**** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE ****

Find this Story

Print, a form you can hold

Wireless download to your Amazon Kindle

Look for a summary or analysis of this Story.

Enjoy this? Share it!

PAGE 7

The Icebreaker
by [?]

“Put the tools together,” Ossip shouted. “And look alive there, and make for the bank.”

“Aye, and a fine Easter Day it will be for us on THAT bank!” growled Sashok.

Meanwhile, it was the river rather than the town that seemed to be motionless–the latter had begun, as it were, to quiver and reel, and, with the hill above it, to appear to be gliding slowly up stream, even as the grey, sandy bank some ten sazheni from us was beginning to grow tremulous, and to recede.

“Run, all of you!” shouted Ossip, giving me a violent push as he did so. Then to myself in particular he added: “Why stand gaping there?”

This caused a keen sense of danger to strike home in my heart, and to make my feet feel as though already the ice was escaping their tread. So, automatically picking themselves up, those feet started to bear my body in the direction of a spot on the sandy bank where the winter-stripped branches of a willow tree were writhing, and whither there were betaking themselves also Boev, the old soldier, Budirin, and the brothers Diatlov. Meanwhile the Morduine ran by my side, cursing vigorously as he did so, and Ossip followed us, walking backwards.

“No, no, Narodetz,” he said.

“But, my good Ossip–“

“Never mind. What has to be, has to be.”

“But, as likely as not, we may remain stuck here for two days!”

“Never mind even if we DO remain stuck here.”

“But what of the festival?”

“It will have, for this year at least, to be kept without you.”

Seating himself on the sand, the old soldier lit his pipe and growled:

“What cowards you all are! The bank was only fifteen sazheni from us, yet you ran as though possessed!”

“With you yourself as leader,” put in Mokei.

The old soldier took no notice, but added:

“What were you all afraid of? Once upon a time Christ Himself, Our Little Father, died.”

“And rose again,” muttered the Morduine with a tinge of resentment. Which led Boev to exclaim:

“Puppy, hold your tongue! What right have you to air your opinions?”

“Besides, this is Good Friday, not Easter Day,” the old soldier concluded with severe, didactical mien.

In a gap of blue between the clouds there was shining the March sun, and everywhere the ice was sparkling as though in derision of ourselves. Shading his eyes, Ossip gazed at the dissolving river, and said:

“Yes, it IS rising–but that will not last for long.”

“No, but long enough to make us miss the festival,” grumbled Sashok.

Upon this the smooth, beardless face of the youthful Morduine, a face dark and angular like the skin of an unpeeled potato, assumed a resentful frown, and, blinking his eyes, he muttered:

“Yes, here we may have to sit–here where there’s neither food nor money! Other folk will be enjoying themselves, but we shall have to remain hugging our hungry stomachs like a pack of dogs! “

Meanwhile Ossip’s eyes had remained fixed upon the river, for evidently his thoughts were far away, and it was in absentminded fashion that he replied:

“Hunger cannot be considered where necessity impels. By the way, what use are our damned icebreakers? For the protection of barges and such? Why, the ice hasn’t the sense to care. It just goes sliding over a barge, and farewell is the word to THAT bit of property! “

“Damn it, but none of us have a barge for property, have we?

“You had better go and talk to a fool.”

“The truth is that the icebreaker ought to have been taken in hand sooner.”

Finally, the old soldier made a queer grimace, and ejaculated:

“Blockhead!”

From a barge a knot of sailors shouted something, and at the same moment the river sent forth a sort of whiff of cruel chilliness and brooding calm. The disposition of the pine boughs now had changed. Nay, everything in sight was beginning to assume a different air, as though everything were charged with tense expectancy.

One of the younger men asked diffidently, beneath his breath: