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Secret of the Night, The
CHAPTER IX - ANNOUCHEA
Gaston Leroux
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       _ "And now it's between us two, Natacha," murmured Rouletabille as
       soon as he was outside. He hailed the first carriage that passed
       and gave the address of the datcha des Iles. When he got in he
       held his head between his hands; his face burned, his jaws were set.
       But by a prodigious effort of his will he resumed almost instantly
       his calm, his self-control. As he went back across the Neva, across
       the bridge where he had felt so elated a little while before, and
       saw the isles again he sighed heavily. "I thought I had got it all
       over with, so far as I was concerned, and now I don't know where it
       will stop." His eyes grew dark for a moment with somber thoughts
       and the vision of the Lady in Black rose before him; then he shook
       his head, filled his pipe, lighted it, dried a tear that had been
       caused doubtless by a little smoke in his eye, and stopped
       sentimentalizing. A quarter of an hour later he gave a true Russian
       nobleman's fist-blow in the back to the coachman as an intimation
       that they had reached the Trebassof villa. A charming picture was
       before him. They were all lunching gayly in the garden, around the
       table in the summer-house. He was astonished, however, at not
       seeing Natacha with them. Boris Mourazoff and Michael Korsakoff
       were there. Rouletabille did not wish to be seen. He made a sign
       to Ermolai, who was passing through the garden and who hurried to
       meet him at the gate.
       "The Barinia," said the reporter, in a low voice and with his finger
       to his lips to warn the faithful attendant to caution.
       In two minutes Matrena Petrovna joined Rouletabille in the lodge.
       "Well, where is Natacha?" he demanded hurriedly as she kissed his
       hands quite as though she had made an idol of him.
       "She has gone away. Yes, out. Oh, I did not keep her. I did not
       try to hold her back. Her expression frightened me, you can
       understand, my little angel. My, you are impatient! What is it
       about? How do we stand? What have you decided? I am your slave.
       Command me. Command me. The keys of the villa?"
       "Yes, give me a key to the veranda; you must have several. I must
       be able to get into the house to-night if it becomes necessary."
       She drew a key from her gown, gave it to the young man and said a
       few words in Russian to Ermolai, to enforce upon him that he must
       obey the little domovoi-doukh in anything, day or night.
       "Now tell me where Natacha has gone."
       "Boris's parents came to see us a little while ago, to inquire after
       the general. They have taken Natacha away with them, as they often
       have done. Natacha went with them readily enough. Little domovoi,
       listen to me, listen to Matrena Petrovna - Anyone would have said
       she was expecting it!"
       "Then she has gone to lunch at their house?"
       "Doubtless, unless they have gone to a cafe. I don't know. Boris's
       father likes to have the family lunch at the Barque when it is fine.
       Calm yourself, little domovoi. What ails you? Bad news, eh? Any
       bad news?"
       "No, no; everything is all right. Quick, the address of Boris's
       family."
       "The house at the corner of La Place St. Isaac and la rue de la
       Poste."
       "Good. Thank you. Adieu."
       He started for the Place St. Isaac, and picked up an interpreter at
       the Grand Morskaia Hotel on the way. It might be useful to have him.
       At the Place St. Isaac he learned the Morazoffs and Natacha Trebassof
       had gone by train for luncheon at Bergalowe, one of the nearby
       stations in Finland.
       "That is all," said he, and added apart to himself, "And perhaps that
       is not true."
       He paid the coachman and the interpreter, and lunched at the
       Brasserie de Vienne nearby. He left there a half-hour later, much
       calmer. He took his way to the Grand Morskaia Hotel, went inside
       and asked the schwitzar:
       "Can you give me the address of Mademoiselle Annouchka?"
       "The singer of the Krestowsky?"
       "That is who I mean."
       "She had luncheon here. She has just gone away with the prince."
       Without any curiosity as to which prince, Rouletabille cursed his
       luck and again asked for her address.
       "Why, she lives in an apartment just across the way."
       Rouletabille, feeling better, crossed the street, followed by the
       interpreter that he had engaged. Across the way he learned on the
       landing of the first floor that Mademoiselle Annouchka was away for
       the day. He descended, still followed by his interpreter, and
       recalling how someone had told him that in Russia it was always
       profitable to be generous, he gave five roubles to the interpreter
       and asked him for some information about Mademoiselle Annouchka's
       life in St. Petersburg. The interpreter whispered:
       "She arrived a week ago, but has not spent a single night in her
       apartment over there."
       He pointed to the house they had just left, and added:
       "Merely her address for the police."
       "Yes, yes," said Rouletabille, "I understand. She sings this
       evening, doesn't she?"
       "Monsieur, it will be a wonderful debut."
       "Yes, yes, I know. Thanks."
       All these frustrations in the things he had undertaken that day
       instead of disheartening him plunged him deep into hard thinking.
       He returned, his hands in his pockets, whistling softly, to the
       Place St. Isaac, walked around the church, keeping an eye on the
       house at the corner, investigated the monument, went inside,
       examined all its details, came out marveling, and finally went once
       again to the residence of the Mourazoffs, was told that they had
       not yet returned from the Finland town, then went and shut himself
       in his room at the hotel, where he smoked a dozen pipes of tobacco.
       He emerged from his cloud of smoke at dinner-time.
       At ten that evening he stepped out of his carriage before the
       Krestowsky. The establishment of Krestowsky, which looms among the
       Isles much as the Aquarium does, is neither a theater, nor a
       music-hall, nor a cafe-concert, nor a restaurant, nor a public
       garden; it is all of these and some other things besides. Summer
       theater, winter theater, open-air theater, hall for spectacles,
       scenic mountain, exercise-ground, diversions of all sorts, garden
       promenades, cafes, restaurants, private dining-rooms, everything is
       combined here that can amuse, charm, lead to the wildest orgies, or
       provide those who never think of sleep till toward three or four
       o'clock of a morning the means to await the dawn with patience. The
       most celebrated companies of the old and the new world play there
       amid an enthusiasm that is steadily maintained by the foresight of
       the managers: Russian and foreign dancers, and above all the French
       chanteuses, the little dolls of the cafes-concerts, so long as they
       are young, bright, and elegantly dressed, may meet their fortune
       there. If there is no such luck, they are sure at least to find
       every evening some old beau, and often some officer, who willingly
       pays twenty-five roubles for the sole pleasure of having a demoiselle
       born on the banks of the Seine for his companion at the supper-table.
