"Ivan Kouzmitch[32] is not at home," said she. "He is gone to see Father

Garassim. But it's all the same, I am his wife. Be so good as to love us

and take us into favour.[33] Sit down, my little father."

She called a servant, and bid her tell the "ouriadnik"[34] to come.

The little, old man was looking curiously at me with his one eye.

"Might I presume to ask you," said he to me, "in what regiment you have

deigned to serve?"

I satisfied his curiosity.

"And might I ask you," continued he, "why you have condescended to

exchange from the Guard into our garrison?"

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I replied that it was by order of the authorities.

"Probably for conduct unbecoming an officer of the Guard?" rejoined my

indefatigable questioner.

"Will you be good enough to stop talking nonsense?" the wife of the

Commandant now said to him. "You can see very well that this young man

is tired with his journey. He has something else to do than to answer

your questions. Hold your hands better. And you, my little father," she

continued, turning to me, "do not bemoan yourself too much because you

have been shoved into our little hole of a place; you are not the first,

and you will not be the last. One may suffer, but one gets accustomed to

it. For instance, Chvabrine, Alexey Ivanytch,[35] was transferred to us

four years ago on account of a murder. Heaven knows what ill-luck befel

him. It happened one day he went out of the town with a lieutenant, and

they had taken swords, and they set to pinking one another, and Alexey

Ivanytch killed the lieutenant, and before a couple of witnesses. Well,

well, there's no heading ill-luck!"

At this moment the "ouriadnik," a young and handsome Cossack, came in.

"Maximitch," the Commandant's wife said to him, "find a quarter for this

officer, and a clean one."

"I obey, Vassilissa Igorofna,"[36] replied the "ouriadnik." "Ought not

his excellency to go to Iwan Polejaieff?"

"You are doting, Maximitch," retorted the Commandant's wife; "Polejaieff

has already little enough room; and, besides, he is my gossip; and then

he does not forget that we are his superiors. Take the gentleman--What

is your name, my little father?"

"Petr' Andrejitch."

"Take Petr' Andrejitch to Semeon Kouzoff's. The rascal let his horse get

into my kitchen garden. Is everything in order, Maximitch?"

"Thank heaven! all is quiet," replied the Cossack. "Only Corporal

Prokoroff has been fighting in the bathhouse with the woman Oustinia

Pegoulina for a pail of hot water."

"Iwan Ignatiitch,"[37] said the Commandant's wife to the little one-eyed

man, "you must decide between Prokoroff and Oustinia which is to blame,

and punish both of them; and you, Maximitch, go, in heaven's name! Petr'

Andrejitch, Maximitch will take you to your lodging."




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