登陆注册
26305700000010

第10章 II(2)

A murmur of wonder arose with an undertone of uneasiness. A laugh was heard too, and an exclamation, "There! there!" jeeringly soothing. The waiter looked all round and announced to the room--"The gentleman won't believe that Ziemianitch is drunk."

>From a distant corner a hoarse voice belonging to a horrible, nondescript, shaggy being with a black face like the muzzle of a bear grunted angrily--"The cursed driver of thieves. What do we want with his gentlemen here? We are all honest folk in this place."

Razumov, biting his lip till blood came to keep himself from bursting into imprecations, followed the owner of the den, who, whispering "Come along, little father," led him into a tiny hole of a place behind the wooden counter, whence proceeded a sound of splashing. A wet and bedraggled creature, a sort of ***less and shivering scarecrow, washed glasses in there, bending over a wooden tub by the light of a tallow dip.

"Yes, little father," the man in the long caftan said plaintively. He had a brown, cunning little face, a thin greyish beard. Trying to light a tin lantern he hugged it to his breast and talked garrulously the while.

He would show Ziemianitch to the gentleman to prove there were no lies told. And he would show him drunk. His woman, it seems, ran away from him last night. "Such a hag she was! Thin!

Pfui!" He spat. They were always running away from that driver of the devil--and he sixty years old too; could never get used to it. But each heart knows sorrow after its own kind and Ziemianitch was a born fool all his days. And then he would fly to the bottle. "'Who could bear life in our land without the bottle?' he says. A proper Russian man--the little pig. . . .

Be pleased to follow me."

Razumov crossed a quadrangle of deep snow enclosed between high walls with innumerable windows. Here and there a dim yellow light hung within the four-square mass of darkness. The house was an enormous slum, a hive of human vermin, a monumental abode of misery towering on the verge of starvation and despair.

In a corner the ground sloped sharply down, and Razumov followed the light of the lantern through a small doorway into a long cavernous place like a neglected subterranean byre. Deep within, three shaggy little horses tied up to rings hung their heads together, motionless and shadowy in the dim light of the lantern.

It must have been the famous team of Haldin's escape. Razumov peered fearfully into the gloom. His guide pawed in the straw with his foot.

"Here he is. Ah! the little pigeon. A true Russian man.

'No heavy hearts for me,' he says. 'Bring out the bottle and take your ugly mug out of my sight.' Ha! ha! ha! That's the fellow he is."

He held the lantern over a prone form of a man, apparently fully dressed for outdoors. His head was lost in a pointed cloth hood.

On the other side of a heap of straw protruded a pair of feet in monstrous thick boots.

"Always ready to drive," commented the keeper of the eating-house. "A proper Russian driver that. Saint or devil, night or day is all one to Ziemianitch when his heart is free from sorrow. 'I don't ask who you are, but where you want to go,' he says. He would drive Satan himself to his own abode and come back chirruping to his horses. Many a one he has driven who is clanking his chains in the Nertchinsk mines by this time."

Razumov shuddered.

"Call him, wake him up," he faltered out.

The other set down his light, stepped back and launched a kick at the prostrate sleeper. The man shook at the impact but did not move. At the third kick he grunted but remained inert as before.

The eating-house keeper desisted and fetched a deep sigh.

"You see for yourself how it is. We have done what we can for you."

He picked up the lantern. The intense black spokes of shadow swung about in the circle of light. A terrible fury--the blind rage of self-preservation--possessed Razumov.

"Ah! The vile beast," he bellowed out in an unearthly tone which made the lantern jump and tremble! "I shall wake you!

Give me . . . Give me . . ."

He looked round wildly, seized the handle of a stablefork and rushing forward struck at the prostrate body with inarticulate cries. After a time his cries ceased, and the rain of blows fell in the stillness and shadows of the cellar-like stable. Razumov belaboured Ziemianitch with an insatiable fury, in great volleys of sounding thwacks. Except for the violent movements of Razumov nothing stirred, neither the beaten man nor the spoke-like shadows on the walls. And only the sound of blows was heard. It was a weird scene.

Suddenly there was a sharp crack. The stick broke and half of it flew far away into the gloom beyond the light. At the same time Ziemianitch sat up. At this Razumov became as motionless as the man with the lantern--only his breast heaved for air as if ready to burst.

Some dull sensation of pain must have penetrated at last the consoling night of drunkenness enwrapping the "bright Russian soul" of Haldin's enthusiastic praise. But Ziemianitch evidently saw nothing. His eyeballs blinked all white in the light once, twice--then the gleam went out. For a moment he sat in the straw with closed eyes with a strange air of weary meditation, then fell over slowly on his side without ****** the slightest sound.

