at the floor,
-haggard and hollow-eyed. His face was drawn, and
-reflected the bitterness in his soul. He hunted his pockets
-for cigarettes, but found none. He looked under the
-table. There he saw a litter of flattened mouthpieces and
-matches, the remains of his night-long smoking.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There came a gentle tapping at Katerin’s door. He
-sprang toward it and threw off the bolt. The door came
-open under his hand, and Katerin stood smiling at him.
-She did not look any too well, he thought—as if she had
-not slept herself. His eyes met hers, and he forced a
-smile. He bowed, and with a gesture invited her to enter.
-He did not look past her, but he was conscious of some
-one moving in the room beyond—her father’s room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Good-morning,” she said. “I did not bring the
-samovar because I did not want to risk being seen in the
-hall.” Her voice was low, and there was a note of worry
-in it, as if she had already sensed something inimical in
-his manner, or in the close stale air of the room which
-reeked with the fumes of dead tobacco smoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter turned toward the window to pull a chair from
-the writing table.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You—you are ill!” she exclaimed suddenly, giving
-him a look of concern. “And you have not slept!”
-She took in the undisturbed blankets on his bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes,” said Peter dully. “I have a cold—a headache.
-But it is nothing—see—I have already had my
-morning tea and feel better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am sorry. You look as if you had suffered much,”
-and she sat down, still observing him with troubled doubt.
-She saw the exposed pistol in the holster, but refrained
-from anything which would indicate that she had noticed
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What about Kirsakoff?” he asked, as if they should
-get to business.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>His words startled her, but she concealed from him any
-indication of her inner alarm.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I came to tell you,” she answered. “We sent Wassili
-out through the city last night, to people who have underground
-information. And he came back early with his
-report.” She affected a quiet complacence, as if seeking
-news of her father’s whereabouts was a trivial detail of
-everyday life.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what did he learn?” asked Peter, sitting down
-by the writing table with his back to the window. He was
-calmer now, resolved to play his part of utter ignorance
-of the truth about Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The last word that has come to Chita is that—Kirsakoff
-is in Harbin.” She looked straight at Peter
-to gauge the effect of her story upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“In Manchuria,” he said, without surprise. “In that
-case, we should go to Harbin. Could you and your father
-get away to Harbin with me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It might be possible—with your help.” Her face
-took on a trace of color as her heart began to respond to
-her rising hope that what she planned with Peter could
-be carried through. At least, he had interposed no
-objection to going to Harbin to find Kirsakoff, and actually
-had in mind a willingness to take her and her father
-along.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But could we find him when we got there?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We have friends there who know where he could be
-found. It should not be difficult—there are not so many
-Russians in Harbin, after all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are a brave woman,” he said quietly. “You
-must know that this whole plan holds naked menace for
-your father—and yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There is greater menace here,” she replied, looking
-steadily into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He wondered if she could mean that he was part of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>menace. It was possible that she knew Lutoff had been
-talking—and that what Lutoff had said was already
-known to her. If the latter were true, she must realize
-that it would be impossible to manipulate Peter so that
-he would save them from Zorogoff. He dismissed the
-thought—she was bent now on leading him on a fool’s
-errand to Harbin, and once safe from the Ataman, disappear
-in the Manchurian city.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>It now struck Peter that it might be wise to get away
-from the Valley of Despair with the Kirsakoffs. Harbin
-offered possibility not only to the Kirsakoffs, but to himself.
-He could hardly expect to kill Kirsakoff in Chita
-and cover his own tracks.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have you a plan for escape from the city?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We have talked it over with Slipitsky—the Jew.
-But my father is averse to having any hand in putting
-you into danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter smiled. “Your father need not worry about
-that,” he said lightly. “Did we not arrange last night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, but——” She hesitated to go on, and turned
-her face from him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Has your father changed his mind since last night?”
-asked Peter, alert at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, no,” she said, looking at the floor. “We—we
-thought you might change yours. You have not been
-sleeping—and perhaps you gave thought to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have not changed my mind about Kirsakoff,” he
-said when it was plain that she was not going to finish
-her sentence. “I am still determined to—find him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We thought you might have changed your mind
-about helping us.” She lifted her head, and smiled at
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He saw at once that her reluctance to avail herself of
-his help was only feigned. She was too subtle to be
-over-eager in a matter which concerned her own safety
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>and the safety of her father. She intended that Peter
-should be the insistent one, so that any suspicions he
-might have that they sought their own safety rather than
-Kirsakoff, would be allayed. She wished the trip to
-Harbin to be made on his wishes instead of out of their
-own selfish, if natural, desire to escape the Ataman.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter laughed without mirth.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We might not be able to find Kirsakoff in Harbin,”
-he suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” she admitted at once. “He spends his time
-between Harbin and Chita. By the time we got there, he
-might be on his way back here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Would you advise waiting?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is for you to decide.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then we shall go to Harbin,” he announced. “This
-is a serious thing to me. As I told you last night, I have
-waited twenty years to find Kirsakoff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It should not be difficult,” she said casually.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Not with your help,” he said, with a play at enthusiasm.
-“If I find him, it will be because——” He
-stopped short. What he was about to say was that if
-he found Kirsakoff, it would be due to her. But that was
-not true—she was concealing Kirsakoff. Peter felt he
-owed her nothing there.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Perhaps you would prefer to wait till you feel better,”
-suggested Katerin. She was still worried about his constrained
-manner, and not quite sure that the change which
-she detected in him was due to his feeling badly, as he
-claimed. She sensed an undercurrent of agitation, and
-though the reason of it was far beyond her intuitions, she
-knew he had undergone some change during the night—there
-was something hostile in his eye, something in the
-slow turning of his head which revealed to her the brooding
-rage which burned in his brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I feel well enough,” he said, putting his hand to his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>ruffled brow. “The pain has gone, but I feel dull and
-stupid. I hope you will forgive my—stolidity.” He
-forced a smile, and threw back his head and shook it as if
-to dispel a heaviness.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“When should we attempt to get away?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We should not delay, I think. Is it not likely that
-the Ataman will be down upon the hotel at any time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She shivered slightly. “Every minute is precious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The sooner away, the sooner we shall come up to
-Kirsakoff,” he said, and rose to take a turn about the
-room. Then he came and stood over her, looking down
-into her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take some more tea,” she said. “If we are to go
-away, you must feel as well as possible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, I must. Suppose you bring your father here—and
-the three of us talk over the plan of going—to
-Harbin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin gave him a quick glance. Once more she had
-caught in Peter’s manner a glimmer of the fact that he
-was holding himself in leash against an impulse to action
-which he found it painfully difficult to restrain. He
-frightened her a little, for there was that about his
-mouth, about his eyes, and in his voice which told her
-that this man was ready to slay.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father is still asleep, I am afraid,” she said.
-“But I know all the plans that have been made. We are
-to leave by droshky—and Slipitsky will forge passports
-for us. The old Jew is very shrewd about such things.
-He helped many a man escape from—the old prison.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter wondered if her reluctance to let him see her
-father could be due to a suspicion that Peter already knew
-that her father was Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Droshky to Harbin! It sounds impossible! By
-droshky more than a thousand versts in this time of the
-year?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>She laughed lightly. “Not all the way, of course,”
-she said. “Just far enough to get away from the city—down
-the railway far enough to get a train beyond
-where Zorogoff’s men are on guard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But how are we to get through the cordons of Cossacks?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“An American officer should be able to pass—if my
-father and myself have forged passports. They would
-not stop you—an American.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He saw the cleverness of her plan. It was a bold move.
-And the Kirsakoffs would not have to risk having their
-identity revealed to Peter during any quizzing at the railway
-station in Chita. Zorogoff’s passport officers would
-undoubtedly hold Katerin and her father if they attempted
-to board a train at the station with Peter—and the worst
-of it would be, the old general would most likely be
-addressed by his name in the hearing of Peter. But the
-sentries of the cordon around the city would be more
-easily fooled. In the first place, they might not recognize
-Kirsakoff at all if he were well wrapped in furs, and
-had his bandage about his face. Besides, they might be
-deceived by the false passports.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Is it intended that we should go by night?” asked
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, by day. The soldiers will not be so careful by
-day. By night, they might fire upon us, or hold us till
-morning in some guardroom while our papers were sent
-back to the city for examination. That is the advice
-Slipitsky gives. He says the best escapes are made
-by daylight, and the proper plan carefully worked
-out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin waited till Peter thought it over. He considered
-the plan, looking thoughtfully at the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You, as an American, can be liberal with the soldiers.
-Give them enough rubles to make them feel they want to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>please you, but not enough to rouse their suspicions. We
-will give you the money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter found it hard to choke down the bitterness which
-rose anew within him as he listened to her elaborating her
-plan for his deception. He was tempted for an instant
-to laugh at her, and tell her now that he knew all he
-needed to know. Yet there was a queer comfort for him
-in listening to Katerin go on with her intricate scheme
-to save herself and her father by means of the enemy of
-her father. And Peter realized also that they probably
-did not contemplate going on to Harbin with him at all—they
-would slip away from him on the train, at some
-station—anywhere once they were clear of the district
-in which Zorogoff’s army held any power.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Does Wassili go with us?” he asked, thinking that
-perhaps the servant would be taken for the purpose of
-killing Peter once they had used him to get them free
-through the cordons.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, Wassili will remain here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is the first thing to be done?” he asked, as if
-anxious to get about the business.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Send Wassili for the droshky and the driver who is in
-the plan—a man who can be trusted. That can be done
-as soon as Slipitsky has the passports ready. He was
-drying the ink this morning, over a smoky lamp to make
-the signatures fast and soften the wax of the seals so that
-the counterfeit seal could be pressed in. Then we drive
-straight toward Zorogoff’s headquarters, to make it appear
-first that we are going there. But we go around
-the building, so that it will appear to the first line of
-sentries on the other side that we have just left headquarters.
-That will make the first cordon willing to let
-us pass with scarcely any questioning. The next cordon
-will take it for granted that we are all right because we
-have passed the first—and if there is any trouble, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>passports will let us through. The earlier we start, the
-better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She rose, flushed with hope, which was engendered by
-the very telling of how they were to escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am ready when you are,” said Peter. “Let us not
-lose any time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Tears came into her eyes. “We put our lives in your
-hands,” she said. “God will bless you if you aid us in
-our escape.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The road to Harbin is before us yet,” he said with a
-smile. “You and your father are not yet out of danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” she said, moving toward the door of her
-room. “I shall have him get ready at once, and see
-Slipitsky about the passports.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter opened the door for her, and bowed as she passed
-out. He closed the door after her, and stood looking at
-the windows of his room, the same queer twisted smile of
-the morning at the corner of his mouth.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE OFFICER FROM THE ATAMAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER paced the floor of his room, his head bent
-in thought, after Katerin left him. He considered
-the possibilities of the proposed trip to
-Harbin in relation to himself and Michael. An escape
-from Chita, he saw now, would be most desirable for his
-own purpose, providing he was not being walked into a
-trap in Harbin. It was quite possible that Katerin and
-Michael would try to elude him in Harbin. It was inconceivable
-that they were not quite as anxious to escape
-from Peter as they were from the Ataman, for they were
-in full possession of his secret. And once clear of the
-cordon of Cossack guards surrounding Chita, they might
-be able to give him the slip.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He had a desire to play out the intricate game in which
-he found himself enmeshed. He knew he would find it
-amusing to watch Katerin and Michael play at being
-fugitives from the Ataman with him, and then play at
-stalking Michael himself in Harbin—to see a man pretend
-to seek himself. And at any time, Peter could turn
-to Michael, and say, “Thou art the man I seek.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The sheer chicanery of it had an irresistible appeal
-to Peter. Like all Slavs, he loved the dramatic for the
-sake of itself, and he enjoyed proceeding by devious ways.
