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<h2> Chapter XXIX </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was August. For
days the sky had been cloudless, the sun scorched unbearably and from
early morning the warm wind raised a whirl of hot sand from the
sand-drifts and from the road, and bore it in the air through the reeds,
the trees, and the village. The grass and the leaves on the trees were
covered with dust, the roads and dried-up salt marshes were baked so hard
that they rang when trodden on. The water had long since subsided in the
Terek and rapidly vanished and dried up in the ditches. The slimy banks of
the pond near the village were trodden bare by the cattle and all day long
you could hear the splashing of water and the shouting of girls and boys
bathing. The sand-drifts and the reeds were already drying up in the
steppes, and the cattle, lowing, ran into the fields in the day-time. The
boars migrated into the distant reed-beds and to the hills beyond the
Terek. Mosquitoes and gnats swarmed in thick clouds over the low lands and
villages. The snow-peaks were hidden in grey mist. The air was rarefied
and smoky. It was said that abreks had crossed the now shallow river and
were prowling on this side of it. Every night the sun set in a glowing red
blaze. It was the busiest time of the year. The villagers all swarmed in
the melon-fields and the vineyards. The vineyards thickly overgrown with
twining verdure lay in cool, deep shade. Everywhere between the broad
translucent leaves, ripe, heavy, black clusters peeped out. Along the
dusty road from the vineyards the creaking carts moved slowly, heaped up
with black grapes. Clusters of them, crushed by the wheels, lay in the
dirt. Boys and girls in smocks stained with grape-juice, with grapes in
their hands and mouths, ran after their mothers. On the road you
continually came across tattered labourers with baskets of grapes on their
powerful shoulders; Cossack maidens, veiled with kerchiefs to their eyes,
drove bullocks harnessed to carts laden high with grapes. Soldiers who
happened to meet these carts asked for grapes, and the maidens, clambering
up without stopping their carts, would take an armful of grapes and drop
them into the skirts of the soldiers’ coats. In some homesteads they
had already begun pressing the grapes; and the smell of the emptied skins
filled the air. One saw the blood-red troughs in the pent-houses in the
yards and Nogay labourers with their trousers rolled up and their legs
stained with the juice. Grunting pigs gorged themselves with the empty
skins and rolled about in them. The flat roofs of the outhouses were all
spread over with the dark amber clusters drying in the sun. Daws and
magpies crowded round the roofs, picking the seeds and fluttering from one
place to another.</p>
<p>The fruits of the year’s labour were being merrily gathered in, and
this year the fruit was unusually fine and plentiful.</p>
<p>In the shady green vineyards amid a sea of vines, laughter, songs,
merriment, and the voices of women were to be heard on all sides, and
glimpses of their bright-coloured garments could be seen.</p>
<p>Just at noon Maryanka was sitting in their vineyard in the shade of a
peach-tree, getting out the family dinner from under an unharnessed cart.
Opposite her, on a spread-out horse-cloth, sat the cornet (who had
returned from the school) washing his hands by pouring water on them from
a little jug. Her little brother, who had just come straight out of the
pond, stood wiping his face with his wide sleeves, and gazed anxiously at
his sister and his mother and breathed deeply, awaiting his dinner. The
old mother, with her sleeves rolled up over her strong sunburnt arms, was
arranging grapes, dried fish, and clotted cream on a little low, circular
Tartar table. The cornet wiped his hands, took off his cap, crossed
himself, and moved nearer to the table. The boy seized the jug and eagerly
began to drink. The mother and daughter crossed their legs under them and
sat down by the table. Even in the shade it was intolerably hot. The air
above the vineyard smelt unpleasant: the strong warm wind passing amid the
branches brought no coolness, but only monotonously bent the tops of the
pear, peach, and mulberry trees with which the vineyard was sprinkled. The
cornet, having crossed himself once more, took a little jug of <i>chikhir</i>
that stood behind him covered with a vine-leaf, and having had a drink
from the mouth of the jug passed it to the old woman. He had nothing on
over his shirt, which was unfastened at the neck and showed his shaggy
muscular chest. His fine-featured cunning face looked cheerful; neither in
his attitude nor in his words was his usual wiliness to be seen; he was
cheerful and natural.</p>
<p>‘Shall we finish the bit beyond the shed to-night?’ he asked, wiping
his wet beard.</p>
<p>‘We’ll manage it,’ replied his wife, ‘if only the
weather does not hinder us. The Demkins have not half finished yet,’
she added. ‘Only Ustenka is at work there, wearing herself out.’</p>
<p>‘What can you expect of them?’ said the old man proudly.</p>
<p>‘Here, have a drink, Maryanka dear!’ said the old woman, passing the
jug to the girl. ‘God willing we’ll have enough to pay for the
wedding feast,’ she added.</p>
<p>‘That’s not yet awhile,’ said the cornet with a slight frown.</p>
<p>The girl hung her head.</p>
<p>‘Why shouldn’t we mention it?’ said the old woman. ‘The
affair is settled, and the time is drawing near too.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t make plans beforehand,’ said the cornet. ‘Now we
have the harvest to get in.’</p>
<p>‘Have you seen Lukashka’s new horse?’ asked the old woman.
‘That which Dmitri Andreich Olenin gave him is gone — he’s
exchanged it.’</p>
<p>‘No, I have not; but I spoke with the servant to-day,’ said the
cornet, ‘and he said his master has again received a thousand rubles.’</p>
<p>‘Rolling in riches, in short,’ said the old woman.</p>
<p>The whole family felt cheerful and contented.</p>
<p>The work was progressing successfully. The grapes were more abundant and
finer than they had expected.</p>
<p>After dinner Maryanka threw some grass to the oxen, folded her <i>beshmet</i>
for a pillow, and lay down under the wagon on the juicy down-trodden
grass. She had on only a red kerchief over her head and a faded blue print
smock, yet</p>
<p>she felt unbearably hot. Her face was burning, and she did not know where
to put her feet, her eyes were moist with sleepiness and weariness, her
lips parted involuntarily, and her chest heaved heavily and deeply.</p>
<p>The busy time of year had begun a fortnight ago and the continuous heavy
labour had filled the girl’s life. At dawn she jumped up, washed her
face with cold water, wrapped herself in a shawl, and ran out barefoot to
see to the cattle. Then she hurriedly put on her shoes and her beshmet
and, taking a small bundle of bread, she harnessed the bullocks and drove
away to the vineyards for the whole day. There she cut the grapes and
carried the baskets with only an hour’s interval for rest, and in
the evening she returned to the village, bright and not tired, dragging
the bullocks by a rope or driving them with a long stick. After attending
to the cattle, she took some sunflower seeds in the wide sleeve of her
smock and went to the corner of the street to crack them and have some fun
with the other girls. But as soon as it was dusk she returned home, and
after having supper with her parents and her brother in the dark outhouse,
she went into the hut, healthy and free from care, and climbed onto the
oven, where half drowsing she listened to their lodger’s
conversation. As soon as he went away she would throw herself down on her
bed and sleep soundly and quietly till morning. And so it went on day
after day. She had not seen Lukashka since the day of their betrothal, but
calmly awaited the wedding. She had got used to their lodger and felt his
intent looks with pleasure.</p>
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