       After their turn at the singing, these women display their graces and
       their eager smiles in the promenades of the garden or among the
       tables where the champagne-drinkers sit. The head-liners, naturally,
       are not driven to this wearying perambulation, but can go away to
       their rest if they are so inclined. However, the management is
       appreciative if they accept the invitation of some dignitary of the
       army, of administration, or of finance, who seeks the honor of
       hearing from the chanteuse, in a private room and with a company of
       friends not disposed to melancholy, the Bohemian songs of the Vieux
       Derevnia. They sing, they loll, they talk of Paris, and above all
       they drink. If sometimes the little fete ends rather roughly, it
       is the friendly and affectionate champagne that is to blame, but
       usually the orgies remain quite innocent, of a character that
       certainly might trouble the temperance societies but need not make
       M. le Senateur Berenger feel involved.
       A war whose powder fumes reeked still, a revolution whose last
       defeated growls had not died away at the period of these events,
       had not at all diminished the nightly gayeties of Kretowsky. Many
       of the young men who displayed their uniforms that evening and
       called their "Nichevo" along the brilliantly lighted paths of the
       public gardens, or filled the open-air tables, or drank vodka at
       the buffets, or admired the figures of the wandering soubrettes,
       had come here on the eve of their departure for the war and had
       returned with the same child-like, enchanted smile, the same ideal
       of futile joy, and kissed their passing comrades as gayly as ever.
       Some of them had a sleeve lying limp now, or walked with a crutch,
       or even on a wooden leg, but it was, all the same, "Nichevo!"
       The crowd this evening was denser than ordinarily, because there
       was the chance to hear Annouchka again for the first time since the
       somber days of Moscow. The students were ready to give her an
       ovation, and no one opposed it, because, after all, if she sang now
       it was because the police were willing at last. If the Tsar's
       government had granted her her life, it was not in order to compel
       her to die of hunger. Each earned a livelihood as was possible.
       Annouchka only knew how to sing and dance, and so she must sing
       and dance!
       When Rouletabille entered the Krestowsky Gardens, Annouchka had
       commenced her number, which ended with a tremendous "Roussalka."
       Surrounded by a chorus of male and female dancers in the national
       dress and with red boots, striking tambourines with their fingers,
       then suddenly taking a rigid pose to let the young woman's voice,
       which was of rather ordinary register, come out, Annouchka had
       centered the attention of the immense audience upon herself. All
       the other parts of the establishment were deserted, the tables had
       been removed, and a panting crowd pressed about the open-air theater.
       Rouletabille stood up on his chair at the moment tumultuous "Bravos"
       sounded from a group of students. Annouchka bowed toward them,
       seeming to ignore the rest of the audience, which had not dared
       declare itself yet. She sang the old peasant songs arranged to
       present-day taste, and interspersed them with dances. They had an
       enormous success, because she gave her whole soul to them and sang
       with her voice sometimes caressing, sometimes menacing, and
       sometimes magnificently desperate, giving much significance to
       words which on paper had not aroused the suspicions of the censor.
       The taste of the day was obviously still a taste for the revolution,
       which retained its influence on the banks of the Neva. What she
       was doing was certainly very bold, and apparently she realized how
       audacious she was, because, with great adroitness, she would bring
       out immediately after some dangerous phrase a patriotic couplet
       which everybody was anxious to applaud. She succeeded by such means
       in appealing to all the divergent groups of her audience and secured
       a complete triumph for herself. The students, the revolutionaries,
       the radicals and the cadets acclaimed the singer, glorifying not
       only her art but also and beyond everything else the sister of the
       engineer Volkousky, who had been doomed to perish with her brother
       by the bullets of the Semenovsky regiment. The friends of the
       Court on their side could not forget that it was she who, in front
       of the Kremlin, had struck aside the arm of Constantin Kochkarof,
       ordered by the Central Revolutionary Committee to assassinate the
       Grand Duke Peter Alexandrovitch as he drove up to the governor's
       house in his sleigh. The bomb burst ten feet away, killing
       Constantin Kochkarof himself. It may be that before death came he
       had time to hear Annouchka cry to him, "Wretch! You were told to
       kill the prince, not to assassinate his children." As it happened,
       Peter Alexandrovitch held on his knees the two little princesses,
       seven and eight years old. The Court had wished to recompense her
       for that heroic act. Annouchka had spit at the envoy of the Chief
       of Police who called to speak to her of money. At the Hermitage in
       Moscow, where she sang then, some of her admirers had warned her of
       possible reprisals on the part of the revolutionaries. But the
       revolutionaries gave her assurance at once that she had nothing to
       fear. They approved her act and let her know that they now counted
       on her to kill the Grand Duke some time when he was alone; which
       had made Annouchka laugh. She was an enfant terrible, whose friends
       no one knew, who passed for very wise, and whose lines of intrigue
       were inscrutable. She enjoyed making her hosts in the private
       supper-rooms quake over their meal. One day she had said bluntly
       to one of the most powerful tchinovnicks of Moscow: "You, my old
       friend, you are president of the Black Hundred. Your fate is sealed.
       Yesterday you were condemned to death by the delegates of the Central
       Committee at Presnia. Say your prayers." The man reached for
       champagne. He never finished his glass. The dvornicks carried him
       out stricken with apoplexy. Since the time she saved the little
       grand-duchesses the police had orders to allow her to act and talk
       as she pleased. She had been mixed up in the deepest plots against
       the government. Those who lent the slightest countenance to such
       plottings and were not of the police simply disappeared. Their
       friends dared not even ask for news of them. The only thing not in
       doubt about them was that they were at hard labor somewhere in the
       mines of the Ural Mountains. At the moment of the revolution
       Annouchka had a brother who was an engineer on the Kasan-Moscow line.
       This Volkousky was one of the leaders on the Strike Committee. The
       authorities had an eye on him. The revolution started. He, with
       the help of his sister, accomplished one of those formidable acts
       which will carry their memory as heroes to the farthest posterity.