-Besides, the fact that Katerin and Michael were deliberately
-deceiving him, justified his own deception. Peter
-had actually been sorry, as he sat thinking through the
-night, that the identity of Michael had been made known
-so abruptly. It had all come with such amazing clarity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>and finality that he had found himself rather helpless
-when he realized that the whole business could be settled
-by the simple expedient of killing Michael without any
-more delay. He shrank from so hasty a conclusion to
-an affair which he had been dreaming about for twenty
-years. He thought that perhaps the Russian people had
-been caught in just such a staggering position by the
-easy success of their revolution. A whole nation thrown
-back upon its haunches, so to speak, and asking itself
-what it was to do now! Their minds had been so occupied
-for years in planning and plotting to overthrow the Czar
-and his government that they had neglected entirely to
-think of what might face them once they were successful.
-Their plans had not gone beyond the destruction of the
-Czar, and when he was destroyed, they needed more years
-to give thought to what was necessary for the good of
-the country and the people. It did not seem quite fair
-to them that the Czar had allowed himself to be overthrown
-so easily—he had destroyed their game, their
-one interest in life. So they began to sulk, and intrigue
-against each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In the same way, Peter rather resented Lutoff’s directness
-in revealing the fact that the “old exile” was
-Michael Kirsakoff. It made the matter of killing Michael
-so absurdly easy! And the Slav insists upon making all
-things difficult—life, war, government—before he can
-enjoy them. He demands that Life shall be a puzzle, and
-examines its hidden purposes to discover why the Creator
-has tricked him into being a living being. He seeks a
-sinister motive behind his birth, and not being able to
-find one or to construct one out of his fancy, he kills himself
-because life is not worth living unless it can be proved
-to be a sort of divine persecution. The Slav needs a lot
-of trouble to keep himself happy. Convince him that the
-purpose of Life is to make him miserable and he is content.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>But Peter had become almost wholly Russian again, so
-he could not fully consider himself in the proper light.
-He had no intention of letting Michael escape. But he
-had the bothersome idea that he had to begin all over
-again to run Michael into a snare—a snare of Peter’s
-own devising, and built so leisurely that the joy of vengeance
-would have a satisfactory accretion of mental torture
-for Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old general knew that Peter lusted for his life, and
-this knowledge must in itself fill Kirsakoff with terror.
-Did not Kirsakoff live in dread of a look, a word, an
-intonation of the voice, which would betray him to Peter?
-And Peter knew that he had the power to precipitate the
-dreaded catastrophe for Michael at any instant. All
-Peter waited for now was the moment which would intensify
-the terror for Michael—that moment, perhaps,
-when Michael would consider himself safest. It might
-come at the instant when Michael would be ready to slip
-away from Peter in Harbin, exulting in the thought that
-he was about to escape from the man who sought to slay
-him. Safe at last! And then Peter could smile, and
-instead of saying, “Good-by, my friend,” could say instead,
-“Now, Michael Alexandrovitch, you die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And so utterly Russian such a moment would be! And
-how fitting, thought Peter. Was not Michael Kirsakoff
-living in a fool’s paradise and thinking that he could
-use his enemy to save his life from the Ataman? When
-he saw it from this angle, Peter was glad that he knew
-the old man was Michael. Now he could build Michael’s
-hopes, only to shatter them at the end.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Once again Peter was master of himself and of the
-situation. He would play the covert game with the Kirsakoffs—and
-Michael could not escape. Harbin would
-be better than Chita after all, for it offered a better
-chance for Peter to cover his tracks.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>He had come to this decision when he heard the rattle
-of boots on the other side of the door which led into
-Michael’s room. Then the door opened slowly, cautiously,
-and presently Michael, the blanket over his shoulders
-and clutching the loose ends of the covering to his
-breast, looked in. The old man was crouched forward
-and he was visibly trembling.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter thought at first that Michael had come sneaking
-in during the absence of Katerin below, to attack him.
-But he saw at once that Michael was alarmed—he stood
-hesitating in the door, looking back over his shoulder,
-listening. He had a blanket over his shoulders, and his
-hair stood up stiffly on the back of his head behind the
-bandages about his face, like the crest of an angry cockatoo.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter stood still. He half expected that Michael had
-come to the attack—that beneath the blanket Michael
-had a weapon. And there was no longer any doubt that
-the old man was Kirsakoff. Peter recognized him for
-the Governor at once, though the years had changed so
-much and the bandages which covered his cheeks hid his
-predominant features. The nose was still strong and
-arrogant, the black eyes now deeply set with age, the
-white mustaches which had once been black, though sparse,
-changed his appearance but little.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This was the moment for which Peter had waited so
-long—but he knew at once that it was not the moment
-to strike. He wanted more time to deal with Michael,
-and the old man was worried about something which
-seemed to threaten from the hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What is wrong?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael threw up his hand in a gesture for silence, and
-did not turn his head, but continued to look back over his
-shoulder into the two rooms behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Some one outside my door,” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>Peter listened but heard nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Wassili has gone for a droshky, and my daughter has
-gone down to Slipitsky—I did not want to lock the door
-against her. But—the Cossacks have come—I heard
-them talking outside.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come in here, sir,” said Peter. “And we will leave
-this door open, so that we may watch if anybody enters
-and see who they are before they discover that you have
-come to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old man obeyed, and Peter stood in the doorway
-looking into the Kirsakoffs’ rooms. The curtain between
-them was caught aside by a cord, so that both rooms were
-visible to Peter, the farther one by the width of the passage
-between them which was enough to reveal to Peter any one
-who might enter and pass it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>There were a few minutes of silence except for the
-quick breathing of Michael crouched beside Peter and
-standing to one side of him so that he was hidden from
-the other rooms. And during this time Peter began to
-suspect that it was all a ruse of Michael. The old general
-was probably trying to catch Peter off his guard,
-and attack him. It was quite likely, so Peter thought,
-that Michael in some way had come to knowledge of the
-fact that Lutoff had apprised Peter of the identity of the
-Kirsakoffs.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But Peter abandoned his suspicion when he heard a
-rattling of the door in the far room. Some one was
-rattling the knob in place of knocking, a practice customary
-when one wanted to enter without attracting the
-attention of those in other rooms opening into the hall.
-The rattling ceased. The next instant Peter saw in the
-gloom of the far room a high white cap of wool, and a
-gray sheepskin coat, and a Cossack stood looking in the
-direction of Peter, head bent forward against the sharper
-light from Peter’s windows.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>The Cossack hesitated but a moment, then he advanced
-toward Peter, one hand behind him as if he held a weapon
-in concealment.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What do you want?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Cossack did not reply, but came on till he was close
-to Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Who are you?” asked the Cossack. He moved
-slightly to the right and looked past Peter, his eyes upon
-Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am an American officer,” said Peter coldly. “These
-are my rooms.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“An American officer! You speak Russian well, for an
-American.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are intruding,” said Peter. “Or have you come
-on a mission?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am Captain Shimilin of the Ataman’s staff,” said
-the Cossack, and put his hand on the hilt of his saber as
-he clicked his heels and bowed, formally polite.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And I am Lieutenant Gordon of the American army,”
-said Peter. “This is my room. Please! Come in!”
-There was no other thing for Peter to do, unless he wished
-to bring on hostilities with Shimilin. It was very likely
-that the Cossack captain had soldiers within call. And
-now it looked very much as if an escape to Harbin would
-be out of the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin entered as Peter stepped aside. The Cossack
-looked at Michael, who had retreated to the low writing
-table under the window, clutching the blanket about him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have you business of the Ataman with me?” asked
-Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, not with you,” said Shimilin. “I did not call
-upon you, but I thank you for your politeness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter considered what he should do next. He had no
-wish to see Michael wrested from his control in this
-fashion, and he had no doubt but that Shimilin had come
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>for Michael. It was quite likely that Katerin had been
-seized when she went down to arrange matters with Slipitsky.
-Peter frowned at the thought that Michael would
-escape him, even though the old general met death at the
-hands of the Ataman’s soldiers. It came to him that the
-limit of his vengeance now would be but to surrender
-Michael and taunt him with the fact that the Cossacks—his
-own Cossacks—could now deal with a Kirsakoff as
-they had dealt in the old days with a Gorekin. But Peter
-hoped to delay with Shimilin. It might be possible to get
-the Cossack away for a time, when Peter would have things
-in his own hands again, if only for a brief space. He
-began to see that his hand was being forced—if he was
-to kill Michael he would have to do it in Chita—probably
-on the spot, and that in the next few minutes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Could you tell me why you have come to my room?”
-asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, yes,” said Shimilin easily, as he faced Michael.
-“I have come to arrest this old man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Arrest him? For what?” asked Peter, feigning a
-mild surprise. Shimilin seemed so casual, so light-hearted,
-so jaunty that he appeared to regard the whole matter as
-in the nature of a joke. He smiled good-naturedly at
-Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin lifted his shoulders inside the sheepskin coat,
-put out both hands with the palms upward, and jerked
-his head. “It is a business of the Ataman. You speak
-Russian well. Are you a Russian?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Of course,” said Shimilin. “Only a Russian could
-speak so. Have you called upon the Ataman Zorogoff?
-What do you think of—our Ataman?” He regarded
-Peter with questioning eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have not yet called,” replied Peter. “I know little
-about the Ataman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>“You have heard about him here in Chita. Surely,
-you must have formed some opinion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Peter dryly. “If I had, I doubt if I would
-discuss it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Now, now,” said Shimilin, not in the least offended by
-Peter’s reluctance to discuss the Ataman, “I know all
-that. But what do the Americans—the American army
-in Vladivostok—think of Zorogoff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin’s curiosity on that score seemed without limit.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I doubt if they have given him much thought,” said
-Peter. “But about this gentleman here—I am sorry
-that you want to arrest him. And in my room.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What does that matter?” asked the Cossack.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But little,” agreed Peter, who felt that he could have
-his way with Shimilin if the Cossack believed that Peter
-was not seriously opposed to having Michael taken. For
-Peter knew that a Cossack can be cajoled when open antagonism
-only strengthens his resistance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True,” said Shimilin, with a smile. “We need have
-no quarrel. And being a soldier, you know what duty
-means—I must obey my orders at all cost. I am glad
-that you have sensible ideas.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Captain Shimilin evidently took it for granted that
-Peter had decided not to interfere, but would allow
-Michael to go with the Cossack. Still, Shimilin took no
-action. It appeared that he wished to prolong his conversation
-with Peter, and his eyes when he looked at Peter
-were frankly curious.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael leaned back against the table, his back to the
-window, watching Peter closely. The old general’s head
-nodded gently with the palsy, suggestive of being moved
-by the beating of his heart. He divined in Peter some
-sudden change of manner, and suspected that Peter was
-not going to protect him against the Cossack. But he
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>“I would advise you to call later,” suggested Peter
-suddenly, affecting a serious mien with Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Cossack was visibly surprised at this.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What! Come later? What difference can it
-make?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It might make some difference to your Ataman,” said
-Peter, purposely putting a dash of mystery into the sentence.
-“I do not demand, captain, that you come later.
-I merely advise it—for your own benefit. I can’t explain
-now—but if you will come back in an hour——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, no,” said Shimilin, though not quite sure of himself.
-“I am not to be prevented from carrying out my
-orders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I also have my orders,” said Peter significantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh,” said Shimilin. “It would be unfortunate if
-your orders conflicted with mine.” He drew his lips
-tightly across his teeth, and his eyes looked squarely into
-Peter’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True!” retorted Peter. “It would be unfortunate.
