Yama Aleksandr Kuprin (smart ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Aleksandr Kuprin
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Tamara walked up to him with rapid steps.
âYouâll go this minute to Madameâ ââ ⊠to Magda. Youâll assist her to dressâ âin her own clothesâ âand to wash up, and so forth. And then youâll bring her here. Let the rest of the wenches march to their rooms. Let me see nor hide nor hair of you, or Iâll run all of you into the lockup!â
When Magda cameâ ânot at all frightened or upset, but, on the contrary, as calm as everâ âthe officer arose quickly and, making a low bow, kissed the hand extended to him, while Berkesh drew himself up like a post.
âThereâs a bit of a billâ ââ âŠâ the housekeeper began weakly.
âNo bills of any sort! Silence!â the inordinately zealous Berkesh barked out at her; but the officer squeamishly ordered him to cease.
The housekeeperâs bill was paid not only in full, but with a large pourboire. A chic carriage awaited the officer and the lady at the front entrance. Berkesh assisted both of them into it.
There had been an interesting conversation between Magda and Tamara, who was helping her to get ready.
âSo, Magda, it turns out that youâre no wench at all?â asked Tamara.
Magda smiled:
âI never was that.â
âThat means youâre respectable?â
âNo, my dear. Iâm an enemy of respectability.â
âWell, then, whyâ âwhy did you ever come into such a house? Or werenât there enough men for you when you were free, if youâve such a hankering after them?â
Magda again smiled, with a shading of some hidden sadness:
âAh, Tamara, Tamaraâ âyou wouldnât believe me, for anything, if I were to tell you that Iâm an innocent girl, even right up to now.â
Tamara simply exploded from laughter.
âYou donât say! You took on six or seven men a day in our houseâ âfine innocent girl you are!â
Magdaâs face became serious. She leant toward Tamara, who just then was squatting on her heels, and asked her quietly:
âTamara, youâre a clever girl. Tell me.â ââ ⊠Suppose youâre a young girl, and âinnocent,â as you girls put it.â ââ ⊠And that, now, some low-down skunk has raped you. After that, are you a maid, or arenât you?â
âWhat bosh you ask. No maidâ âof course. Iâd no longer be whole then.â
âWell, and before God, or before a good husband, whoâd understand everything and take pity upon youâ âor even before your own selfâ âwould you be guilty or innocent?â
âWell, nowâ âinnocent, of course.â
âJust so in my case. Well, you would hardly understand meâ ââ âŠâ
Tamara was silent for a while. Then she asked quietly:
âBut this officer? Is he your husband? Your fiancĂ©? Your brother?â
âNone of these. Heâs my comrade.â
âAh, Magdochka, I feel that youâre not lying to me the least wee bit, but I simply canât understand you. Just as though you were some sort of a lilâ natural. That youâre a ladyâ âIâve been feeling that long since. But whyâ âwhy, of your own free will, have you come into our cesspool? I, for instanceâ âIâll open up to youâ âI received an education at one time, even though a superficial one. I still remember two foreign languages. The language I speak here isnât mine, but assumed; I used it in speaking with you on purpose. But Iâm a vagabond, a bird of passageâ ânever do I know whither my soul is flying, nor where it will perch. But you! You! You! Why did you do it?â
Magdaâs face suddenly became stony, cold.
âYes,â said she dryly. âI, too, have long since penetrated your pretence, assumed for the sake of equality in this company.â ââ ⊠Well, now, if you find the matter so interesting. Iâll tell you straight. Iâm a writerâ âI wanted to write up the customs and life of sporting houses, and, in order that my novel might be authentic, I decided to go through it all. Through all!â
Tamara, who was by now finished with her work, straightened up and said:
âGood. I believe in the sincerity of your intentionsâ âbut when it comes to this authoress partâ âno. Your sweep is much too great. But about this conversation of oursâ âI swear I shanât tell anybody.â
âJust as you wish,â said Magda coldly. âThank you.â Then suddenly, as if relenting, she clasped Tamara hard, kissed her ardently, and, in a whisper, said in her ear:
âIâll write you.â
Some eight months passed after these events. The days of Gapon,7 of the All-Russian Strike, of the Little Constitution, came on. In a word, one sniffed revolution in the air. Political raids and arrests were the order of the day all over Russia.
And so, at the dead of a certain night, there burst into the peaceful little domicile of Anna Markovna some gens dâarmes, accompanied by the police. A cordon was thrown around the house. All the guests found in the house were held and politely transferred to the large cabinet, under guard; those sleeping were awakened for this purpose. The house was searched, from garret to cellar. Brochures, proclamations and bombs were being sought. Nothing, of course, was found. The young ladies, by turns, were led into another cabinet, and there the chief of the gens dâarmes, now sternly, now kindly interrogated each one of them concerning Magda: What had she been doing? What had she said? Whom had she seen? Whom did she write letters to? Did she, perhaps, give to any of her mates any brochures, or books?
The young ladies understood nothing of these questions, became confused, turned so red that they sweated, blinked their eyes, and frequently threw themselves at the feet of authority: âMay thunder strike me on the spot if Iâve done a single thingâ âif I killed anybody or stole anything!â ââ âŠâ They were quickly dismissed.
Tamara could have said a great dealâ âespecially about her last talk with Magda. Thus would have acted the majority of prostitutes, in whom a hysterical passion to make themselves stand out somehow, to be marked apart, is excessively developed.
But Tamara answered rather cynically:
âI canât tell you anything about her, mister chief, save that she was a low-down tart and a depraved creature. There wasnât enough men for her in the worldâ âshe had to get
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