       Their work accomplished, they were taken by Trebassof's soldiers.
       Both were condemned to death. Volkousky was executed first, and
       the sister was taking her turn when an officer of the government
       arrived on horseback to stop the firing. The Tsar, informed of her
       intended fate, had sent a pardon by telegraph. After that she
       disappeared. She was supposed to have gone on some tour across
       Europe, as was her habit, for she spoke all the languages, like a
       true Bohemian. Now she had reappeared in all her joyous glory at
       Krestowsky. It was certain, however, that she had not forgotten her
       brother. Gossips said that if the government and the police showed
       themselves so long-enduring they found it to their interest to do
       so. The open, apparent life Annouchka led was less troublesome to
       them than her hidden activities would be. The lesser police who
       surrounded the Chief of the St. Petersburg Secret Service, the
       famous Gounsovski, had meaning smiles when the matter was discussed.
       Among them Annouchka had the ignoble nickname, "Stool-pigeon."
       Rouletabille must have been well aware of all these particulars
       concerning Annoucbka, for he betrayed no astonishment at the great
       interest and the strong emotion she aroused. From the corner
       where he was he could see only a bit of the stage, and he was
       standing on tiptoes to see the singer when he felt his coat pulled.
       He turned. It was the jolly advocate, well known for his gastronomic
       feats, Athanase Georgevitch, along with the jolly Imperial councilor,
       Ivan Petrovitch, who motioned him to climb down.
       "Come with us; we have a box."
       Rouletabille did not need urging, and he was soon installed in the
       front of a box where he could see the stage and the public both.
       Just then the curtain fell on the first part of Annouchka's
       performance. The friends were soon rejoined by Thaddeus
       Tchitchnikoff, the great timber-merchant, who came from behind the
       scenes.
       "I have been to see the beautiful Onoto," announced the Lithuanian
       with a great satisfied laugh. "Tell me the news. All the girls
       are sulking over Annouchka's success."
       "Who dragged you into the Onoto's dressing-room then? demanded
       Athanase.
       "Oh, Gounsovski himself, my dear. He is very amateurish, you know."
       "What! do you knock around with Gounsovski?"
       "On my word, I tell you, dear friends, he isn't a bad acquaintance.
       He did me a little service at Bakou last year. A good acquaintance
       in these times of public trouble."
       "You are in the oil business now, are you?"
       "Oh, yes, a little of everything for a livelihood. I have a little
       well down Bakou way, nothing big; and a little house, a very small
       one for my small business."
       "What a monopolist Thaddeus is," declared Athanase Georgevitch,
       hitting him a formidable slap on the thigh with his enormous hand.
       "Gounsovski has come himself to keep an eye on Annouchka's debut,
       eh? Only he goes into Onoto's dressing-room, the rogue."
       "Oh, he doesn't trouble himself. Do you know who he is to have
       supper with? With Annouchka, my dears, and we are invited."
       "How's that?" inquired the jovial councilor.
       "It seems Gounsovski influenced the minister to permit Annouchka's
       performance by declaring he would be responsible for it all. He
       required from Annouchka solely that she have supper with him on the
       evening of her debut."
       "And Annouchka consented?"
       "That was the condition, it seems. For that matter, they say that
       Annouchka and Gounsovski don't get along so badly together.
       Gounsovski has done Annouchka many a good turn. They say he is in
       love with her."
       "He has the air of an umbrella merchant," snorted Athanase
       Georgevitch.
       "Have you seen him at close range?" inquired Ivan.
       "I have dined at his house, though it is nothing to boast of, on
       my word."
       "That is what he said," replied Thaddeus. "When he knew we were
       here together, he said to me: 'Bring him, he is a charming fellow
       who plies a great fork; and bring that dear man Ivan Petrovitch,
       and all your friends.'"
       "Oh, I only dined at his house," grumbled Athanase, "because there
       was a favor he was going to do me."
       "He does services for everybody, that man," observed Ivan Petrovitch.
       "Of course, of course; he ought to," retorted Athanase. "What is
       a chief of Secret Service for if not to do things for everybody?
       For everybody, my dear friends, and a little for himself besides.
       A chief of Secret Service has to be in with everybody, with
       everybody and his father, as La Fontaine says (if you know that
       author), if he wants to hold his place. You know what I mean."
       Athanase laughed loudly, glad of the chance to show how French he
       could be in his allusions, and looked at Rouletabille to see if he
       had been able to catch the tone of the conversation; but Rouletabille
       was too much occupied in watching a profile wrapped in a mantilla
       of black lace, in the Spanish fashion, to repay Athanase's
       performance with a knowing smile.
       "You certainly have naive notions. You think a chief of Secret
       Police should be an ogre," replied the advocate as he nodded here
       and there to his friends.
       "Why, certainly not. He needs to be a sheep in a place like that,
       a thorough sheep. Gounsovski is soft as a sheep. The time I dined
       with him he had mutton streaked with fat. He is just like that. I
       am sure he is mainly layers of fat. When you shake hands you feel
       as though you had grabbed a piece of fat. My word! And when he
       eats he wags his jaw fattishly. His head is like that, too; bald,
       you know, with a cranium like fresh lard. He speaks softly and looks
       at you like a kid looking to its mother for a juicy meal."
       "But - why - it is Natacha!" murmured the lips of the young man.
       "Certainly it is Natacha, Natacha herself," exclaimed Ivan
       Petrovitch, who had used his glasses the better to see whom the
       young French journalist was looking at. "Ah, the dear child!
       she has wanted to see Annouchka for a long time."
       "What, Natacha! So it is. So it is. Natacha! Natacha!" said the
       others. "And with Boris Mourazoff's parents."
       "But Boris is not there," sniggered Thaddeus Tehitchnikoff.
       "Oh, he can't be far away. If he was there we would see Michael
       Korsakoff too. They keep close on each other's heels."
       "How has she happened to leave the general? She said she couldn't
       bear to be away from him."
       "Except to see Annouchka," replied Ivan. "She wanted to see her,
       and talked so about it when I was there that even Feodor Feodorovitch
       was rather scandalized at her and Matrena Petrovna reproved her
       downright rudely. But what a girl wishes the gods bring about.
       That's the way."