-But I have been talking with this old gentleman here—and
-we have not finished our conversation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What have you been talking about?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is a private matter between ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah! Something about the Ataman, I presume,” said
-Shimilin, giving Michael a suspicious look. Then to
-Peter, “You would hardly believe a man who is sought
-by the Ataman to have anything good to say about him—if
-you could trust such a report by such a man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What this old gentleman has to say about the Ataman—good
-or bad—is likely to be borne out by the actions
-of the Ataman. You can see, Captain Shimilin, that
-if your Ataman did something which did not meet my
-approval—such as an arrest without sufficient warrant—I
-might be able to form my own opinion of the Ataman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>“Hmm!” sniffed Shimilin, and walked round slowly in
-a small circle, looking at the floor while he considered
-Peter’s words. He stopped abruptly and faced Peter,
-one eye partly closed. “Perhaps you have an idea that
-the Ataman Zorogoff has no rights to consider?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have never questioned any rights that Zorogoff may
-claim,” said Peter. He saw that he had Shimilin worried.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But the Americans have not officially recognized Zorogoff
-as a ruler,” went on Shimilin. “You have been here
-several days, yet you have not called upon the Ataman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter saw in this an attempt to draw from him some
-hint as to the American attitude toward Zorogoff, and
-had no intention of committing himself on the subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I do not feel accountable to any person for my
-actions here, other than my superiors,” said Peter. “If
-Zorogoff seeks information as to the attitude of the
-Americans, let him send some one to Vladivostok.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Would you defy an officer of the Ataman?” asked
-Shimilin. “Would you tell me that I cannot arrest a
-Russian subject here in your rooms?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This man is under my protection while he is in my
-room. I have not defied you—but I suggest delay. I
-shall not attempt to control your actions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You don’t want him arrested? Is that what you are
-saying?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I don’t want him arrested now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My Ataman will not like that. It is interference,”
-snapped Shimilin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I cannot help what the Ataman thinks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin smiled and bowed. “Suppose I report your
-attitude to the Ataman himself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I would consider that wisdom on your part,” said
-Peter. “There are some aspects to this case which I
-cannot discuss now. That is why I suggested delay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>Shimilin clicked his heels and walked straight to the
-hall door. He opened it, and turned. “I will submit
-your proposal to the Ataman—if you are willing to
-take the consequence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Thank you,” said Peter, bowing in dismissal. “You
-are very kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And,” continued Shimilin, “I shall hold you responsible
-that Michael Kirsakoff is here when I return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin shut the door with a quick jerk, suggestive of
-the closing of the jaws of a great trap.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXIII<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>A LIFE FOR A LIFE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>WHEN he heard his own name uttered by
-Shimilin as the Cossack captain departed,
-Michael locked his grip upon the ends of the
-blanket as if against a blow. A startled moan broke from
-his lips, an expression of horror that at last Peter would
-know him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter turned upon the old man swiftly, alert at once
-and his own hand dropping to the butt of his pistol.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I—I am revealed to you!” whispered Michael,
-thrusting his head forward toward Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And before you were ready, eh?” said Peter. “But
-you thought you could fool me, Michael Alexandrovitch,
-before——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Kirsakoff made a quick flick of his right hand, and
-there dropped down from the sleeve of his shirt a small
-derringer. The weapon fell into his hand, and he made a
-movement to adjust it for use. But Peter was too quick
-for him, and before Michael could get proper hold of it,
-much less aim it, Peter had leaped upon the old man and
-pinioned his arms against his sides.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So the old wolf has a snap left in him yet,” taunted
-Peter, as he bore the frail Michael back against the table
-and wrested the derringer from his fingers. Michael made
-no struggle, but relaxed in Peter’s hands, and when released,
-sank weakly to his knees.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter pocketed the derringer, and then leaned down to
-Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You would kill me, would you? You have not forgotten
-your tricks, Michael! Perhaps you came prepared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>to kill me! So the escape to Harbin was all pretty
-talk, to throw me off my guard that you might——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Mercy!” gasped Michael. “Mercy for my daughter’s
-sake—I ask none for myself!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have discovered mercy. Who called for mercy
-for Peter Petrovitch twenty years ago when you ordered
-him and his father sent to prison—and then his father
-was cut down by your Cossacks? Answer me that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“If my daughter were safe from the Ataman, you
-could take your vengeance,” said Michael simply. “I
-have lived beyond——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, hush!” cried Peter angrily, clapping his hand
-over Michael’s mouth. He slipped his fingers under the
-folds of the bandage about Michael’s face, and slipped it
-back over his head, pulling it upward from the chin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Let me see your face, Michael! It has been a long
-time since we looked at one another—and each knew the
-other. On that day you were the bold, brave Governor,
-surrounded by your soldiers. Life was cheap then—to
-you. Come! Stand upon your feet like a man!” And
-Peter lifted him up against the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have no fear of death,” said Michael proudly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” said Peter, laughing. “You are so ready to
-meet death that you tie your face up in rags. But you
-look like yourself, Michael! Yes, I would have known
-you but for the rags. Life is not so strong in you, now,
-it is true, but you are the same, yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter stood before him, with folded arms, and scanned
-Michael’s face with reflective memory. He spoke quietly,
-almost soothingly, and his face was lighted by his joyful
-exultation. He thought of nothing but that his triumph
-had come, and he cared for nothing but that he should
-drink his fill of the wine of revenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am helpless now—an old man,” said Michael.
-“But I can die—Gorekin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>“I suppose you can,” said Peter, “much as you would
-throw away a lemon that had been sucked dry. But I
-am thinking now of my father, twenty years ago. You
-were brave with his life, too—and mine! I was a helpless
-boy and you left me in your filthy prison. I might
-be there now for all you cared.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do your will with me,” said Michael wearily.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter put a hand upon his shoulder, and bent his body
-back, so that he might peer into the old man’s eyes in
-better light.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have not lost your cunning, Michael. I can see
-it still in your eyes, faded as they are. You thought
-that I, Peter Petrovitch, would save your life—I, who
-have come half way round the world to take it, I, who
-have waited twenty years to see the breath leave your
-body!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“To save my daughter, yes,” said Michael.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ha! Do you not see the divinity behind all this?
-You run squealing to an American officer to save you from
-your Cossacks—and the American is Peter Petrovitch!
-And now that your own skin is threatened, you plead for
-life because of your daughter! Did you give my father
-a chance to plead for his son? Michael, <i>I am the boy</i>
-who saw his father die in the snow before the post-house—and
-you come now seeking my protection from the
-Ataman——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A half-blood Mongol,” put in Michael. “I would
-save my daughter from a Mongol—for myself I ask
-nothing. And I would kill you if I had the power——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Stop! I shall do the talking!” Peter’s body trembled
-with his rage. All the hatred which he had built
-up in twenty years, all the concentrated venom in his
-soul against Kirsakoff was now diffusing through his
-body and poisoning his brain. He lunged at Michael,
-and took the frail old body in his arms, swinging him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>upward from the floor as a child might be lifted in play
-by its father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Come!” commanded Peter, looking down into the
-white face of Michael. “I will show you your Valley of
-Despair! I will show you the spot before the old post-house
-where I watched my father pour out his blood into
-the snow! I will show you where Peter Petrovitch, who
-now holds you in his arms, could but scream in terror
-against you and your Cossacks—and vow to have your
-life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He turned with Michael, and thrust the old man’s face
-against the pane of the window, holding him high enough
-so that he could see over the stratum of frost on the lower
-part of the glass.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Look, Michael Alexandrovitch! Up the Sofistkaya!
-The post-house where the mail-sledges stopped when they
-came in from Irkutsk! That is the spot! And I cannot
-even find the bones of my beloved father in the old cemetery
-by the prison on the hill. And below—the little hut
-where Gorekin the bootmaker lived! See it? The chimney
-and a part of the old roof. It has taken twenty years
-for God to put you in my hands—twenty years, before
-He has let you, a leaf which is ready to fall, come into
-my power. Can you doubt that He let you live that
-I might show you where you stood one cold morning,
-master of lives in the Valley of Despair and death waiting
-the snap of your finger? Times have changed,
-Michael. The light has come to Russia—a new day,
-and for such as you who gave us but black despair,
-black night has come. And justice without
-mercy!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter swung round from the window and threw Michael
-upon his feet. The old general swayed dizzily and saved
-himself from falling by grasping at the table. Peter
-stood glowering, arms hanging out from his sides with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>fingers widespread as if he were about to seize Michael
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You shall have your vengeance!” cried Michael, and
-held up an arm to restrain Peter for a time.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, shall I?” asked Peter sneeringly, a crooked smile
-playing at the side of his mouth. “Perhaps you covered
-your face that I might have my vengeance! Did you plan
-to take me to Harbin to find Kirsakoff? Did you put
-Wassili behind my chair with a knife to——?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Give heed to my words!” pleaded Michael in a passionate
-outburst. “I will bargain with you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter laughed at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Bargain! Why should I buy what I already have?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Look!” Michael held forth his hand to Peter. Between
-the fingers was a small white pellet.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what is that?” asked Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I could still defeat you, Gorekin. This is a poison
-tablet—quick as a bullet or a blade.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“For me, Michael? Is it for me?” sneered Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, for myself. I can die by my own hand quicker
-than you can fire your pistol—and you must shoot
-quickly, or even the Ataman will defeat your purpose
-with me. But I would bargain with you, Gorekin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“To what end?” asked Peter, somewhat amused, and
-curious as to the old man’s intent. “What have you to
-sell, Michael?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I will sell you my life,” said Kirsakoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can have your life for the taking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No. Look! I hold the tablet six inches from my
-mouth. I could be dead before your bullet would reach
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I like to hear your voice, Michael—speaking of your
-own death. Well, have your say out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are a Russian, and you must have your blood
-amend, Gorekin. You shall have it—I shall not destroy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>myself—but I ask you to save Katerin from the Ataman.
-That is my bargain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My father and I could not bargain, twenty years ago
-out there in the Sofistkaya.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True. But I offer you now a life for a life—and a
-clean slate between the two of us. My blood for your
-father’s blood—and go your way in peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael leaned forward eagerly. Peter’s expression
-had changed so that the old man had hope, but Peter
-was merely astounded by Michael’s proposal. This was
-something he had not looked for in the old man—a calm
-willingness to take death as part of a trade, an exchange
-of favors.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The old wolf has not lost his craft,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The lion returns to the lair where he was whelped,”
-said Michael. “What I was, I was, and done is done.
-What I offer is nothing, true—but you may fail in your
-vengeance. Rather I would make it sure for you—and
-go to meet the dead with no debt to living man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And how is it to be done?” asked Peter. He still
-suspected that Michael sought to escape him by a stratagem.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“With this!” exclaimed Michael, and with his left hand
-he drew from the breast of his shirt a small slender object,
-one part red and one part white, and held it forth to
-Peter. “Take this, Gorekin—I put vengeance into your
-hand—if you will save Katerin from the Mongol.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter drew near and looked at what Michael held. It
-was a cased dagger—a leather case of red, surmounted
-by a hilt of yellowed old ivory and a steel hand guard at
-the base of the hilt. It was the weapon of Chinese assassins,
-an instrument made for but a single crime for it
-was cupped under the hilt guard in such a way that it
-sealed the very wound it made. Peter knew at once what
-it was and what it would do.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>“Give me the promise—and take the knife!” entreated
-Michael. “One Russian to another—to save
-Katerin from the Mongol!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what should I do with it?” asked Peter, seeking
-to draw out the old general.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What should you do? What else, but thrust it into
-my heart—and take my daughter away from the city?
