PAGE 12
Lieutenant Yergunov’s Story
by
Colibri craned her neck like a bird … she listened. Kuzma Vassilyevitch was alarmed.
“Emilie?” he asked.
“No.”
“Someone else?”
Colibri shrugged her shoulder.
“Do you hear something?”
“Nothing.” With a birdlike movement, again Colibri drew back her little oval-shaped head with its pretty parting and the short growth of tiny curls on the nape of her neck where her plaits began, and again curled herself up into a ball. “Nothing.”
“Nothing! Then now I’ll …” Kuzma Vassilyevitch craned forward towards Colibri but at once pulled back his hand. There was a drop of blood on his finger. “What foolishness is this!” he cried, shaking his finger. “Your everlasting pins! And the devil of a pin it is!” he added, looking at the long, golden pin which Colibri slowly thrust into her sash. “It’s a regular dagger, it’s a sting…. Yes, yes, it’s your sting, and you are a wasp, that’s what you are, a wasp, do you hear?”
Apparently Colibri was much pleased at Kuzma Vasselyevitch’s comparison; she went off into a thin laugh and repeated several times over:
“Yes, I will sting … I will sting.”
Kuzma Vassilyevitch looked at her and thought: “She is laughing but her face is melancholy.
“Look what I am going to show you,” he said aloud.
“Tso?”
“Why do you say tso? Are you a Pole?”
“Nee.”
“Now you say nee! But there, it’s no matter.” Kuzma Vassilyevitch got out his present and waved it in the air. “Look at it…. Isn’t it nice?”
Colibri raised her eyes indifferently.
“Ah! A cross! We don’t wear.”
“What? You don’t wear a cross? Are you a Jewess then, or what?”
“We don’t wear,” repeated Colibri, and, suddenly starting, looked back over her shoulder. “Would you like me to sing?” she asked hurriedly.
Kuzma Vassilyevitch put the cross in the pocket of his uniform and he, too, looked round.
“What is it?” he muttered.
“A mouse … a mouse,” Colibri said hurriedly, and suddenly to Kuzma Vassilyevitch’s complete surprise, flung her smooth, supple arms round his neck and a rapid kiss burned his cheek … as though a red-hot ember had been pressed against it.
He pressed Colibri in his arms but she slipped away like a snake–her waist was hardly thicker than the body of a snake–and leapt to her feet.
“Wait,” she whispered, “you must have some coffee first.”
“Nonsense! Coffee, indeed! Afterwards.”
“No, now. Now hot, after cold.” She took hold of the coffee pot by the handle and, lifting it high, began pouring out two cups. The coffee fell in a thin, as it were, twirling stream; Colibri leaned her head on her shoulder and watched it fall. “There, put in the sugar … drink … and I’ll drink.”
Kuzma Vassilyevitch put a lump of sugar in the cup and drank it off at one draught. The coffee struck him as very strong and bitter. Colibri looked at him, smiling, and faintly dilated her nostrils over the edge of her cup. She slowly put it down on the table.
“Why don’t you drink it?” asked Kuzma Vassilyevitch.
“Not all, now.”
Kuzma Vassilyevitch got excited.
“Do sit down beside me, at least.”
“In a minute.” She bent her head and, still keeping her eyes fixed on Kuzma Vassilyevitch, picked up the guitar. “Only I will sing first.”
“Yes, yes, only sit down.”
“And I will dance. Shall I?”
“You dance? Well, I should like to see that. But can’t that be afterwards?”
“No, now…. But I love you very much.”
“You love? Mind now … dance away, then, you queer creature.”
XXI
Colibri stood on the further side of the table and running her fingers several times over the strings of the guitar and to the surprise of Kuzma Vassilyevitch, who was expecting a lively, merry song, began singing a slow, monotonous air, accompanying each separate sound, which seemed as though it were wrung out of her by force, with a rhythmical swaying of her body to right and left. She did not smile, and indeed knitted her brows, her delicate, high, rounded eyebrows, between which a dark blue mark, probably burnt in with gunpowder, stood out sharply, looking like some letter of an oriental alphabet. She almost closed her eyes but their pupils glimmered dimly under the drooping lids, fastened as before on Kuzma Vassilyevitch. And he, too, could not look away from those marvellous, menacing eyes, from that dark-skinned face that gradually began to glow, from the half-closed and motionless lips, from the two black snakes rhythmically moving on both sides of her graceful head. Colibri went on swaying without moving from the spot and only her feet were working; she kept lightly shifting them, lifting first the toe and then the heel. Once she rotated rapidly and uttered a piercing shriek, waving the guitar high in the air…. Then the same monotonous movement accompanied by the same monotonous singing, began again. Kuzma Vassilyevitch sat meanwhile very quietly on the sofa and went on looking at Colibri; he felt something strange and unusual in himself: he was conscious of great lightness and freedom, too great lightness, in fact; he seemed, as it were, unconscious of his body, as though he were floating and at the same time shudders ran down him, a sort of agreeable weakness crept over his legs, and his lips and eyelids tingled with drowsiness. He had no desire now, no thought of anything … only he was wonderfully at ease, as though someone were lulling him, “singing him to bye-bye,” as Emilie had expressed it, and he whispered to himself, “little doll!” At times the face of the “little doll” grew misty. “Why is that?” Kuzma Vassilyevitch wondered. “From the smoke,” he reassured himself. “There is such a blue smoke here.” And again someone was lulling him and even whispering in his ear something so sweet … only for some reason it was always unfinished. But then all of a sudden in the little doll’s face the eyes opened till they were immense, incredibly big, like the arches of a bridge…. The guitar dropped, and striking against the floor, clanged somewhere at the other end of the earth…. Some very near and dear friend of Kuzma Vassilyevitch’s embraced him firmly and tenderly from behind and set his cravat straight. Kuzma Vassilyevitch saw just before his own face the hooked nose, the thick moustache and the piercing eyes of the stranger with the three buttons on his cuff … and although the eyes were in the place of the moustache and the nose itself seemed upside down, Kuzma Vassilyevitch was not in the least surprised, but, on the contrary, thought that this was how it ought to be; he was even on the point of saying to the nose, “Hullo, brother Grigory,” but he changed his mind and preferred … preferred to set off with Colibri to Constantinople at once for their forthcoming wedding, as she was a Turk and the Tsar promoted him to be an actual Turk.