       "That's so, I know," put in Athanase. "Ivan Petrovitch is right.
       Natacha hasn't been able to hold herself in since she read that
       Annouchka was going to make her debut at Krestowsky. She said
       she wasn't going to die without having seen the great artist."
       "Her father had almost drawn her away from that crowd," affirmed
       Ivan, "and that was as it should be. She must have fixed up this
       affair with Boris and his parents."
       "Yes, Feodor certainly isn't aware that his daughter's idea was to
       applaud the heroine of Kasan station. She is certainly made of
       stern stuff, my word," said Athanase.
       "Natacha, you must remember, is a student," said Thaddeus, shaking
       his head; "a true student. They have misfortunes like that now in
       so many families. I recall, apropos of what Ivan said just now,
       how today she asked Michael Korsakoff, before me, to let her know
       where Annouchka would sing. More yet, she said she wished to speak
       to that artist if it were possible. Michael frowned on that idea,
       even before me. But Michael couldn't refuse her, any more than the
       others. He can reach Annouchka easier than anyone else. You
       remember it was he who rode hard and arrived in time with the pardon
       for that beautiful witch; she ought not to forget him if she cared
       for her life."
       "Anyone who knows Michael Nikolaievitch knows that he did his duty
       promptly," announced Athanase Georgevitch crisply. "But he would
       not have gone a step further to save Annouchka. Even now he won't
       compromise his career by being seen at the home of a woman who is
       never from under the eyes of Gounsovski's agents and who hasn't been
       nicknamed 'Stool-pigeon' for nothing."
       "Then why do we go to supper tonight with Annouchka?" asked Ivan.
       "That's not the same thing. We are invited by Gounsovski himself.
       Don't forget that, if stories concerning it drift about some day,
       my friends," said Thaddeus.
       "For that matter, Thaddeus, I accept the invitation of the honorable
       chief of our admirable Secret Service because I don't wish to slight
       him. I have dined at his house already. By sitting opposite him at
       a public table here I feel that I return that politeness. What do
       you say to that?"
       "Since you have dined with him, tell us what kind of a man he is
       aside from his fattish qualities," said the curious councilor.
       "So many things are said about him. He certainly seems to be a man
       it is better to stand in with than to fall out with, so I accept
       his invitation. How could you manage to refuse it, anyway?"
       "When he first offered me hospitality," explained the advocate, "I
       didn't even know him. I never had been near him. One day a police
       agent came and invited me to dinner by command - or, at least, I
       understood it wasn't wise to refuse the invitation, as you said,
       Ivan Petrovitch. When I went to his house I thought I was entering
       a fortress, and inside I thought it must be an umbrella shop. There
       were umbrellas everywhere, and goloshes. True, it was a day of
       pouring rain. I was struck by there being no guard with a big
       revolver in the antechamber. He had a little, timid schwitzar
       there, who took my umbrella, murmuring 'barine' and bowing over and
       over again. He conducted me through very ordinary rooms quite
       unguarded to an average sitting-room of a common kind. We dined
       with Madame Gounsovski, who appeared fattish like her husband, and
       three or four men whom I had never seen anywhere. One servant
       waited on us. My word!
       "At dessert Gounsovski took me aside and told me I was unwise to
       'argue that way.' I asked him what he meant by that. He took my
       hands between his fat hands and repeated, 'No, no, it is not wise
       to argue like that.' I couldn't draw anything else out of him.
       For that matter, I understood him, and, you know, since that day
       I have cut out certain side passages unnecessary in my general
       law pleadings that had been giving me a reputation for rather too
       free opinions in the papers. None of that at my age! Ah, the
       great Gounsovski! Over our coffee I asked him if he didn't find
       the country in pretty strenuous times. He replied that he looked
       forward with impatience to the month of May, when he could go for
       a rest to a little property with a small garden that he had bought
       at Asnieres, near Paris. When he spoke of their house in the
       country Madame Gounsovski heaved a sigh of longing for those simple
       country joys. The month of May brought tears to her eyes. Husband
       and wife looked at one another with real tenderness. They had not
       the air of thinking for one second: to-morrow or the day after,
       before our country happiness comes, we may find ourselves stripped
       of everything. No! They were sure of their happy vacation and
       nothing seemed able to disquiet them under their fat. Gounsovski
       has done everybody so many services that no one really wishes him
       ill, poor man. Besides, have you noticed, my dear old friends, that
       no one ever tries to work harm to chiefs of Secret Police? One goes
       after heads of police, prefects of police, ministers, grand-dukes,
       and even higher, but the chiefs of Secret Police are never, never
       attacked. They can promenade tranquilly in the streets or in the
       gardens of Krestowsky or breathe the pure air of the Finland country
       or even the country around Paris. They have done so many little
       favors for this one and that, here and there, that no one wishes to
       do them the least injury. Each person always thinks, too, that
       others have been less well served than he. That is the secret of
       the thing, my friends, that is the secret. What do you say?"
       The others said: "Ah, ah, the good Gounsovski. He knows. He knows.
       Certainly, accept his supper. With Annouchka it will be fun."
       "Messieurs," asked Rouletabille, who continued to make discoveries
       in the audience, "do you know that officer who is seated at the end
       of a row down there in the orchestra seats? See, he is getting up."
       "He? Why, that is Prince Galitch, who was one of the richest lords
       of the North Country. Now he is practically ruined."
       "Thanks, gentlemen; certainly it is he. I know him," said
       Rouletabille, seating himself and mastering his emotion.
       "They say he is a great admirer of Annouchka," hazarded Thaddeus.
       Then he walked away from the box.
       "The prince has been ruined by women," said Athanase Georgevitch,
       who pretended to know the entire chronicle of gallantries in the
       empire.
       "He also has been on good terms with Gounsovski," continued Thaddeus.
       "He passes at court, though, for an unreliable. He once made a
       long visit to Tolstoi."
       "Bah! Gounsovski must have rendered some signal service to that
       imprudent prince," concluded Athanase. "But for yourself, Thaddeus,
       you haven't said what you did with Gounsovski at Bakou."
       (Rouletabille did not lose a word of what was being said around him,
       although he never lost sight of the profile hidden in the black
       mantle nor of Prince Galitch, his personal enemy,* who reappeared,
       it seemed to him, at a very critical moment.)