-Come! Your word! Give it and strike quickly, or the
-Ataman will defeat you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You know well I could not escape, leaving you dead
-in my room,” jeered Peter. “What would I gain? If
-I strike now—here—my vengeance will be a short joy.
-It is so much simpler to turn you over to Shimilin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“By the Holy Saints!” cried Michael in disgust.
-“Has the blood of a Russian turned to water so that he
-will not kill on his own honor’s account? Please! Take
-this blade!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael drew the hilt away from the leather case and
-exposed a polished shaft of steel, white and glittering in
-the light from the windows—a weapon of exquisite daintiness,
-with a round blade, slightly curved.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Look at it!” urged Michael. “It is cupped at the
-hilt, and if you do not draw it once you have struck,
-it will let away no blood. What more could you
-desire?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter regarded him with thoughtful eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael threw aside the leathern case, and pulled his
-shirt open at the neck, exposing his withered chest.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Say the promise—and strike quickly while I pray,”
-he begged. “See! It is a gentle weapon—so sharp
-and smooth that it will cause me little discomfort. And
-then you may say I did it, which will leave you without
-blame.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>For an instant Peter thought Michael to be mad. But
-it was plain enough that the simplicity of the old man in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>his appeal for death was but his surrender to the inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter knew the lucidity of mind which comes with the
-agony of spirit. He knew how Michael’s mind was working.
-The old man was in the grip of that clarity of
-mental vision which comes to the drowning man, or to the
-man who walks to execution. Peter had experienced the
-same phenomenon as he watched his father die twenty
-years before. The trivial things of every day, things
-never noticed before, had stood out with amazing distinctness
-and had registered in his brain a picture which had
-never vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter remembered now the tiny stone he had seen in
-the snow near his dying father; the Cossack’s boot which
-had been deeply scratched; the odor of raw fur from the
-sledges—even now the pungent scent was in his nostrils.
-The scene recurred to him now with overpowering intensity,
-and once more his old rage against Michael
-mounted. He reached forward and snatched the dagger
-from Michael’s fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Good!” cried Michael. “You will promise—and
-strike!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Then the old general began to whisper a prayer, and
-stretched out his arms, like a great bat preparing for
-flight.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter held the dagger in his hand, palm upward, and
-slightly extended before him, so that his elbow was a right
-angle with his upper arm, a pose somewhat similar to a
-man who holds a rapier in low carte ready to thrust forward
-the point. And he was close enough to Michael, so
-that if the arm was extended, the dagger would reach the
-old man.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>While the two of them were thus confronting each other,
-a low scream broke upon the room—a full-throated cry
-of sudden and complete horror.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>Peter turned to see Katerin in the door which led to the
-Kirsakoffs’ rooms. Her hands were thrown up and
-pressed against her cheeks, her staring eyes fastened upon
-the dagger in Peter’s hands, her mouth still open with the
-horror of her cry, and her body transfixed into rigidity by
-the astounding situation in which she found her father
-and Peter. The catastrophe which she had planned so
-carefully to avert, had come now, she knew. The delicate
-structure she had devised had crashed down during her
-absence, and she saw that Peter and her father were at
-each other’s throats, or so it appeared to her in the first
-glance she had of the interior of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She had returned from making the final arrangements
-for their escape, in happy confidence that Peter would
-never discover their identity—and here was Peter about
-to slay her father. She saw an end to everything—the
-man she looked to for safety was now to destroy them.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She screamed again. It was a scream of utter hopelessness,
-a scream of black despair.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXIV<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>A NEW TUNE ON AN OLD FIDDLE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>PETER stood staring at Katerin, still holding the
-tiny dagger in his hand. A puzzled look had come
-into his face, as if he could not understand why
-she should scream. The mental shock which he had sustained
-in his discovery that the old man was Michael
-Kirsakoff, seemed to have closed some compartment of
-Peter’s consciousness which included Katerin in her relationship
-to Michael. Now the full fact of her personality
-intruded itself upon him in relation to what had happened
-and Peter’s brain needed time to readjust itself to
-a state of affairs in which Katerin must be considered.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He lifted his empty hand to his face and drew his fingers
-across his eyes in a motion that suggested brushing something
-away which interfered with his vision. He threw
-back his head and shook it slightly, as if to clear his brain
-of a vapor which befogged it. An infinite weariness
-gripped him, and his eyes regarded Katerin as if she were
-some specter which had formed out of thin air and now
-stood between him and his vengeance, possessed of a supernatural
-power to thwart him in his desires.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The first of the three to move was Michael. He slumped
-down into a chair, and, lifting a warning hand to Katerin,
-said weakly, “He has found us out!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Her father’s voice seemed to release Katerin from the
-grip of her terror, and she began to move forward toward
-Peter, with slow, even steps, her eyes upon the dagger in
-Peter’s hand. There was no wariness about her, yet she
-had a quiet deliberation, as if she knew that it would be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>safer to make no sudden movement and so startle Peter
-into resistance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin approached Peter, and reaching for the dagger,
-put her hand upon its blade and drew it out of his fingers
-with the same gentle motion that a mother might use in
-taking a dangerous object from the hand of a child. And
-Peter relinquished the weapon, not so much in surrender
-as in a state of mind which was willing to forego for the
-present anything or any action in exchange for time to
-consider a new phase of the situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin recognized the dagger, more by the quick sidewise
-glance she gave her father than by looking at the
-ivory hilt which stuck up between her thumb. She suspected
-that her father had drawn the weapon against
-Peter when he had discovered her father’s identity, and
-that Peter had disarmed him. But she knew that just
-what had happened during her absence from the room did
-not matter now—the danger lay before her. She mistrusted
-Peter’s temporary mood, and sought for an angle
-by which she might draw from him his attitude, or deflect
-him from any murderous intent. She knew that her
-father’s life hung in the balance—and her own—while
-Peter stood there silently staring at her, grim and forbidding
-and gathering impetus for whatever form his next
-impulse would take.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I trusted you!” she said quietly, and after she had
-uttered the words her mouth remained half open and her
-breath came gustily, like the breath of a runner who is
-spent at the end of an effort. She had been holding her
-breath since she had screamed in the doorway. She looked
-into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s lids flickered. His eyes were half closed, and
-still shot with red in the tiny blood-engorged veins at the
-sides. He looked at her dreamily, questioningly, and she
-thought with something of insolent defiance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>Peter did not answer, but he moved his head slightly
-and looked past her at Michael, lips compressed, and the
-lids flickering.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Peter Petrovitch—I love my father.” Her voice
-was low, entreating, consoling, and carried an infinite
-desire that he understand her suffering.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“This is the end for us!” piped up Michael shrilly.
-“To the dead it does not matter how death has come—we
-shall take the poison!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael lifted one hand before him, and with the other
-tore open a seam in the cuff of his shirt. Between his
-thumb and finger appeared a small white pellet.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin was upon him instantly and took away the
-pellet.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Not yet—by your own hand,” she said gently, and
-putting one arm about his neck, bent and kissed him. She
-turned to Peter once more, her courage stronger, a vague
-hope growing within her. But her eyes were filled with
-tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Would you kill my father? Would you do the work
-of Zorogoff, the Mongol? And see me surrendered to
-this half-blood Ataman? You! Peter Petrovitch—a
-Russian—a Russian from America!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She was not so much asking him these things, as she
-was asking herself if he could do them. She was not
-afraid—she was hurt. It all seemed incomprehensible to
-her—that any Russian could ally himself with Zorogoff,
-could commit a murder such as he had planned. She
-understood now that she had not been brave in her dealings
-with him, but that she had never allowed herself to
-believe he could be dangerous even though her dexterous
-manipulation of him were exposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Katerin Stephanovna!” said Peter, gazing at her
-with a trace of surprised awe in his tone and his look.
-“You—are Katerin Stephanovna!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>She divined something of what was passing through his
-mind—he was thinking of her as a little girl, in the
-old days in Chita. A look of hope flashed across her
-face, though she took care that she did not betray to
-him that she saw an advantage.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am Katerin Stephanovna,” she said, with a lift of
-her chin. She stood beside her father, one hand upon his
-shoulder to restrain him against any action, and yet in a
-posture which suggested defense.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The same little girl—who was in the sledge—that
-morning of the almanacs and——” went on Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Her mind leaped ahead of him as he paused—she knew
-now that he was mentally reconstructing the scene of his
-father’s death, and that from it would accrue a new burst
-of hate, a fresh impetus which might compel him to action
-against the restraint which her presence had interposed
-between him and her father. She left her father and
-moved toward Peter, seeking to distract his thoughts by
-drawing his attention to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Are you a true Russian?” she demanded passionately,
-as she approached him. “Are you a man of my race?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He seemed startled by the question, and once more his
-hand brushed his brow.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Russian?” he repeated simply, almost helplessly, as
-if it were something that it had never occurred to him
-before to question. He looked down at his uniform, and
-then lifted a khaki sleeve to study the brown band of tape
-at the cuff, the band of an officer’s sleeves.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Why, yes—I am Peter Petrovitch,” he said finally.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He stepped to the window and looked out upon the
-Sofistkaya, and at the flattened gable-end of the little
-hut below which had been his and his father’s. Katerin
-drew close to him, and putting her hand softly upon his
-arm, looked into his face. Her own was drawn with
-suffering, and glistened with fresh tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>“Peter Petrovitch,” she whispered, “you look upon a
-new Russia—the one you knew has gone. The old prison
-on the hill is empty! Empty! Thank God for it! What
-more can you do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He looked directly at her, and studied her face for a
-minute, his own face still reamed with the lines of the
-hatred which held his nerves taut.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You trusted me?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You deceived me,” he retorted, once more himself and
-completely readjusted to the meaning of her return.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes. To save my father. But I trusted you, too,
-else I could have avoided you. I would give my life to
-save my father, but it is too late now—I can neither
-save him nor myself. We live only so long as Zorogoff
-delays in coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You speak to thwart me,” he said bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She turned her palms upward in a gesture of submission
-and the slightest shrug of her shoulders, as if she
-had lost all interest in what the final result of what she
-said might be, and as if what he might do was a matter of
-little moment to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I speak to save your soul,” she said softly. “But we
-shall not quarrel about it—either what you are to decide
-about us, or about your soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No?” he demanded, surprised that he should be
-nettled by her carelessness. “But you are pleading with
-me now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She gave him a look of surprise and laughed harshly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Pleading? For what? A few hours of life?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You might both escape,” he suggested, “by the
-droshky which you have so cleverly planned. That is, if
-I should let you go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We could not get through without you. And what
-does it matter whether the Ataman Zorogoff kills my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>father in the morning, or you kill him now. No, Peter
-Petrovitch, I plead only to save you from blood upon your
-hands—and to save your own life—the life of an American
-officer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>At this, he thought of Wassili and smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I mean Zorogoff,” she hastened to say. “He would
-not let you escape, if you gave him reason to destroy you—if
-you killed my father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You can argue for Zorogoff, who will destroy you
-both?” he asked, making no attempt to mask his incredulity.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She lifted her shoulders again in that same almost
-imperceptible shrug, and looked casually out of the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You can help America help our people,” she said.
-“As for Zorogoff, I have death ready at my bidding for
-myself before he could take me to his palace—I can
-defeat the dog of a Mongol. But what do you gain by
-your vengeance upon my father? A few hours of his
-life! Is that the measure of the value of your vengeance?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You think that I am too late—that I am already
-defeated in my purpose,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes. You are, Peter Petrovitch. Time has defeated
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No,” he insisted. “I have waited twenty years——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And after twenty years, you come back to what?
-Michael Kirsakoff and his daughter hiding from his Cossacks!
