The Spy. Максим Горький

The Spy - Максим Горький


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At supper he suddenly lifted his spoon and said:

      "Impossible for me to eat. I'll tell you about something that happened." Bending over the plate he was silent for some time as if considering whether or not to speak of the incident. Then he began with a sigh. "Suppose a man has a wife, his own house, not a large house, a garden, and a vegetable garden, a cook, all acquired by hard labor without sparing himself. Then comes a young man, sickly, consumptive, who rents a room in the garret, and takes meals with the master and mistress."

      Rayisa listened calmly and attentively. Yevsey felt bored. While looking into the woman's face he stubbornly endeavored to comprehend what had happened in the shop that day. He felt as if he had unexpectedly struck a match and set fire to something old and long dried, which began to burn alarmingly and almost consumed him in its sudden malicious blaze.

      "I must keep quiet," he thought.

      "Were you the man?" asked Rayisa.

      Raspopov quickly raised his head.

      "Why I?" he asked. He struck his breast, and exclaimed with angry heat, "The question here is, not about the man but about the law. Ought a man uphold the law? Yes, he ought. Without law it is impossible to live. You people are stupid, because man is in every respect like a beast. He is greedy, malicious, cruel."

      The old man rose a little from his armchair, and shouted his words in Rayisa's face. His bald pate reddened. Yevsey listened to his exclamations without believing in their sincerity. He reflected on how people are bound together and enmeshed by some unseen threads, and how if one thread is accidentally pulled, they twist and turn, rage and cry out. So he said to himself:

      "I must be more careful."

      The old man continued:

      "Words bring no harm if you do not listen to them. But when the fellow in the garret began to trouble her heart with his ideas, she, a stupid young woman, and that friend of his who – who to-day – " The old man suddenly came to a stop, and looked at Yevsey. "What are you thinking about?" he asked in a low suspicious tone.

      Yevsey rose and answered in embarrassment:

      "I am not thinking."

      "Well, then, go. You've had your supper. So go. Clear the table."

      Desiring to vex his master Yevsey was intentionally slow in removing the dishes from the table.

      "Go, I tell you!" the old man screamed in a squeaking voice. "Oh, what a fool you are!"

      Yevsey went to his room, and seated himself on the chest. Having left the door slightly ajar, he could hear his master's rapid talk.

      "They came for him one night. She got frightened, began to shiver, understood then on what road these people had put her. I told her – "

      "So it was you?" Rayisa asked aloud.

      The old man now began to speak in a low voice, almost a whisper. Then Yevsey heard Rayisa's clear voice:

      "Did he die?"

      "Well, what of it?" the old man shouted excitedly. "You can't cure a man of consumption. He would have died at any rate."

      Yevsey sat upon the chest listening to the low rasping sound of his talk.

      "What are you sitting there for?"

      The boy turned around, and saw the master's head thrust through the door.

      "Lie down and sleep."

      The master withdrew his head, and the door was tightly closed.

      "Who died?" Yevsey thought as he lay in bed.

      The dry words of the old man came fluttering down and fluttering down, like autumn leaves upon a grave. The boy felt more and more distinctly that he lived in a circle of dread mystery. Sometimes the old man grew angry, and shouted; which prevented the boy from thinking or sleeping. He was sorry for Rayisa, who kept peacefully silent in answer to his ejaculations. At last Yevsey heard her go to her own room. Perfect stillness then prevailed in the master's room for several minutes, after which Raspopov's voice sounded again, but now even as usual:

      "Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sit – "

      With these reassuring words ringing in his ears Yevsey fell asleep.

      The next morning Rayisa again called him to her.

      "What happened in the shop yesterday?" she asked with a smile when he had seated himself.

      Yevsey told her everything in detail, and she laughed contentedly and happily. She suddenly drew her brows together and asked in an undertone:

      "Do you understand who he is?"

      "No."

      "A spy," she whispered, her eyes growing wide with fright.

      Yevsey was silent. She rose and went to him.

      "What a tragic fellow you are!" she said thoughtfully and kindly, stroking his head. "You don't understand anything. You're so droll. What was the stuff you told me the other day? What other life?"

      The question animated him; he wanted very much to talk about it. Raising his head and looking into her face with the fathomless stare of blind eyes, he began to speak rapidly.

      "Of course there's another life. From where else do the fairy-tales come? And not only the fairy-tales, but – "

      The woman smiled, and rumpled his hair with her warm fingers.

      "You little stupid! They'll seize you," she added seriously, even sternly, "they'll lead you wherever they want to, and do with you whatever they want to. That will be your life."

      Yevsey nodded his head, silently assenting to Rayisa's words.

      She sighed and looked through the window upon the street. When she turned to Yevsey, her face surprised him. It was red, and her eyes had become smaller and darker.

      "If you were smarter," she said in an indolent, hollow voice, "or more alert, maybe I would tell you something. But you're such a queer chappie there's no use telling you anything, and your master ought to be choked to death. There, now, go tell him what I've said – you tell him everything."

      Yevsey rose from the table, feeling as if a cold stream of insult had been poured over him. He inclined his head and mumbled:

      "I'll never tell anything about you – to nobody. I love you very much, and – even if you choked him, I wouldn't tell anybody. That's how I love you."

      He shuffled to the door, but the woman's hands caught him like warm white wings, and turned him back.

      "Did I insult you?" he heard. "Well, excuse me. If you knew what a devil he is, how he tortures me, and how I hate him. Dear me!" She pressed his face tightly to her breast, and kissed him twice. "So you love me?"

      "Yes," whispered Yevsey, feeling himself turning around lightly in a hot whirlpool of unknown bliss.

      "How?"

      "I don't know. I love you very much."

      Laughing and fondling him, she said:

      "You'll tell me about it. Ah, you little baby!"

      Going down the stairs he heard her satisfied laugh, and smiled in response. His head turned, his entire body was suffused with sweet lassitude. He walked quietly and cautiously, as if afraid of spilling the hot joy of his heart.

      "Why have you been so long?" asked the master.

      Yevsey looked at him, but saw only a confused, formless blur.

      "I have a headache," he answered slowly.

      "And I, too. What does it mean? Has Rayisa gotten up?"

      "Yes."

      "Did she speak to you?"

      "Yes."

      "What about?" the master asked hastily.

      The question was like a slap in Yevsey's face. He recovered, however, and answered indifferently:

      "She said I hadn't swept the kitchen clean."

      A few moments


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