Only the straw rustled a little. Razumov stared wildly, fighting for his breath. After a second or two he heard a light snore.

He flung from him the piece of stick remaining in his grasp, and went off with great hasty strides without looking back once.

After going heedlessly for some fifty yards along the street he walked into a snowdrift and was up to his knees before he stopped.

This recalled him to himself; and glancing about he discovered he had been going in the wrong direction. He retraced his steps, but now at a more moderate pace. When passing before the house he had just left he flourished his fist at the sombre refuge of misery and crime rearing its sinister bulk on the white ground.

It had an air of brooding. He let his arm fall by his side--discouraged.

同类推荐
  • 止学

    止学

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 南楚新闻

    南楚新闻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 韵语阳秋

    韵语阳秋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 前明正德白牡丹

    前明正德白牡丹

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 妙法莲华经忧波提舍

    妙法莲华经忧波提舍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 重生之过去王者

    重生之过去王者

    陈锋重生后变得无敌起来本人扣扣1305562863
  • 乌拉草

    乌拉草

    这是一部描写二十世纪二十年代初到东北四五年光复后,这一动荡时期的一代闯关东的山东黄县(今龙口市)亲哥仨,在老东北这噶达经商做买卖惊险艰辛的坎坷经历及反满抗日可歌可泣的传奇故事。本书分上、中、下三部。每部以东北三宝人参、貂皮、乌拉草品德描绘主人公人生轨迹。故事情节跌宕起伏,惊心动魄,催人泪下。尤其是伪满十四年里,主人公反满抗日的英雄故事,碑铭可载!
  • 洪荒五帝

    洪荒五帝

    乾坤生五帝,万物皆为天。洪荒之后,五帝重生,全新的五帝成神之路。镇魔石之上孕育着五块上古神石,获天地灵气之润,神石破碎,石娃重生,从此一条神圣的不归路,又该如何前进!
  • 漠漠轻乔栖君画

    漠漠轻乔栖君画

    她是叶府一名嫡出女,自幼丧母二娘因怕女主继承家产,女主七岁岁生日当天请来法师,家中人听信法师言“她的出生将会危及到苏家的兴旺,这是一个祸星,你们必须将她送到山上永不归府”女主被送上山跟着药师王学医,而女主的弟弟也经常背着家人到山上看女主,经常给女主送书和衣物,而女主也非常争气在山上学习医术,纵观书籍,时光流逝,朝中让苏相送300名秀女进宫五个月之后交工,叶相接旨之后在府中整日唉声叹气,二夫人听闻便出主意,将女主从山上接下来,送进宫中为妃,叶相因女主是嫡女为由断然拒绝,最后无奈同意......
  • 宅斗之玉面玲珑大结局

    宅斗之玉面玲珑大结局

    绮丽玉面间的尔虞我诈,八面玲珑中的波谲云诡,再掀不见硝烟的旷世之争。拨开柯弘安身世的迷雾,捅破家族斗争的窗户纸。忠婢秋白智巧无双,腹黑妾合纵连横。一个要助迎初走出绝境,一个誓要断尽夫君后路。迎初与弘安能否突破重重困境,继续夫妻同心,斗破山河?且看这不见刀枪的战火,怎样继续这不同以往的故事……
  • 月下侠骨柔

    月下侠骨柔

    一个侠骨柔情的少年,他不想找麻烦,麻烦却来找他;他身遭不幸,却勇于斗争,以此来夺回本该就属于自己的东西;而我,要说的就是这个少年的故事,这是他的故事。
  • 极速星空

    极速星空

    一群进化失败的的星际流浪者,挣扎着在废弃星球上艰辛求生,正常的进化渠道对他们来说已经关闭了,那他们可走的路只有……
  • 战神粟裕

    战神粟裕

    大将粟裕对战场有种天才般的敏锐感知,善于指挥大兵团作战,堪称一代战神。他运兵奇巧、用势奇险、胃口奇大、胆识奇绝,达到兵家""上兵若水""的最高境界。在抗日战争和解放战争中,立下了赫赫战功。
  • 影响中国学生的十万个为什么·辉煌科技2

    影响中国学生的十万个为什么·辉煌科技2

    本书根据小学生的认知特点,精选有代表性的,孩子们最感兴趣的问题,用通俗易懂、简练济的文字,配以生动有趣的插图解知答案。内容新颖丰富、分类科学合理。本书集知训性趣味性于一体,更适合少年儿童的阅读品味。
  • 公主抢夫不嫌多