-The old governor, worse off than peasants, with
-death lurking at the door! The general of the Czar’s
-army, in flight and hiding like one of his own escapes in
-the old days! What sweeter vengeance would you ask,
-Peter Petrovitch?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She spoke of her father and herself in the third person
-as if she were already separated from life and saw herself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>in the detachment of death, looking back upon her
-father’s and her own end.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True, times have changed,” said Peter grimly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yet you had no hand in it,” she said daringly, conscious
-that what she said might lift his wrath again.
-“The tree of hate has borne its own bitter fruit, and a
-gale of death sweeps the land——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ay, the wheel has turned!” cried Michael from his
-chair. “And the water has returned to the sea! My sins
-are my own, and judgment is before me. But I have
-offered my life to you, Peter Gorekin, for——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do not heed him!” said Katerin to Peter hastily, as
-she saw his eyes flame with sudden anger.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have come all the way from America to hear him,”
-said Peter. “Am I to be cheated——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“America!” cried Katerin with fervor, clapping her
-hands together. “You, a Russian! Have come from
-America! And what are you to do with what America
-has given you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what has it given me?” he demanded in surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“America has given you its trust—you, the poor son
-of an exile, by the coat you wear, are an officer—a
-gentleman! Ah, Peter Petrovitch, I had hoped that
-America had changed your heart as well as your coat—and
-taken something from you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what should it take?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He scanned her face, seeking her purpose in holding his
-attention away from Michael. Her eyes held infinite sadness,
-and seemed to have lost any sense of terror. Her
-face had softened in final resignation, and he saw her for
-the first time in her own nature—the serene calmness
-which belongs to the Russian aristocrat, who is essentially
-a fatalist.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have heard much of America,” she said dreamily,
-her eyes on the window but her vision not extending beyond
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>the glass. “I hoped that you, who are of my own
-race, should learn a new lesson in America—that the
-spirit of America should take from you that love of
-destruction, that love for vengeance which is so strong
-in our people. Countless millions have been willing to
-die, and have died for Holy Russia. When is the Slav
-to learn that he must live for Holy Russia?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, those who have ruled Russia have just begun to
-learn how precious is life,” said Peter. “I learned the
-lesson out there in the Sofistkaya twenty years ago—it
-is you who are learning now—from me—and your
-Cossacks!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, I know Shimilin has been here,” she said wearily.
-“We have come to the end. I cannot ask you to save
-us, even if you could or would. That is done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You were willing—when you went down to arrange
-for the droshky. You could smile when you thought I
-was deceived.” His manner with her was easier now, and
-he seemed to be toying with the situation, testing her
-bravery.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, it was all a woman has against a man—a smile
-for a shield. And you thought you were deceiving me—you
-would tell to Rimsky what you would not tell to
-Vashka the samovar girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Vashka the samovar girl!” he repeated. “Vashka,
-telling me of Kirsakoff—a tall man in uniform, with
-black mustaches—a man in his full strength, stalwart—the
-cruel Governor who was behind the government of
-Zorogoff!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You were secretly seeking my father. It was my duty
-to learn your secret before you learned ours—a fair
-game.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“True!” he admitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I would save you now from the Ataman.” She gave
-him a quick and eager look. He misread her intent, when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>he thought she was turning his mind into new channels.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Save me!” He was incredulous, and once more on
-the alert against some new plan to entrap him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, to save you, Peter Petrovitch! If Zorogoff
-knows that you had our story, when we are dead, he will
-fear your knowledge against him—and destroy you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You should think of my safety at this time! Why?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She bent her head and turned from him, but he took
-both her arms and swung her so that she had to look into
-his face. But she evaded his glance, though she did not
-resist his grasp.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can tell you now because of the barrier between
-us,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Barrier?” He was frankly puzzled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The blood of your father and your desire for vengeance
-stands between us—that is why I can tell you,
-Peter Petrovitch, that—I loved you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>His hands loosened upon her arms, and a flood of tears
-was upon her—silent tears, which shook her frame.
-And Peter seized her again and threw his arms about her
-with crushing ferocity.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Katerin! Katerin!” he cried, and the next instant
-released her as suddenly as he had swept her to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, God!” he cried, throwing up his clenched fists in
-a gust of fury. “Have I been brought to my enemy,
-only to be tormented? What am I to do, my father,
-what——?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael had leaped from his chair with a cry, and
-faced Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What? What?” demanded the old general. “There
-is love—love between you two—my daughter——!”
-He was too shaken to frame more words, and his voice
-wavered and broke and lost itself in the depths of his
-throat. He stood with his frail legs bending under him,
-his mouth wide open and his chin quivering, gulping for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>breath to give him energy to express the emotions which
-shook his body and rendered him powerless to express himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin flung herself at him to sustain and calm him,
-still fearful that Peter might attack under the slightest
-provocation—and she was in terror lest her father would
-give vent to an outburst of anger.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I shall speak!” he said gently to Katerin, and at once
-he was strong again, as if he had rallied the last bit of
-his energy for his new venture of resistance. Katerin let
-him go on toward Peter, who stood waiting to see what
-the old man might have to say.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael sank to his knees before Peter, and held up
-his arms imploringly, while words began flowing from
-his agitated lips in a torrent.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Give heed to what I say,” he cried beseechingly.
-“You, too, are a Russian! Look upon me, who once was
-your Governor! Have compassion upon me who am now
-but a bit of dried mud cast upon the road by the wheel of
-Time! Have mercy——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So you have learned what it is to ask for mercy,
-Michael Alexandrovitch! But you have yet to learn what
-it means to have mercy denied,” taunted Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is not mercy that I ask for myself, Gorekin,” went
-on Michael. “But you love my daughter—and I stand
-between you! Save her! Save her from the Mongol.
-And leave me, who am but some of the wreckage of Holy
-Russia, to suffer the wrath of this Zorogoff!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We two shall die together, my father—your fate
-shall be mine,” said Katerin, “or I shall die by my own
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You saw me in the old days, Gorekin,” went on Michael
-in disregard of Katerin. “Were those days worse than
-these? I obeyed my orders. I held my power by the
-word of the Czar, and I bore his sword. Now I have lived
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>beyond my time. My day is done. I am not of these
-days. How does it matter the manner of my end? I
-shall soon be with your father—I, Kirsakoff the Governor,
-with Gorekin the bootmaker and the political—in
-the hills above us. Then let God judge my sins, as
-will yours be judged! Take my daughter—she is all I
-have to give for the debt that is due you, yes, overdue!
-I am old, but my eyes still see, and I see that you two
-love! Take my Katerin Stephanovna to America, Peter
-Petrovitch! Flee, both of you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin gave a warning cry and sprang toward the
-door leading into her room. She had caught the sound
-of running feet from the hall—feet in panic flight.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Hush!” she warned. “Some one comes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Slipitsky, his black cap missing from the top of his
-head, and his eyes telling of his dread for something
-which pursued him, burst into the room. He clapped his
-hands to his temples in frantic despair in a gesture of
-hopelessness, too short of breath still from running to tell
-what he feared.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Ataman!” he gasped. “God’s doom is upon
-us!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXV<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>THE FINAL RECKONING</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>THE door leading to the hall was flung open.
-Shimilin, the Cossack captain, stood on the
-threshold, and behind him was a group of his
-wild-looking soldiers, their heads hooded with wrappings
-of furs, and the points of their shining bayonets bristling
-about their shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin did not advance, but remained in the doorway,
-coldly surveying those inside the room. He gave each
-of them a casual glance—Michael, Katerin, Peter, and
-even the shivering Slipitsky who stood cowering against
-the wall and whispering to himself through trembling lips
-and fingering his beard in nervous terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Ataman Zorogoff!” announced Shimilin, and
-the soldiers behind him opened a narrow lane, as Shimilin
-stepped aside and into the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Ataman pushed through the guards, and strode
-into the room, looking straight at Peter, stern and challenging.
-The Mongol chieftain’s greatcoat was off, and
-his somewhat fantastic costume betrayed his childish love
-for personal display. Rising from the swarthy forehead
-was the towering white cap of long hairy wool, studded in
-the center of its flat front by a wide slab of crudely hammered
-gold half the size of a man’s hand, and in it set
-a diamond. At his left side hung a tremendous scimitar
-with a hilt-knot of gold fiber swinging from the guard.
-He wore a snuff-brown tunic with big brass buttons, blue
-riding breeches with double stripes of gold braid down
-the sides, and heavy black boots fitted with wheel-like
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>spurs of silver. His shoulders were covered with broad
-straps of gold cloth. In his belt were a pair of pistols,
-the butts sticking up from the tops of uncovered holsters.
-An order of the Czar hung from the top of a tunic pocket,
-an odd link between the shattered empire and this usurper,
-who was crafty enough to display upon his person something
-which still had a meaning to many of his followers
-and reflected a trace of the vanished glory of the
-throne.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A pair of gold devices gleamed upon the standing collar
-of the tunic of the Ataman, and his long black hair which
-fringed his ears, was all the blacker for the whiteness of
-the woolly cap.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff marched toward Peter, his boots pounding the
-floor belligerently, his small black eyes burning with a
-glittering menace. But he stopped when he could have
-put out his hand and touched Peter—stopped with an
-abrupt and final thump of the heel of his left boot as he
-planted it close beside the right boot.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“There is the American officer,” said Shimilin, still
-standing by the door. “That is the man, sir, who sent
-the message.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Some of the soldiers edged into the room and grounded
-their rifles with jarring thuds, and the others outside in
-the hall pressed forward, thrusting their heads in.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter bowed. “I am Lieutenant Gordon of the American
-army,” he said with cold formality, and returned the
-Ataman’s angry stare.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I have come to hear you oppose my will,” growled
-Zorogoff, a wicked twist to the corner of his lips, and
-venom in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what is your will, sir?” demanded Peter, putting
-enough deference into his words and manner to prevent
-Zorogoff from having any complaint on the ground of
-lack of civility or respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>“My officers report that you have been in my city
-several days. You come here as an American and ignore
-me and my government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I can assure you that you will not be ignored by the
-American army, sir,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do you, representing the American army, dare tell
-my officers what they may not do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I requested your officer not to arrest General Kirsakoff
-and his daughter in my room. They came here to
-talk with me, and till I have finished talking with them,
-your officers must not interfere, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff’s breathing became audible to Peter, and he
-saw the flat nostrils of the Ataman twitch, and growing
-anger flashing in his eyes. But he did not take his eyes
-from Peter’s, nor was there the slightest change of expression
-in the Mongol’s immobile face after that lifting
-of the nostrils. Behind the Ataman stood Shimilin, smiling
-sneeringly over the shoulder of his chief, in an obvious
-attempt to break through Peter’s armor of stolid patience.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“My officers must not interfere!” echoed the Ataman.
-“Is it that I take orders from the Americans?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, it is not an order, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Good!” blustered the Ataman. “It is not an
-order!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is not an order,” went on Peter, in the same even
-tones. “But you must take care that you do not interfere
-with American officers. I tell you now, sir, that if
-these people are arrested in my room, I shall demand to
-know the reason for their arrest, that they are properly
-charged and tried, and given the right to a proper defense.
-Otherwise it may appear to the Russian people that an
-American officer has betrayed this old man and his daughter
-to you, and delivered them into your hands. I cannot
-prevent you from arresting them, from executing them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>if you wish, but I can reveal to the commander of the
-American army and to the people of America, the methods
-of your rule, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I rule here, and in my own way. I ask no help in
-ruling from the Americans,” grunted Zorogoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And the Americans are vitally interested in <i>how</i> you
-rule, sir,” retorted Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I rule as I please, with account to no one!” raged
-Zorogoff. “Captain Shimilin! Take the old man and
-the woman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Wait!” cried Peter, throwing up his hand to Shimilin.