       ____________________________________________________________________
       * as told in "The Lady In Black."
       ____________________________________________________________________
       "I was returning from Balakani in a drojki," said Thaddeus
       Tchitchnikoff, "and I was drawing near Bakou after having seen the
       debris of my oil shafts that had been burned by the Tartars, when
       I met Gounsovski in the road, who, with two of his friends, found
       themselves badly off with one of the wheels of their carriage broken.
       I stopped. He explained to me that he had a Tartar coachman, and
       that this coachman having seen an Armenian on the road before him,
       could find nothing better to do than run full tilt into the
       Armenian's equipage. He had reached over and taken the reins from
       him, but a wheel of the carriage was broken." (Rouletabille quivered,
       because he caught a glance of communication between Prince Galitch
       and Natacha, who was leaning over the edge of her box.) "So I
       offered to take Gounsovski and his friends into my carriage, and
       we rode all together to Bakou after Gounsovski, who always wishes
       to do a service, as Athanase Georgevitch says, had warned his Tartar
       coachman not to finish the Armenian." (Prince Galitch, at the
       moment the orchestra commenced the introductory music for
       Annouchka's new number, took advantage of all eyes being turned
       toward the rising curtain to pass near Natacha's seat. This time
       he did not look at Natacha, but Rouletabille was sure that his lips
       had moved as he went by her.)
       Thaddeus continued: "It is necessary to explain that at Bakou my
       little house is one of the first before you reach the quay. I had
       some Armenian employees there. When arrived, what do you suppose
       I saw? A file of soldiers with cannon, yes, with a cannon, on my
       word, turned against my house and an officer saying quietly, 'there
       it is. Fire!'" (Rouletabille made yet another discovery - two,
       three discoveries. Near by, standing back of Natacha's seat, was
       a figure not unknown to the young reporter, and there, in one of
       the orchestra chairs, were two other men whose faces he had seen
       that same morning in Koupriane's barracks. Here was where a memory
       for faces stood him in good stead. He saw that he was not the only
       person keeping close watch on Natacha.) "When I heard what the
       officer said," Thaddeus went on, "I nearly dropped out of the
       drojki. I hurried to the police commissioner. He explained the
       affair promptly, and I was quick to understand. During my absence
       one of my Armenian employees had fired at a Tartar who was passing.
       For that matter, he had killed him. The governor was informed and
       had ordered the house to be bombarded, for an example, as had been
       done with several others. I found Gounsovski and told him the
       trouble in two words. He said it wasn't necessary for him to
       interfere in the affair, that I had only to talk to the officer.
       'Give him a good present, a hundred roubles, and he will leave your
       house. I went back to the officer and took him aside; he said he
       wanted to do anything that he could for me, but that the order was
       positive to bombard the house. I reported his answer to Gounsovski,
       who told me: 'Tell him then to turn the muzzle of the cannon the
       other way and bombard the building of the chemist across the way,
       then he can always say that he mistook which house was intended.'
       I did that, and he had them turn the cannon. They bombarded the
       chemist's place, and I got out of the whole thing for the hundred
       roubles. Gounsovski, the good fellow, may be a great lump of fat
       and be like an umbrella merchant, but I have always been grateful
       to him from the bottom of my heart, you can understand, Athanase
       Georgevitch."
       "What reputation has Prince Galitch at the court?" inquired
       Rouletabille all at once.
       "Oh, oh!" laughed the others. "Since he went so openly to visit
       Tolstoi he doesn't go to the court any more."
       "And - his opinions? What are his opinions?"
       "Oh, the opinions of everybody are so mixed nowadays, nobody knows."
       Ivan Petrovitch said, "He passes among some people as very advanced
       and very much compromised."
       "Yet they don't bother him?" inquired Rouletabille.
       "Pooh, pooh," replied the gay Councilor of Empire, "it is rather he
       who tries to mix with them."
       Thaddeus stooped down and said, "They say that he can't be reached
       because of the hold he has over a certain great personage in the
       court, and it would be a scandal - a great scandal."
       "Be quiet, Thaddeus," interrupted Athanase Georgevitch, roughly.
       "It is easy to see that you are lately from the provinces to speak
       so recklessly, but if you go on this way I shall leave."
       "Athanase Georgevitch is right; hang onto your mouth, Thaddeus,"
       counseled Ivan Petrovitch.
       The talkers all grew silent, for the curtain was rising. In the
       audience there were mysterious allusions being made to this second
       number of Annouchka, but no one seemed able to say what it was to
       be, and it was, as a matter of fact, very simple. After the
       whirl-wind of dances and choruses and all the splendor with which
       she had been accompanied the first time, Annouchka appeared as a
       poor Russian peasant in a scene representing the barren steppes,
       and very simply she sank to her knees and recited her evening prayers.
       Annouchka was singularly beautiful. Her aquiline nose with sensitive
       nostrils, the clean-cut outline of her eyebrows, her look that now
       was almost tender, now menacing, always unusual, her pale rounded
       cheeks and the entire expression of her face showed clearly the
       strength of new ideas, spontaneity, deep resolution and, above all,
       passion. The prayer was passionate. She had an admirable contralto
       voice which affected the audience strangely from its very first
       notes. She asked God for daily bread for everyone in the immense
       Russian land, daily bread for the flesh and for the spirit, and she
       stirred the tears of everyone there, to which-ever party they
       belonged. And when, as her last note sped across the desolate
       steppe and she rose and walked toward the miserable hut, frantic
       bravos from a delirious audience told her the prodigious emotions
       she had aroused. Little Rouletabille, who, not understanding the
       words, nevertheless caught the spirit of that prayer, wept.
       Everybody wept. Ivan Petrovitch, Athanase Georgevitch, Thaddeus
       Tchitchnikoff were standing up, stamping their feet and clapping
       their hands like enthusiastic boys. The students, who could be
       easily distinguished by the uniform green edging they wore on their
       coats, uttered insensate cries. And suddenly there rose the first
       strains of the national hymn. There was hesitation at first, a
       wavering. But not for long. Those who had been dreading some
       counter-demonstration realized that no objection could possibly
       be raised to a prayer for the Tsar. All heads uncovered and the
       Bodje Taara Krari mounted, unanimously, toward the stars.
