WHO goes there?"
No answer. The watchman sees nothing, but through the roar of
the wind and the trees distinctly hears someone walking along the
avenue ahead of him. A March night, cloudy and foggy, envelopes the
earth, and it seems to the watchman that the earth, the sky, and he
himself with his thoughts are all merged together into something
vast and impenetrably black. He can only grope his way.
"Who goes there?" the watchman repeats, and he begins to fancy
that he hears whispering and smothered laughter. "Who's
there?"
"It's I, friend . . ." answers an old man's voice.
"But who are you?"
"I . . . a traveller."
"What sort of traveller?" the watchman cries angrily, trying
to disguise his terror by shouting. "What the devil do you want
here? You go prowling about the graveyard at night, you
ruffian!"
"You don't say it's a graveyard here?"
"Why, what else? Of course it's the graveyard! Don't you see
it is?"
"O-o-oh . . . Queen of Heaven!" there is a sound of an old man
sighing. "I see nothing, my good soul, nothing. Oh the darkness,
the darkness! You can't see your hand before your face, it is dark,
friend. O-o-oh. . ."
"But who are you?"
"I am a pilgrim, friend, a wandering man."
"The devils, the nightbirds. . . . Nice sort of pilgrims! They
are drunkards . . ." mutters the watchman, reassured by the tone
and sighs of the stranger. "One's tempted to sin by you. They drink
the day away and prowl about at night. But I fancy I heard you were
not alone; it sounded like two or three of you."
"I am alone, friend, alone. Quite alone. O-o-oh our sins. . .
."
The watchman stumbles up against the man and stops.
"How did you get here?" he asks.
"I have lost my way, good man. I was walking to the Mitrievsky
Mill and I lost my way."
"Whew! Is this the road to Mitrievsky Mill? You sheepshead!
For the Mitrievsky Mill you must keep much more to the left,
straight out of the town along the high road. You have been
drinking and have gone a couple of miles out of your way. You must
have had a drop in the town."
"I did, friend . . . Truly I did; I won't hide my sins. But
how am I to go now?"
"Go straight on and on along this avenue till you can go no
farther, and then turn at once to the left and go till you have
crossed the whole graveyard right to the gate. There will be a gate
there. . . . Open it and go with God's blessing. Mind you don't
fall into the ditch. And when you are out of the graveyard you go
all the way by the fields till you come out on the main
road."
"God give you health, friend. May the Queen of Heaven save you
and have mercy on you. You might take me along, good man! Be
merciful! Lead me to the gate."
"As though I had the time to waste! Go by yourself!"
"Be merciful! I'll pray for you. I can't see anything; one
can't see one's hand before one's face, friend. . . . It's so dark,
so dark! Show me the way, sir!"
"As though I had the time to take you about; if I were to play
the nurse to everyone I should never have done."
"For Christ's sake, take me! I can't see, and I am afraid to
go alone through the graveyard. It's terrifying, friend, it's
terrifying; I am afraid, good man."
"There's no getting rid of you," sighs the watchman. "All
right then, come along."
The watchman and the traveller go on together. They walk
shoulder to shoulder in silence. A damp, cutting wind blows
straight into their faces and the unseen trees murmuring and
rustling scatter big drops upon them. . . . The path is almost
entirely covered with puddles.
"There is one thing passes my understanding," says the
watchman after a prolonged silence -- "how you got here. The gate's
locked. Did you climb over the wall? If you did climb over the
wall, that's the last thing you would expect of an old man."
"I don't know, friend, I don't know. I can't say myself how I
got here. It's a visitation. A chastisement of the Lord. Truly a
visitation, the evil one confounded me. So you are a watchman here,
friend?"
"Yes."
"The only one for the whole graveyard?"
There is such a violent gust of wind that both stop for a
minute. Waiting till the violence of the wind abates, the watchman
answers:
"There are three of us, but one is lying ill in a fever and
the other's asleep. He and I take turns about."
"Ah, to be sure, friend. What a wind! The dead must hear it!
It howls like a wild beast! O-o-oh."
"And where do you come from?"
"From a distance, friend. I am from Vologda, a long way off. I
go from one holy place to another and pray for people. Save me and
have mercy upon me, O Lord."
The watchman stops for a minute to light his pipe. He stoops
down behind the traveller's back and lights several matches. The
gleam of the first match lights up for one instant a bit of the
avenue on the right, a white tombstone with an angel, and a dark
cross; the light of the second match, flaring up brightly and
extinguished by the wind, flashes like lightning on the left side,
and from the darkness nothing stands out but the angle of some sort
of trellis; the third match throws light to right and to left,
revealing the white tombstone, the dark cross, and the trellis
round a child's grave.
"The departed sleep; the dear ones sleep!" the stranger
mutters, sighing loudly. "They all sleep alike, rich and poor, wise
and foolish, good and wicked. They are of the same value now. And
they will sleep till the last trump. The Kingdom of Heaven and
peace eternal be theirs."
"Here we are walking along now, but the time will come when we
shall be lying here ourselves," says the watchman.