-“You are invading my room! I claim the only right to
-give orders here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I take Russian subjects where I find them, and I do
-with them as I see fit!” thundered Zorogoff, his face
-seeming to swell with rage at Peter’s words.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Captain Shimilin turned as if to obey the Ataman’s
-order, but he hesitated, the same sneering smile upon his
-lips. He appeared much amused at Peter’s defiance, and
-only too willing to let him further enrage the Ataman.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You speak of subjects of Russia, sir,” said Peter,
-addressing Zorogoff. “Am I to have the honor of
-reporting that the Ataman Zorogoff occupies the
-throne of all the Russias? And perhaps part of Mongolia?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff made a grimace, and the flesh about his eyes
-crinkled tightly. Peter saw that he had struck a vital
-spot in the pride of Zorogoff, and had touched upon a
-matter which revealed some of Zorogoff’s power as a pretender—his
-strength came from his affinity with Asiatic
-people through his Asiatic blood. His leadership was
-racial, for he was exploiting his Mongol heritage and
-behind him were princes of ancient Tartary whispering
-against white ascendancy in their own land.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“That is the Russian speaking,” said Zorogoff, “not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>the American! You turned your back on your own
-people, and come now in a strange coat to give orders
-with——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I came to give you warning that America will not
-allow you to persecute and kill a helpless old man and a
-defenseless woman! To keep your hands off helpless——”
-Peter checked himself in sheer wonderment at his
-own words—he who had come to kill the helpless old
-father of Katerin, suddenly found himself defending the
-very man he had waited twenty years to slay! “America
-will not allow you to persecute and kill,” he repeated
-weakly, as if it were an idea which he had just discovered!
-And he had! For the first time in his life he had been able
-to express the Americanism which he had acquired in
-twenty years. It was something that had overgrown his
-spirit and had smothered all unknowingly to him the
-smoldering fires within him which impelled him finally to
-seek the blood vengeance of the Slav!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Take the Kirsakoffs away!” ordered Zorogoff, turning
-to Shimilin in the instant of what seemed to him Peter’s
-indecision. “No Russian, even in an American uniform,
-can oppose my will here, or——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A small object came hurtling through the air past
-Peter, and struck the Ataman in the face. It was a heavy
-pocket-knife, with the blades closed, and its end, capped
-with curved grooves, left three short gashes parallel in the
-cheek of Zorogoff, before it ricocheted against the wall
-and clattered to the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael sprang forward closely after the missile which
-he had hurled at the Ataman, and thrust forward his fists,
-past Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God’s curse upon you!” screamed Michael, his voice
-rising to a shrill shriek. The Ataman stepped back, and
-put his hands to his face, and then looked at the tips of
-his fingers covered with blood. He regarded them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>thoughtfully for the fraction of a second, a look of surprise
-in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin spoke in restraint to his soldiers, for they had
-started forward into the room, their bayonets coming up
-aslant.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael pushed forward and thrust his fists into the
-Ataman’s face, the body of the old general coming between
-Peter and Zorogoff, so that Peter’s view of Zorogoff
-was temporarily cut off. And in that time Zorogoff drew
-a pistol, and fired, the crash of its report booming out
-above the startled cries of Katerin and Slipitsky and
-the high-pitched shrilling of Michael at his enemy. Zorogoff’s
-bullet almost lifted Michael from his feet, being
-fired from the hip and upward into Michael’s breast.
-The old general swung half round and then staggered
-backward and fell with startling impact across the low
-writing table.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter turned to look after Michael, just as Katerin
-came plunging toward the Ataman, who stood partly
-hidden in a cloud of gray smoke. Peter caught the flash
-of the naked blade—the blade of the small dagger which
-Michael had handed to Peter and which had been taken
-from Peter’s hand by Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter clutched after her, fearful of the consequences
-of another attack upon Zorogoff. But she eluded his
-grasp, and lunged straight forward into the smoke about
-Zorogoff, to bury the dagger to its hilt in the Ataman’s
-neck at the base of the standing collar of his tunic.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Zorogoff gave a gurgling cry and the heavy pistol fell
-from his hand. He threw up his arms and then clawed
-at his throat as his knees gave beneath him—and pitched
-forward at Peter’s feet to the ringing clatter of the great
-scimitar against the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter caught Katerin in his arms as she reeled back,
-and held her, his left hand flying to his own pistol to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>ready against the expected attack from Shimilin and the
-soldiers. But Shimilin stood with his arm raised to hold
-the soldiers in check, his eyes upon the dying Ataman.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter stood thus holding Katerin for a minute, as she
-cried incoherently. Slipitsky had run to Michael and had
-lifted the old general down into a chair and the moans
-of the stricken general came above the wailing of the
-Jew. Peter gave no heed to them but held his pistol
-with the barrel half downward and watched the soldiers
-pressed about the door, fearing that Shimilin would not
-prevent them from using their rifles. Peter knew well
-that there was no hope of coming out of a fight alive, but
-he knew that a weapon had a restraining effect if not
-aimed at any particular person.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Ataman lay face down upon the floor, his back
-hunching up spasmodically, as if he were struggling to
-get to his feet. At times he drew his knees up, and then
-his toes would slip back and he would fall upon the scimitar
-with a musical clang, his life gurgling out through his
-lips in a crimson stream. Presently he lay still, stretched
-out at full length, his spurs sticking up from the heels of
-his boots, the gold knot of the scimitar hilt at his left
-side, and the toe of the scabbard showing at the right,
-and his great white cap near his head on the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin spoke first. “Go and tell Bouran that the
-Ataman is dead,” he ordered one of his men. “But let
-no one else know. You others stand outside and let no
-one enter or have knowledge of what has happened here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin recovered herself and slipped from Peter’s arm.
-She looked round wildly, and then went to her father.
-He lay back against the chair, held upright by Slipitsky,
-though the old general’s body swayed from side to side
-as he was gripped by the tremors of his agony. His
-hands were clutched to his breast, holding the old peasant’s
-coat against his wound.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>Peter followed after Katerin, for he felt now that whatever
-Shimilin intended against them in retaliation for the
-killing of the Ataman would not come in the form of summary
-action. Katerin was on her knees before her father,
-speaking to him tenderly in her anguish for him, and at
-times sobbing out prayers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael opened his eyes and stared up at Peter, and let
-his hands fall upon Katerin’s head. A spasm of pain
-crossed his graying face, and he opened his mouth several
-times before he could speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Save her!” he gasped to Peter. “Now I—no
-longer stand between you—forgive—forgive——”
-His breath failed him, and his breast heaved as he was
-shook by a mighty convulsion.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Die in peace, Michael Kirsakoff,” said Peter. “I
-forgive.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael recovered himself for a brief space.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Good!” he whispered. “Every man has his wolf to
-kill, but it is better—I was but a millstone hanging from
-her neck—but now you can save her—you forgive——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“As I hope to be forgiven, I forgive,” said Peter, putting
-his face down close to Michael. “Do you hear me,
-Michael Alexandrovitch?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A smile came into Michael’s pain-tortured face—a
-smile of helpless assent, with which was mingled his joy
-at Peter’s words. But still he was troubled, and his
-head shook with his effort to express his further wishes.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Save her—from the Ataman!” he pleaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“The Ataman is dead,” said Peter. “Look! There
-upon the floor!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael’s eyes roved as Peter stepped aside, and finally
-rested upon the prone body of Zorogoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A-h-h!” cried Michael. “The Ataman submits to
-the general of his Emperor! My Katerin, do not be sad
-for me—let the birds sing for both of you—I go happy—God’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>blessing upon you both—Gorekin—I, who go
-to meet the dead, sal—ute——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Shimilin came and stood beside Peter. The Cossack
-captain drew off his cap, crossed himself, and uttered a
-few words of prayer. Michael’s dimming eyes saw him—and
-revealed a new terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Shimilin!” he gasped.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Have no fear of me, Michael Alexandrovitch,” said
-Shimilin. “You, nor your daughter need have no fear
-of me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter glanced at Shimilin in surprise, for the Cossack
-captain was strangely gentle and sympathetic for a man
-who might be expected to take vengeance for the slaying
-of his chief.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I saved you both from Zorogoff, the time at the
-house,” said Shimilin. “It was I who prevented an execution
-because you would not give up your money. If
-you had trusted me and given me the money, I would have
-protected you, for I could have been Ataman then—as
-I am the Ataman now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have succeeded Zorogoff?” asked Peter, in
-startled amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am the new Ataman,” repeated Shimilin. “We
-Cossacks had a plot, but all was not ready——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“God’s blessing—on—my little——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Michael’s head fell forward upon his chest, and he was
-dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin gave a wailing cry and put her hands tenderly
-upon the cheeks of her father. Peter and Shimilin turned
-away to leave her with her dead, while Slipitsky stole out
-into the other room to return with the icon from the corner
-in which stood Michael’s bed. The Jew put the sacred
-image into the wasted hands of him who had been Michael
-Alexandrovitch Kirsakoff, governor and general of the
-Czars in the Valley of Despair.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXVI<br /> <br /><span class='c020'>FAREWELL</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c022'>THE morning was cold and foggy. Through the
-gray and frozen haze came the sounds of voices,
-the creaking of boots, the jangle of a distant bell
-from the horses of a troika—a ghostly world filled with
-ghostly shapes, hidden, yet full of unseen life. It was
-just such a morning as that one in the past when Peter
-Petrovitch waited for the Czar’s mail, and the column of
-unfortunates went clanking out into the wilderness to cut
-wood under a guard of Cossack soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And he who had been Peter Petrovitch sat this morning
-by the window of his room in the Dauria Hotel and gazed
-out over the world of floating mists—Lieutenant Peter
-Gordon of the United States Army. In the hall, outside
-his door, were two tall Cossack soldiers with their rifles, on
-guard.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A week had passed since the killing of the Ataman Zorogoff
-and the death of Kirsakoff. There had been a mutiny
-and an attempt by partisans of Zorogoff to kill Shimilin,
-the new Ataman. But the Cossacks were behind Shimilin,
-and the Mongols and other bandits who had stood with
-Zorogoff found their power broken, their intrigues betrayed
-and their leaders dead after firing squads. The
-survivors fled up and down the railroad. The régime of
-Zorogoff was at an end, with its looting, its terrorism, its
-mailed fist which demanded tribute in exchange for protection.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The body of Zorogoff was not buried in Chita. The
-second day after his death, there appeared in the city,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>from down Urga way, a lama from Outer Mongolia with
-frosty whiskers, a pinnacle cap and a greatcoat of fine
-fur with sleeves which reached to the ground. He came
-with a retinue mounted on camels, and the leading man
-held aloft a small purple banner which caused many men
-to submit their necks when they saw it pass. For somewhere
-down in the mountains to the south in the khanates
-of the Kalkas tribes, there was a Prince, and when he
-spoke, it was an order—an order to be obeyed.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And this lama of grave face and the tall cap summoned
-the Ataman Shimilin and bartered for the body of Zorogoff,
-who was half Mongol by blood, and that half of
-interest to the holy men of Forbidden Tibet. Shimilin,
-being wise in such things, knew how much he could ask
-to the ultimate jewel—and got it. And as the lama
-traded with Shimilin, there were hints of many more men
-from Mongolia lurking outside the city, hidden by the
-fog. A line of tiny fires gleamed at the edge of the plain,
-the Cossack outposts heard the grunting of baggage
-camels, and the murmur of countless voices drifted in
-through the fog.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>So Zorogoff’s body was slung up between the humps of a
-Bactrian camel, and the animal went swaying off through
-the mist, with Zorogoff’s head nodding at the ground of
-ancient Tartary in his last farewell.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Of these things Peter knew little. He was still in
-danger, as was Katerin, for there were many in Chita
-who sought a way to avenge Zorogoff. There were few
-persons who knew Katerin had killed him, but such knowledge
-spreads easily in Asia, where there are so many
-ears listening, so many eyes watching, so many tongues
-whispering in strange tongues. So Shimilin kept a guard
-over the hotel, and in it, to see that Peter and Katerin
-were well protected.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And Peter had seen little of Katerin during the week.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>He had attended the military funeral at daybreak which
-Shimilin had granted the old general. Katerin was
-there, hidden and hemmed in among the Cossacks who had
-served under her father. Few knew who was being buried
-in the cemetery on the hillside above the ruin of the old
-prison. So it was that General Kirsakoff became a part
-of the Valley of Despair which he had ruled.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin seemed to avoid Peter after the funeral. She
-kept to her own rooms, with Wassili, except the night they
-went with Shimilin and his soldiers to the old log house
-and retrieved the fortune in rubles which was hidden in
-the stove.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter waited till the days had softened her sorrow. He
-knew she wanted to be alone with her thoughts, as he did
-with his own. He had no way of knowing how her
-thoughts would turn in relation to him, but one fact made
-him happy—Katerin was safe for the time being. He
-did not know that she possessed a fortune, and he supposed
-that she would want to remain in Chita. He did
-not want her to feel any debt toward him for having
-helped her against the Ataman Zorogoff, and he did not
-want to presume upon the fact that while she was under
-the stress of death she had admitted her love for him.