       Through his tears the young reporter never gave up his close watch
       on Natacha. She had half risen, and, sinking back, leaned on the
       edge of the box. She called, time and time again, a name that
       Rouletabille could not hear in the uproar, but that he felt sure
       was "Annouchka! Annouchka!" "The reckless girl," murmured
       Rouletabille, and, profiting by the general excitement, he left the
       box without being noticed. He made his way through the crowd toward
       Natacha, whom he had sought futilely since morning. The audience,
       after clamoring in vain for a repetition of the prayer by Annouchka,
       commenced to disperse, and the reporter was swept along with them
       for a few moments. When he reached the range of boxes he saw that
       Natacha and the family she had been with were gone. He looked on
       all sides without seeing the object of his search and like a madman
       commenced to run through the passages, when a sudden idea struck his
       blood cold. He inquired where the exit for the artists was and as
       soon as it was pointed out, he hurried there. He was not mistaken.
       In the front line of the crowd that waited to see Annouchka come
       out he recognized Natacha, with her head enveloped in the black
       mantle so that none should see her face. Besides, this corner of
       the garden was in a half-gloom. The police barred the way; he could
       not approach as near Natacha as he wished. He set himself to slip
       like a serpent through the crowd. He was not separated from Natacha
       by more than four or five persons when a great jostling commenced.
       Annouchka was coming out. Cries rose: "Annouchka! Annouchka!"
       Rouletabille threw himself on his knees and on all-fours succeeded
       in sticking his head through into the way kept by the police for
       Annouchka's passage. There, wrapped in a great red mantle, his hat
       on his arm, was a man Rouletabille immediately recognized. It was
       Prince Galitch. They were hurrying to escape the impending pressure
       of the crowd. But Annouchka as she passed near Natacha stopped just
       a second - a movement that did not escape Rouletabille - and,
       turning toward her said just the one word, "Caracho." Then she
       passed on. Rouletabille got up and forced his way back, having
       once more lost Natacha. He searched for her. He ran to the
       carriage-way and arrived just in time to see her seated in a
       carriage with the Mourazoff family. The carriage started at once
       in the direction of the datcha des Iles. The young man remained
       standing there, thinking. He made a gesture as though he were
       ready now to let luck take its course. "In the end," said he, "it
       will be better so, perhaps," and then, to himself, "Now to supper,
       my boy."
       He turned in his tracks and soon was established in the glaring
       light of the restaurant. Officers standing, glass in hand, were
       saluting from table to table and waving a thousand compliments with
       grace that was almost feminine.
       He heard his name called joyously, and recognized the voice of Ivan
       Petrovitch. The three boon companions were seated over a bottle of
       champagne resting in its ice-bath and were being served with tiny
       pates while they waited for the supper-hour, which was now near.
       Rouletabille yielded to their invitation readily enough, and
       accompanied them when the head-waiter informed Thaddeus that the
       gentlemen were desired in a private room. They went to the first
       floor and were ushered into a large apartment whose balcony opened
       on the hall of the winter-theater, empty now. But the apartment
       was already occupied. Before a table covered with a shining service
       Gounsovski did the honors.
       He received them like a servant, with his head down, an obsequious
       smile, and his back bent, bowing several times as each of the guests
       were presented to him. Athanase had described him accurately
       enough, a mannikin in fat. Under the vast bent brow one could
       hardly see his eyes, behind the blue glasses that seemed always
       ready to fall as he inclined too far his fat head with its timid
       and yet all-powerful glance. When he spoke in his falsetto voice,
       his chin dropped in a fold over his collar, and he had a steady
       gesture with the thumb and index finger of his right hand to retain
       the glasses from sliding down his short, thick nose.
       Behind him there was the fine, haughty silhouette of Prince Galitch.
       He had been invited by Annouchka, for she had consented to risk this
       supper only in company with three or four of her friends, officers
       who could not be further compromised by this affair, as they were
       already under the eye of the Okrana (Secret Police) despite their
       high birth. Gounsovski had seen them come with a sinister chuckle
       and had lavished upon them his marks of devotion.
       He loved Annouchka. It would have sufficed to have surprised just
       once the jealous glance he sent from beneath his great blue glasses
       when he gazed at the singer to have understood the sentiments that
       actuated him in the presence of the beautiful daughter of the Black
       Land.
       Annouchka was seated, or, rather, she lounged, Oriental fashion,
       on the sofa which ran along the wall behind the table. She paid
       attention to no one. Her attitude was forbidding, even hostile.
       She indifferently allowed her marvelous black hair that fell in two
       tresses over her shoulder to be caressed by the perfumed hands of
       the beautiful Onoto, who had heard her this evening for the first
       time and had thrown herself with enthusiasm into her arms after the
       last number. Onoto was an artist too, and the pique she felt at
       first over Annouchka's success could not last after the emotion
       aroused by the evening prayer before the hut. "Come to supper,"
       Annouchka had said to her.
       "With whom?" inquired the Spanish artist.
       "With Gounsovski."
       "Never."
       "Do come. You will help me pay my debt and perhaps he will be
       useful to you as well. He is useful to everybody."
       Decidedly Onoto did not understand this country, where the worst
       enemies supped together.
       Rouletabille had been monopolized at once by Prince Galitch, who
       took him into a corner and said:
       "What are you doing here?"
       "Do I inconvenience you?" asked the boy.
       The other assumed the amused smile of the great lord.
       "While there is still time," he said, "believe me, you ought to
       start, to quit this country. Haven't you had sufficient notice?"
       "Yes," replied the reporter. "And you can dispense with any further
       notice from this time on."
       He turned his back.
       "Why, it is the little Frenchman from the Trebassof villa," commenced
       the falsetto voice of Gounsovski as he pushed a seat towards the
       young man and begged him to sit between him and Athanase Georgevitch,
       who was already busy with the hors-doeuvres.
       "How do you do, monsieur?" said the beautiful, grave voice of Annouchka.
       Rouletabille saluted.
       "I see that I am in a country of acquaintances," he said, without
       appearing disturbed.
