He was not thinking of anything in
particular, but gave himself up to those peculiar sensations of
spring which in the heart of young and old alike are always mixed
with a certain degree of sadness—the keen sadness of awaiting in
the young and of settled regret in the old.
Nejdanov was suddenly awakened by approaching footsteps.
It did not sound like the footsteps of one person, nor like a
peasant in heavy boots, or a barefooted peasant woman; it seemed as
if two people were advancing at a slow, measured pace. The slight
rustling of a woman's dress was heard.
Suddenly a deep man's voice was heard to say:
Is this your last word? Never?
"Never!" a familiar woman's voice repeated, and a moment later
from a bend in the path, hidden from view by a young tree, Mariana
appeared, accompanied by a swarthy man with black eyes, an
individual whom Nejdanov had never seen before.
They both stood still as if rooted to the spot on catching sight
of him, and he was so taken aback that he did not rise from the
stump he was sitting on. Mariana blushed to the roots of her hair,
but instantly gave a contemptuous smile. It was difficult to say
whether the smile was meant for herself, for having blushed, or for
Nejdanov. Her companion scowled—a sinister gleam was seen in the
yellowish whites of his troubled eyes. He exchanged glances with
Mariana, and without saying a word they turned their backs on
Nejdanov and walked away as slowly as they had come, while Nejdanov
followed them with a look of amazement.
Half an hour later he returned home to his room, and when, at
the sound of the gong, he appeared in the drawing room, the
dark-eyed stranger whom he had seen in the wood was already there.
Sipiagin introduced Nejdanov to him as his beaufrere'a, Valentina
Mihailovna's brother—Sergai Mihailovitch Markelov.
"I hope you will get to know each other and be friends,
gentlemen," Sipiagin exclaimed with the amiable, stately, though
absent-minded smile characteristic of him.
Markelov bowed silently; Nejdanov responded in a similar way,
and Sipiagin, throwing back his head slightly and shrugging his
shoulders, walked away, as much as to say, "I've brought you
together, but whether you become friends or not is a matter of
equal indifference to me!"
Valentina Mihailovna came up to the silent pair, standing
motionless, and introduced them to each other over again; she then
turned to her brother with that peculiarly bright, caressing
expression which she seemed able to summon at will into her
wonderful eyes.
"Why, my dear Serge, you've quite forgotten us! You did not even
come on Kolia's name-day. Are you so very busy? My brother is
making some sort of new arrangement with his peasants," she
remarked, turning to Nejdanov. "So very original—three parts of
everything for them and one for himself; even then he thinks that
he gets more than his share."
"My sister is fond of joking," Markelov said to Nejdanov in his
turn, "but I am prepared to agree with her; for one man to take a
quarter of what belongs to a hundred, is certainly too much."
"Do you think that I am fond of joking, Alexai Dmitritch?"
Madame Sipiagina asked with that same caressing softness in her
voice and in her eyes.
Nejdanov was at a loss for a reply, but just then Kollomietzev
was announced. The hostess went to meet him, and a few moments
later a servant appeared and announced in a sing-song voice that
dinner was ready.
At dinner Nejdanov could not keep his eyes off Mariana and
Markelov. They sat side by side, both with downcast eyes,
compressed lips, and an expression of gloomy severity on their
angry faces. Nejdanov wondered how Markelov could possibly be
Madame Sipiagina's brother; they were so little like each other.
There was only one point of resemblance between them, their dark
complexions; but the even colour of Valentina Mihailovna's face,
arms, and shoulders constituted one of her charms, while in her
brother it reached to that shade of swarthiness which polite people
call "bronze," but which to the Russian eye suggests a brown
leather boot-leg.
Markelov had curly hair, a somewhat hooked nose, thick lips,
sunken cheeks, a narrow chest, and sinewy hands. He was dry and
sinewy all over, and spoke in a curt, harsh, metallic voice. The
sleepy look in his eyes, the gloomy expression, denoted a bilious
temperament! He ate very little, amused himself by making bread
pills, and every now and again would fix his eyes on Kollomietzev.
The latter had just returned from town, where he had been to see
the governor upon a rather unpleasant matter for himself, upon
which he kept a tacit silence, but was very voluble about
everything else. Sipiagin sat on him somewhat when he went a little
too far, but laughed a good deal at his anecdotes and bon mots,
although he thought qu'il est un affreux reactionnaire.
Kollomietzev declared, among other things, how he went into
raptures at what the peasants, oui, oui! les simples mougiks! call
lawyers. "Liars! Liars!" he shouted with delight. "Ce peupie russe
est delicieux!" He then went on to say how once, when going through
a village school, he asked one of the children what a babugnia was,
and nobody could tell him, not even the teacher himself. He then
asked what a pithecus was, and no one knew even that, although he
had quoted the poet Himnitz, 'The weakwitted pithecus that mocks
the other beasts.' Such is the deplorable condition of our peasant
schools!
"But," Valentina Mihailovna remarked, "I don't know myself what
are these animals!"
"Madame!" Kollomietzev exclaimed, "there is no necessity for you
to know!"
"Then why should the peasants know?"
"Because it is better for them to know about these animals than
about Proudhon or Adam Smith!"
Here Sipiagin again intervened, saying that Adam Smith was one
of the leading lights in human thought, and that it would be well
to imbibe his principles (he poured himself out a glass of wine)
with the (he lifted the glass to his nose and sniffed at it)
mother's milk! He swallowed the wine. Kollomietzev also drank a
glass and praised it highly.
Markelov payed no special attention to Kollomietzev's talk, but
glanced interrogatively at Nejdanov once or twice; he flicked one
of his little bread pills, which just missed the nose of the
eloquent guest.
Sipiagin left his brother-in-law in peace; neither did Valentina
Mihailovna speak to him; it was evident that both husband and wife
considered Markelov an eccentric sort of person whom it was better
not to provoke.
After dinner Markelov went into the billiard room to smoke a
pipe, and Nejdanov withdrew into his own room.
In the corridor he ran against Mariana. He wanted to slip past
her, when she stopped him with a quick movement of the hand.
"Mr. Nejdanov," she said in a somewhat unsteady tone of voice,
"it ought to be all the same to me what you think of me, but still
I find it... I find it..." (she could not think of a fitting word)
"I find it necessary to tell you that when you met me in the wood
today with Mr. Markelov... you must no doubt have thought, when you
saw us both confused, that we had come there by appointment."
"It did seem a little strange to me—" Nejdanov began. "Mr.
Markelov," Mariana interrupted him, "proposed to me... and I
refused him. That is all I wanted to say to you. Goodnight. Think
what you like of me."
She turned away and walked quickly down the corridor.
Nejdanov entered his own room and sat down by the window musing.
"What a strange girl—why this wild issue, this uninvited
explanation? Is it a desire to be original, or simply
affectation—or pride? Pride, no doubt. She can't endure the idea...
the faintest suspicion, that anyone should have a wrong opinion of
her. What a strange girl!"
Thus Nejdanov pondered, while he was being discussed on the
terrace below; every word could be heard distinctly.
"I have a feeling," Kollomietzev declared, "a feeling, that he's
a revolutionist.
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