-There was a barrier between them he well knew—the barrier
-of the circumstance that Peter would never have been
-in Chita if he had not sought to kill her father; and
-behind that, the circumstance that Peter had held her
-father responsible for the killing of his own father, and
-his own imprisonment. Peter knew there was nothing
-which could wipe out those accursed facts, and that they
-would hover over all thoughts Katerin might have for him.
-He saw himself fettered by bonds of his own making—and
-in the gyves of his love for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And how much he loved Katerin was just beginning to
-break upon him with the full fury of an emotion which had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>long been pent within his heart. He had loved Russia
-and his own kind; not the machinery of government which
-had been known as Russia, but the land, the very soil—hills,
-plains, and valleys. This love of his homeland was
-now centered upon Katerin, for she had become to him a
-personification of his own Russia, stricken and deserted
-by the rest of the world. And he was possessed of a
-passion to make amends for the vengeance which he
-nursed against her father. He longed to cherish and
-protect Katerin, to show her the land which had done
-so much for him, to take her by the hand and walk
-with her in the streets of the city where he learned that
-every man may work out his own destiny without the
-handicap of a system of government which measures what
-each man may do and not do according to the rank of
-his father—the land where the boy from a cabin may become
-a Lincoln!</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In his soul, Peter felt that he had betrayed America.
-Though he had not killed Kirsakoff, Peter suffered torment
-that Katerin knew how madly he had sought to
-kill. And he feared that she would blame America, and
-not him, for keeping alive that love for vengeance.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He passed the days pacing the floor of his room, or
-sitting by the window. At times he was tempted to quit
-the city and never see Katerin again. But he could
-not do it. He preferred to take his punishment by
-having her tell him to go—at least, he could fill that
-place in his consciousness which had harbored hatred
-for Michael Kirsakoff with the sorrow that Kirsakoff’s
-daughter loved him yet would not face life with him.
-He felt that it would all be easier to bear if he carried
-with him a memory of his parting from her which would
-always lash him for the dreadful plan which he had
-devised and all but carried out.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As he sat there by the window this morning, there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>came a knock at the door. He admitted a messenger
-from Ataman Shimilin—a tall young Cossack with boyish
-face and filled with pride at the thought that once more
-his own people controlled the city. He saluted and
-clicked his polished steel spurs quite as if he were in the
-presence of royalty.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“From the Ataman!” he announced, and bowed as he
-handed a letter to Peter. It read:</p>
-
-<p class='c023'>I send two officers of my staff to-day to Vladivostok to
-make report to the American commander that I, Shimilin, am
-now Ataman, and that my government shall be just. I have
-taken the private car of Zorogoff, and knowing that you intend
-to return to Vladivostok soon, perhaps you would like to
-travel by this wagon. It is advisable to go aboard the car,
-which now stands in the station yards, while the fog still
-holds, and be picked up by the next train. If you have any
-friends to go with you, the station commandant is at your
-orders. The Irkutsk train for Vladivostok will be here within
-an hour, and it will pick up one of my armored cars for
-safety. Perhaps you will be able to report to your superiors
-that all Cossacks are not robbers and that we desire only the
-salvation of our Russia. I salute you and America.</p>
-<div class='c025'><span class='sc'>Shimilin</span>, Ataman.</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>Peter stepped to the writing table, picked up a pen,
-and wrote on a slip of paper:</p>
-
-<p class='c023'>I shall go at once. Thank you for the kindness. I hope
-to see the Ataman before I depart from his city.</p>
-<div class='c025'><span class='sc'>Peter Gordon</span>, Lieutenant.</div>
-
-<p class='c024'>The messenger bowed, clicked, and left the room, and
-Peter gathered his blankets and made them into a roll.
-Then he paused a minute, thoughtfully—and finally
-knocked upon the door leading to Katerin’s rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The old serving woman who had been at the log house
-opened the door just enough to peep through.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>“Tell your mistress that the American officer wishes
-to say good-by, please,” said Peter, and the door closed
-at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter was stricken with chagrin and disappointment.
-He thought that Katerin might not see him and had given
-her orders to that effect to her servant. He had expected
-that the door would open for him—and it had
-closed upon his request to see Katerin. He stood for
-a moment, wondering if he should not go down to Slipitsky
-at once, pay his bill, and go on to the car which
-stood in the station yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Then the door opened, and Katerin herself stood before
-him—a Katerin that he had never seen. She wore now,
-instead of the poor garments in which he had seen her as
-a samovar girl, the beautiful purple velvet gown which
-reached to her slippers. Her hair was high upon her
-head, dressed in the style of a Russian lady so that it
-suggested a crown—lifted from the front and turned
-back smoothly against the mass, and then drawn down
-tightly across the ears. Tall, slender, and stately she
-was now, such a woman as might be a princess of the
-blood. Hanging from her neck was a gorgeous string
-of pearls, and from her fingers gleamed jeweled rings.
-And Peter’s heart sank as his eyes rested upon her, for
-once again he realized with a pang that, after all, he was
-but Peter Petrovitch, son of a poor exile, and Katerin
-Stephanovna was of the Russian nobility. He saw a new
-barrier between them, and one which he had forgotten in
-his recent thoughts of her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The joy which had come into his face at first glance at
-her was dissipated by his realization that this was the
-end for them, and he bowed a most formal bow.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She held out her hand to him, and he took it, like a
-man in a trance, but conscious of the jewels on her fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are going away?” she said, with concern in her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>eyes—a concern which he knew to be politeness. She
-was still pale, he thought, and wistfully sad for her
-father.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes,” he said. “I am to go—Shimilin sends me
-word that a private car is in the yards and——” He
-let his eyes wander to the figure of the serving woman,
-who was lurking behind the curtains which led to the far
-room. He wondered what he could say for she seemed
-so comfortable now with her servants—the old woman
-and Wassili—and so self-sufficient. How could she be
-otherwise than rich, he thought, with such clothes and
-such jewels? He wished that she had kept her clothes as
-a samovar girl, and then he might have found it possible
-to give utterance to some of the words which pressed
-him to be said. He would have found it much easier to
-blurt out what was in his heart if she had not been so
-grand and disconcerting in that velvet gown. He sensed
-a hurt within himself that she had done this—could it
-be that she had dressed herself deliberately for their meeting
-so that he should find it easy to keep his place?</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You have called to say good-by,” she said, and drew
-aside slightly. “Then you must come in—and we shall
-have a glass of tea.” Then, as if she divined what was in
-his mind about her changed appearance, she added, “We
-Kirsakoffs never mourn our dead with garments—an old
-custom of our warrior clan—instead, we wear our best,
-out of respect for those who have gone—and these poor
-things are the best I have. So please do not think it
-strange. Wassili! Fire the samovar and fetch fresh
-water for a guest of the house!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But are you safe?” burst out Peter. “You are in
-danger enough from those who may know you killed the
-Ataman, without revealing your jewels and your good
-clothes! There may be a rising against Shimilin at any
-time—the Bolsheviki—the bandits from Mongolia! It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>is too bad that you have put on these clothes—for your
-own safety!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are afraid I shall be killed because I killed Zorogoff?”
-she asked, with the ghost of a smile on her lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, I am afraid,” he went on earnestly. “You
-should have remained in the dress of a samovar girl——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Oh, but I have done playing at being a samovar girl,”
-she laughed. “If I am to die, I shall die as a Kirsakoff,
-and not as a servant. So you are leaving the city soon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I am leaving at once. Shimilin has sent me word
-that a private car is in the yards—and I cannot disregard
-such a hint, for he may mean it as a command.
-And—why don’t you go too?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I? Go? Where?” she seemed amazed at the idea.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“To Vladivostok. You would be safe there, and safe
-on the train. Take this chance to escape from the city,
-while Shimilin has control.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She sat down and gestured him to a chair before her.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I, too, have heard from Shimilin—about the car.
-But I shall not go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter’s face showed his disappointment. He had hoped
-that she might be induced to leave Chita, and by getting
-away from the scene of her father’s death and her old
-home, her memory of why Peter had gone to the city
-would be dimmed. Now he saw that she was determined to
-let him go his way—she wanted to see him no more, she
-wanted to forget him. And yet, he remembered, she had
-told him she loved him! He wondered if it were possible
-that she had admitted a love only because she wanted to
-save her father. Was that what she had meant when
-she said she had done with playing at being a samovar
-girl? That she had done with duplicity because there
-was no further necessity for duping him?</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“It is a pity that you will not go,” he said wearily.
-He regretted that he had asked to see her at all, for he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>suspected that she was inclined to laugh at him now
-because as a samovar girl she had been able to deceive him
-so thoroughly.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“At least, I shall not go now,” she said. “Perhaps
-later—for there will be nothing to keep me here now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Then come!” he pleaded, leaning forward, and holding
-out his hand. “I know what there is between us—Katerin.
-I know now how wrong I was about your father—I
-can claim no credit for having helped you the little
-I did—I want no credit—but I was blind with hate for
-the old régime. Now I wish to help you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He stopped and shook his head, seeing that he was not
-giving her help to get away from the city—Shimilin had
-already done that if he had offered her the use of the
-private car. It struck him now that perhaps her suggestion
-that she might leave later had something to do
-with his going now—she did not want to travel with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She sat tapping her fingers on the arm of the chair
-and looking at the rings on her hand, reflectively, yet with
-something that told she had already made up her mind as
-to what she should do and that they were talking to no
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I tell you,” he began again. “I shall not go with the
-car, if you will consent to leave for Vladivostok. If you
-prefer that I should not——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, you must not stay here,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But I shall stay if you do not go!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She gave him a startled look. “Stay? Why, you
-cannot stay here always. I thought you came to say
-good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He stood up. “If you wish it, it shall be good-by,” he
-said. “But I am not going away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You must not be absurd,” she said, and stood up
-also, a faint trace of color in her cheeks. “Why should
-you remain here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>“Because I care for your safety, that’s why! I promised
-your father that I would protect you and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She tossed her head back, and regarded him through
-half-closed lids.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You may consider yourself released from that promise,”
-she said. “You owe no debt—do not trouble
-yourself on that score, because——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Katerin!” he cried, holding out his hands to her
-imploringly. “You know what I mean—you know that
-your father desired your safety! Then let us forget my
-promise, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You do not make your promises to keep them, is that
-it? Then you are not bound by anything, Peter——”
-She shrugged her shoulders and turned her face from
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Go on!” he commanded. “You were going to say
-‘Peter Petrovitch.’ Why have you turned against me?