       He addressed a lively compliment to Annouchka, who threw him a kiss.
       "Rouletabille!" cried la belle Onoto. "Why, then, he is the little
       fellow who solved the mystery of the Yellow Room."
       "Himself."
       "What are you doing here?"
       "He came to save the life of General Trebassof," sniggered
       Gounsovski. "He is certainly a brave little young man."
       "The police know everything," said Rouletabille coldly. And he
       asked for champagne, which he never drank.
       The champagne commenced its work. While Thaddeus and the officers
       told each other stories of Bakou or paid compliments to the women,
       Gounsovski, who was through with raillery, leaned toward Rouletabille
       and gave that young man fatherly counsel with great unction.
       "You have undertaken, young man, a noble task and one all the more
       difficult because General Trebassof is condemned not only by his
       enemies but still more by the ignorance of Koupriane. Understand
       me thoroughly: Koupriane is my friend and a man whom I esteem very
       highly. He is good, brave as a warrior, but I wouldn't give a
       kopeck for his police. He has mixed in our affairs lately by
       creating his own secret police, but I don't wish to meddle with that.
       It amuses us. It's the new style, anyway; everybody wants his secret
       police nowadays. And yourself, young man, what, after all, are you
       doing here? Reporting? No. Police work? That is our business
       and your business. I wish you good luck, but I don't expect it.
       Remember that if you need any help I will give it you willingly. I
       love to be of service. And I don't wish any harm to befall you."
       "You are very kind, monsieur," was all Rouletabille replied, and
       he called again for champagne.
       Several times Gounsovski addressed remarks to Annouchka, who
       concerned herself with her meal and had little answer for him.
       "Do you know who applauded you the most this evening?"
       "No," said Annouchka indifferently.
       "The daughter of General Trebassof."
       "Yes, that is true, on my word," cried Ivan Petrovitch.
       "Yes, yes, Natacba was there," joined in the other friends from the
       datcha des Iles.
       "For me, I saw her weep," said Rouletabille, looking at Annouchka
       fixedly.
       But Annouchka replied in an icy tone:
       "I do not know her."
       "She is unlucky in having a father..." Prince Galitch commenced.
       "Prince, no politics, or let me take my leave," clucked Gounsovski.
       "Your health, dear Annouchka."
       "Your health, Gounsovski. But you have no worry about that."
       "Why?" demanded Thaddeus Tchitcbnikoff in equivocal fashion.
       "Because he is too useful to the government," cried Ivan Petrovitch.
       "No," replied Annouchka; "to the revolutionaries."
       All broke out laughing. Gounsovski recovered his slipping glasses
       by his usual quick movement and sniggered softly, insinuatingly,
       like fat boiling in the pot:
       "So they say. And it is my strength."
       "His system is excellent," said the prince. "As he is in with
       everybody, everybody is in with the police, without knowing it."
       "They say ... ah, ah ... they say ..." (Athanase was choking over a
       little piece of toast that he had soaked in his soup) "they say that
       he has driven away all the hooligans and even all the beggars of the
       church of Kasan."
       Thereupon they commenced to tell stories of the hooligans,
       street-thieves who since the recent political troubles had infested
       St. Petersburg and whom nobody, could get rid of without paying
       for it.
       Athanase Georgevitch said:
       "There are hooligans that ought to have existed even if they never
       have. One of them stopped a young girl before Varsovie station.
       The girl, frightened, immediately held out her purse to him, with
       two roubles and fifty kopecks in it. The hooligan took it all.
       'Goodness,' cried she, 'I have nothing now to take my train with.'
       'How much is it?' asked the hooligan. 'Sixty kopecks.' 'Sixty
       kopecks! Why didn't you say so?' And the bandit, hanging onto the
       two roules, returned the fifty-kopeck piece to the trembling child
       and added a ten-kopeck piece out of his own pocket."
       "Something quite as funny happened to me two winters ago, at Moscow,"
       said la belle Onoto. "I had just stepped out of the door when I was
       stopped by a hooligan. 'Give me twenty kopecks,' said the hooligan.
       I was so frightened that I couldn't get my purse open. 'Quicker,'
       said he. Finally I gave him twenty kopecks. 'Now,' said he then,
       'kiss my hand.' And I had to kiss it, because he held his knife in
       the other."
       "Oh, they are quick with their knives," said Thaddeus. "As I was
       leaving Gastinidvor once I was stopped by a hooligan who stuck a
       huge carving-knife under my nose. 'You can have it for a rouble
       and a half,' he said. You can believe that I bought it without any
       haggling. And it was a very good bargain. It was worth at least
       three roubles. Your health, belle Onoto."
       "I always take my revolver when I go out," said Athanase. "It is
       more prudent. I say this before the police. But I would rather be
       arrested by the police than stabbed by the hooligans."
       "There's no place any more to buy revolvers," dedared Ivan
       Petrovitch. "All such places are closed."
       Gounsovski settled his glasses, rubbed his fat hands and said:
       "There are some still at my locksmith's place. The proof is that
       to-day in the little Kaniouche my locksmith, whose name is Smith,
       when into the house of the grocer at the corner and wished to sell
       him a revolver. It was a Browning. 'An arm of the greatest
       reliability,' he said to him, 'which never misses fire and which
       works very easily.' Having pronounced these words, the locksmith
       tried his revolver and lodged a ball in the grocer's lung. The
       grocer is dead, but before he died he bought the revolver. 'You
       are right,' he said to the locksmith; 'it is a terrible weapon.'
       And then he died."
       The others laughed heartily. They thought it very funny. Decidedly
       this great Gounsovski always had a funny story. Who would not like
       to be his friend? Annouchka had deigned to smile. Gounsovski, in
       recognition, extended his hand to her like a mendicant. The young
       woman touched it with the end of her fingers, as if she were placing
       a twenty-kopeck piece in the hand of a hooligan, and withdrew from
       it with disgust. Then the doors opened for the Bohemians. Their
       swarthy troupe soon filled the room. Every evening men and women
       in their native costumes came from old Derevnia, where they lived
       all together in a sort of ancient patriarchal community, with customs
       that had not changed for centuries; they scattered about in the
       places of pleasure, in the fashionable restaurants, where they
       gathered large sums, for it was a fashionable luxury to have them
       sing at the end of suppers, and everyone showered money on them in
       order not to be behind the others. They accompanied on guzlas, on
       castanets, on tambourines, and sang the old airs, doleful and
       languorous, or excitable and breathiess as the flight of the
       earliest nomads in the beginnings of the world.
