Selected Polish Tales - LightNovelsOnl.com
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He looked with amiable wonder. 'When we had nothing to fire?' he said good-humouredly.
Well, somehow it all ended happily. But, then, the others, his companions...ah, how das.h.i.+ng they had been, what fellows! An admirable, glorious army, the S. Regiment! Almost everyone was killed; it was sad to see them. Now they had to fill up the gaps with raw recruits; but it was no longer the old army; there will never be such fighting again....
It will be hard to discipline them. They had fought continuously for a year. A whole year in the war! They had been close to Drialdow, in Lwow, even close to Cracow itself. 'Do you know Cracow, lady?'
'I do.'
'Well, then, just there, just five miles from Cracow. The bitter cold of a windy day penetrated to our bones. To think that the town was only five miles off!'
I went away to return to the packing of my books. At the door I noticed a woman standing, a neighbour; she was frightened and timid.
'I suppose they have robbed you, lady?'
'They have.'
'And now they are at it in my place,' she said softly. 'Their cattle have eaten up my whole meadow, and they are tearing up everything in my kitchen-garden. I was looking this morning; not a cuc.u.mber left.
To-morrow they will begin mowing the oats; the officer gave me an advance in money, and the rest he paid with note of hand. Is it true that they are going to burn everything?'
'I don't know.'
The new watchman came up, young, black-eyed, a gloomy Siberian villager. When he laughed, his teeth shone like claws.
'We have stolen nothing, but we are ordered to do penance,' he said defiantly to Martin. 'Very well, we'll do it. It was worse in the trenches--a great deal worse! Often we were so close to the enemy that we could see them perfectly. We used to take off our caps, raise them in the air; they fired. If they hit, then we waved a white handkerchief: that meant they had made a hit. Later on they would show their caps and we fired.'
'Are you from a distance?' Martin asked.
'From Siberia,' he answered, and turned his head. 'We were four brothers all serving in the army; two still write to me, the fourth is gone. Our father is an old man, and neither ploughs nor sows. He sold a beautiful colt for 150 roubles, for what is the use of a horse when there is no more farming? G.o.d! what a country this is,' he continued with pity. 'With us in Siberia a farmer with no more than ten cows is called poor. We are rich! We have land where wheat grows like anything.
Manure we cart away and burn; we've no use for it. Ah! Siberia!'
The woman, my neighbour, sat in silence. It was strange to her to hear of this country as the Promised Land. When she had to go she said, thoughtfully and nervously: 'Of course if I hadn't sold him the oats they would have taken them. Even those two roubles on account were better than that.'
I went upstairs again, and by evening the work of packing the books and things was completed.
The soldier who loved books made elaborate remarks on them also to his simple comrades. He spoke about the psychical aspect of fighting, the physiology of heroic deeds, the resignation of those destined for death, &c. He was a thoughtful man and unquestionably sensitive; but all that he said had the stamp of oriental thought, systematically arranged in advance and quite perfectly expressed at the moment, free from the immediate naivete of elementary knowledge.
'Do you belong,' I said, 'to this detachment of machine gunners?'
'Unquestionably; I am, as you see, lady, a simple soldier.'
'I should like to see a machine gun at close quarters. Can I?'
I immediately perceived that I had asked something out of order. He was confused and turned pale.
'I have never seen a machine gun,' I continued, 'up to now; but, of course, if there are any difficulties...'
'It is not that,' he answered, with hesitation. 'I must tell you honestly, lady, we haven't a single cartridge left.'
He checked himself and was silent; at that moment he did not show the repose of a psychologist.
'Do you understand, lady?'
'I do.'
'And also we have absolutely no officers. There is nothing but what you see there in the forest; the rest are pitiful remnants--some 200 soldiers left out of two regiments.'
Early next day Martin joyously informed me that in the night the soldiers had gone away. They had burnt nothing, but it was likely that another detachment would come in by the evening.
'And the soldier who helped you to pack was here very early. I told him the lady was asleep, so he only left this card.'
_It was a visiting card with a bent edge; at the bottom was written, in pencil and in Roman characters,_
'p.p.c.'
'Yes, my friend,' I thought to myself, 'that is just the souvenir I should have expected you to leave me after plundering me right and left... a "P.P.C." card! And my deliverance from you means destruction to somebody else's woods, house, and garden.'