-Katerin, I love you, and even if you will let what has happened
-stand between us, I want to see that you
-escape——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You but want to keep your promise to my father, and
-you think only of what he may have desired about me!”
-she retorted with a show of anger, her face aflame. “You
-have no debt to a Kirsakoff, living or dead, in any way!
-Do I owe you anything? Perhaps I do, but I can pay
-you! What price, I ask? What price, Peter Petrovitch
-Gorekin?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He stood dumfounded and gazed at her. She turned
-abruptly, and opened the top of a trunk which he had
-not seen before.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What price?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Price! Price!” he gasped. “Why, you owe me
-nothing! Please do not insult me—I wished to see you
-again—I wished to say good-by—please, mistress——”
-the word escaped him,—the word of deference to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>upper class, the word of recognition that she was impossibly
-above him in the Russian social caste.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She let the top of the trunk fall, and putting her hands
-to her face, burst into tears. Just then Wassili stuck his
-head through the green curtains and looked in, startled
-and angry. Peter was about to reassure the <i>moujik</i> that
-no harm threatened his mistress, but before Peter could
-speak, Wassili burst through the curtains and he held in
-his hand a great knife. The Slavic battle rage took possession
-of Peter at sight of the knife, and all the restraints
-imposed upon him by civilized life left him in one mad
-instant. He knew but one thing—he loved Katerin, and
-Wassili was going to stand in the way. The blade in the
-<i>moujik’s</i> hand swept away all the fine perplexities which
-had harassed Peter—these points of honor which he saw
-as a barrier between him and Katerin. He snapped out
-his pistol and pointed it at Wassili.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Get back through that curtain!” he commanded, and
-stepped forward toward Wassili. The <i>moujik</i> pressed
-back, but did not leave the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What’s this?” cried Katerin, turning upon Peter
-angrily.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>He made no reply, but shifting his pistol into his left
-hand, he kept Wassili covered with the weapon. Then he
-paused for an instant. Before Katerin or Wassili understood
-his intent, Peter seized her with his right arm and
-lifted her against his shoulder. With his left elbow under
-his head, he kept the muzzle of the pistol toward Wassili,
-and backed out of the room through the open door into
-his own room.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Peter put Katerin upon her feet, just as Wassili moved
-after him—and Peter beckoned the <i>moujik</i> on.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what may this be about?” demanded Katerin,
-staring at Peter as though she suspected that he was
-bereft of his senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“A marriage by abduction—the old folk custom of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>our people,” declared Peter grimly. “Wassili! You
-bear witness! I have taken Katerin Stephanovna Kirsakoff
-from her house to mine—and there must be a witness.
-She is now my wife—and she must do as I say.
-So put away the knife—you cannot take from me the
-woman I have stolen!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Katerin burst out in laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You Peter Petrovitch!” she exclaimed. “I thought
-you were an American—and yet you are Russian—stealing
-a wife by the old custom! Do you think I am to
-take this seriously?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You will find it is serious—till you are safe in
-Vladivostok,” retorted Peter. “Then—well, once you
-are safe, you may do as you wish. But I am master till
-then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She laughed again.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“So you are American after all—in Vladivostok I may
-do as I wish! How can you call yourself Russian? Go
-away, Wassili—it is but a joke!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wassili, not quite sure it was such a joke, put away
-his knife, and went back to the far room. Katerin shut
-the door, and then turned to Peter, who stood looking
-at her, resenting a trifle her taking it as a joke at
-all.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“We shall go aboard the car at once,” he said. “Get
-ready your baggage, please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Ah, he is Russian again!” laughed Katerin.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“What does it matter if I am Russian or not?” said
-Peter. “When I try to consider your feelings, you
-insult——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“No, no, Peter,” she begged, and went to him and put
-her hands gently on his sleeves, looking up into his face.
-“You did not understand—you know nothing of a
-woman’s heart—I told you once that I loved you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes!” cried Peter. “You told me that, and then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>you insist upon staying here when I want to protect you—when
-you know there is a chance to go——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Growl—growl like a Russian bear, Peter! But did
-you not come to say good-by?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“To take you with me if I could.” He seized her
-hands. “O, Katerin, think this over and see what I want
-you to see—when you get to Vladivostok——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“And what when I get to Vladivostok? What am I
-to do when I get to Vladivostok?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Well, you will know what you want to do, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Do about what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I want you to marry me—to go to America—to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>She stamped her foot.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You are a hopeless American!” she cried. “I like
-you better as a Russian, Peter Petrovitch!” She dropped
-her head, and as he gave a cry of joy, she looked up, her
-face radiant with joy and flushed with color.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Katerin! You will marry me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How can I help myself—I have been stolen by the old
-law, and now——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Yes, what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I know that you want me—not for a promise—but
-for myself—Peter——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“O God!” he cried, “I know now I am forgiven!” and
-he crushed her to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Presently there came a knocking at the door of Katerin’s
-room, and the old serving woman came when Katerin
-called to her to enter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Tell Wassili to pack my baggage,” said Katerin.
-“We are all going to Vladivostok—at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“But let Wassili first go for a priest,” said Peter.
-“And do not cry, my love—we shall both say farewell
-forever to the Valley of Despair, and our journey’s end
-shall be America—our America.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>“America!” she whispered, looking through the window
-as if her eyes saw behind the fog-banks a strange land.
-“What a wonderful country America must be!”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“You cannot know till you have seen,” said Peter.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“I know now,” she replied, smiling through her tears,
-“I know now, Peter Petrovitch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“How can you know, my love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Because—I know a Russian who became an American—the
-son of a bootmaker—a bootmaker who was
-an unfortunate—a poor boy——”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Hush, hush!” he said, and put his arms about her
-again, seeing where her thoughts were straying—to the
-fresh brown mound on the bleak hillside by the ruin of
-the old prison. “They are together, your father and
-mine. Because of that, we shall not forget our Holy
-Russia. Would not they both be happy—are they not
-both happy, knowing what they must know now, and
-seeing what the dead must see? We living think we would
-do one thing, but is it not that the dead guide us, knowing
-better than we what is before us and what we shall do
-before we have finished? Truly, as the wise say, from
-evil good—my love was here but I did not know it—and
-now I have found her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>And as the fog shrouded them from the street, there
-was nothing to prevent him from kissing her once more.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>THE END</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span><span class='xlarge'>APPLETON’S RECENT FICTION</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c021'><b>THE VAGRANT DUKE</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By GEORGE GIBBS</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The author of “The Splendid Outcast” has here written another
-smashing adventure novel. A Russian Duke, fleeing the Bolsheviki,
-must work his way in America. Mystery and romance
-are what he finds as superintendent of a queer old multi-millionaire’s
-estate.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>THE INNOCENT ADVENTURESS</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By MARY HASTINGS BRADLEY</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A family of the Italian nobility are hard up and as a solution
-send their youngest daughter to search for a husband, wealthy,
-in America. She is a brave and attractive little thing, and the
-author of “The Fortieth Door” has known how to make her
-adventures truly exciting.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>THE RAPIDS</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By ALAN SULLIVAN</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A novel of the vigorous north, which tells the story of a man
-who seeks to transform a simple village into a mighty city.
-In the voice of the rapids he hears the urging towards his
-ambition and the great love which comes to him.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>THE COUNSEL OF THE UNGODLY</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By CHARLES BRACKETT</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A diverting comedy of society life. Peter Van Hoeven, an old
-society man who finds himself penniless, takes a position as
-butler to a very new-rich lady. Unusual and dramatic situations
-ensue.</p>
-<p class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span><b>THE SLEUTH OF ST. JAMES’S SQUARE</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By MELVILLE DAVISSON POST</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This master of mystery detective stories has found a new
-method of constructing them that is a big contribution to detective
-fiction. These tales carry one to all parts of the world,
-to strange crimes and mysteries.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>THE UNSEEN EAR</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By NATALIE SUMNER LINCOLN</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The author of “The Red Seal” and other great successes has
-never built up a more baffling mystery than this. A man is
-murdered in a Washington home; in the room sits a girl who
-is deaf and does not hear what passes. Suspicion points in all
-directions before the final surprising climax.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>PENGARD AWAKE</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By RALPH STRAUS</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The most thrilling depiction since “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”
-of the struggle in a man’s soul between the powers of good and
-evil. Actual psychological fact is the basis of this remarkable
-story of the love of two men, one malignant, the other sweet
-and gentle, for the same woman.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>JOHN SENESCHAL’S MARGARET</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By AGNES and EGERTON CASTLE</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>John Tempest, imprisoned in Turkey, loses all memory of his
-true identity. Returning to England he is believed to be John
-Seneschal, and is welcomed by the true John Seneschal’s parents
-and even by his sweetheart Margaret.</p>
-
-<p class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span><b>THE AGE OF INNOCENCE</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By EDITH WHARTON</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This great popular success marks the pinnacle of Mrs. Wharton’s
-art thus far. It tells an absorbing story of New York
-Society in its days of innocence, about 1880. “One of the best
-novels of the twentieth century”, says William Lyon Phelps in
-the <i>New York Times</i>.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>MISS LULU BETT</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By ZONA GALE</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A splendid novel that portrays the sudden flowering of happiness
-in the life of the family drudge, Miss Lulu Bett. Every
-word of the book counts and the characters, from Grandma
-Bett to the child Monona, are unsurpassed for living qualities.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>CHILDREN IN THE MIST</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By GEORGE MADDEN MARTIN</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Stories that depict the virtues, the limitations, the sweetness
-and the humor of the negro, from the emancipation down to the
-present day. There is a true insight into the nature of this
-people, who after fifty-six years of freedom, still see as in a
-glass, darkly.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>LUCINDA</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By ANTHONY HOPE</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This is the romance of a missing bride, who disappears on her
-wedding day, leaving the world baffled and her fiancée ready to
-pursue her to the ends of the earth. All of Anthony Hope’s
-charming ability and knowledge of how to construct a truly
-readable story are found in “Lucinda”.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span><b>THE PORTYGEE</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By JOSEPH C. LINCOLN</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Rich humor and insight into human nature are in this entertaining
-novel by Joseph C. Lincoln. Everyone enjoys its story
-of a romantic young fellow who goes to live down East with
-his grandfather, a typical old salt. This is a best-seller, by the
-author of “Shavings”.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>THE ADVENTUROUS LADY</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By J. C. SNAITH</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“Witty, amusing, as light and sparkling as sun-flecked foam”—<i>New
-York Times</i>. The daughter of an English peer changes
-places with a governess, when traveling to the same destination,
-where each is unknown. The results are highly entertaining.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>NANCY GOES TO TOWN</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By FRANCES R. STERRETT</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Nancy Mary Yates goes to train as a nurse in a hospital. She
-says she is hunting for a “Prince Moneybags”. The reader
-eagerly follows her career, made zestful by her youth and brave
-spirit. Nancy finds some unique characters in her path.</p>
-<p class='c021'><b>THE PARTS MEN PLAY</b></p>
-
-<p class='c009'>By A. BEVERLEY BAXTER</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>A vital picture of a young American who finds himself among
-England’s parasite, artistic social set during days of international
-strife. The psychology of nations is interestingly shown, and the
-unfolding of character under stress finely rendered.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c013' />
-</div>
-<p class='c009'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c013'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c009'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SAMOVAR GIRL ***</div>
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