       When they had entered, those present made place for them, and
       Rouletabille, who for some moments had been showing marks of fatigue
       and of a giddiness natural enough in a young man who isn't in the
       habit of drinking the finest champagnes, profited by the diversion
       to get a corner of the sofa not far from Prince Galitch, who
       occupied the place at Annouchka's right.
       "Look, Rouletabaille is asleep," remarked la belle Onoto.
       "Poor boy!" said Annouchka.
       And, turning toward Gounsovski:
       "Aren't you soon going to get him out of our way? I heard some of
       our brethren the other day speaking in a way that would cause pain
       to those who care about his health."
       "Oh, that," said Gounsovski, shaking his head, "is an affair I have
       nothing to do with. Apply to Koupriane. Your health, belle
       Annouchka."
       But the Bohemians swept some opening chords for their songs, and
       the singers took everybody's attention, everybody excepting Prince
       Galitch and Annouchka, who, half turned toward one another,
       exchanged some words on the edge of all this musical uproar. As
       for Rouletabille, he certainly must have been sleeping soundly not
       to have been waked by all that noise, melodious as it was. It is
       true that he had - apparently - drunk a good deal and, as everyone
       knows, in Russia drink lays out those who can't stand it. When
       the Bohemians had sung three times Gounsovski made a sign that they
       might go to charm other ears, and slipped into the hands of the
       chief of the band a twenty-five rouble note. But Onoto wished to
       give her mite, and a regular collection commenced. Each one threw
       roubles into the plate held out by a little swarthy Bohemian girl
       with crow-black hair, carelessly combed, falling over her forehead,
       her eyes and her face, in so droll a fashion that one would have
       said the little thing was a weeping-willow soaked in ink. The
       plate reached Prince Galitch, who futilely searched his pockets.
       "Bah!" said he, with a lordly air, "I have no money. But here is
       my pocket-book; I will give it to you for a souvenir of me,
       Katharina."
       Thaddeus and Athanase exclaimed at the generosity of the prince,
       but Annouchka said:
       "The prince does as he should, for my friends can never sufficiently
       repay the hospitality that that little thing gave me in her dirty
       hut when I was in hiding, while your famous department was deciding
       what to do about me, my dear Gounsovski."
       "Eh," replied Gounsovski, "I let you know that all you had to do
       was to take a fine apartment in the city."
       Annouchka spat on the ground like a teamster, and Gounsovski from
       yellow turned green.
       "But why did you hide yourself that way, Annouchka?" asked Onoto as
       she caressed the beautiful tresses of the singer.
       "You know I had been condemned to death, and then pardoned. I had
       been able to leave Moscow, and I hadn't any desire to be re-taken
       here and sent to taste the joys of Siberia."
       "But why were you condemned to death?"
       "Why, she doesn't know anything!" exclaimed the others.
       "Good Lord, I'm just back from London and Paris - how should I know
       anything! But to have been condemned to death! That must have
       been amusing."
       "Very amusing," said Annouchka icily. "And if you have a brother
       whom you love, Onoto, think how much more amusing it must be to
       have him shot before you."
       "Oh, my love, forgive me!"
       "So you may know and not give any pain to your Annouchka in the
       future, I will tell you, madame, what happened to our dear friend,"
       said Prince Galitch.
       "We would do better to drive away such terrible memories," ventured
       Gounsovski, lifting his eyelashes behind his glasses, but he bent
       his head as Annouchka sent him a blazing glance.
       "Speak, Galitch."
       The Prince did as she said.
       "Annouchka had a brother, Vlassof, an engineer on the Kasan line,
       whom the Strike Committee had ordered to take out a train as the
       only means of escape for the leaders of the revolutionary troops
       when Trebassof's soldiers, aided by the Semenowsky regiment, had
       become masters of the city. The last resistance took place at the
       station. It was necessary to get started. All the ways were
       guarded by the military. There were soldiers everywhere! Vlassof
       said to his comrades, 'I will save you;' and his comrades saw him
       mount the engine with a woman. That woman was - well, there she
       sits. Vlassof's fireman had been killed the evening before, on a
       barricade; it was Annouchka who took his place. They busied
       themselves and the train started like a shot. On that curved line,
       discovered at once, easy to attack, under a shower of bullets,
       Vlassof developed a speed of ninety versts an hour. He ran the
       indicator up to the explosion point. The lady over there continued
       to pile coal into the furnace. The danger came to be less from the
       military and more from an explosion at any moment. In the midst of
       the balls Vlassof kept his usual coolness. He sped not only with
       the firebox open but with the forced draught. It was a miracle
       that the engine was not smashed against the curve of the embankment.
       But they got past. Not a man was hurt. Only a woman was wounded.
       She got a ball in the chest."
       "There!" cried Annouchka.
       With a magnificent gesture she flung open her white and heaving
       chest, and put her finger on a scar that Gounsovski, whose fat began
       to melt in heavy drops of sweat about his temples, dared not look at.
       "Fifteen days later," continued the prince, "Vlassof entered an inn
       at Lubetszy. He didn't know it was full of soldiers. His face
       never altered. They searched him. They found a revolver and papers
       on him. They knew whom they had to do with. He was a good prize.
       Vlassof was taken to Moscow and condemned to be shot. His sister,
       wounded as she was, learned of his arrest and joined him. 'I do
       not wish,' she said to him, 'to leave you to die alone.' She also
       was condemned. Before the execution the soldiers offered to bandage
       their eyes, but both refused, saying they preferred to meet death
       face to face. The orders were to shoot all the other condemned
       revolutionaries first, then Vlassof, then his sister. It was in
       vain that Vlassof asked to die last. Their comrades in execution
       sank to their knees, bleeding from their death wounds. Vlassof
       embraced his sister and walked to the place of death. There he
       addressed the soldiers: 'Now you have to carry out your duty
       according to the oath you have taken. Fulfill it honestly as I
       have fulfilled mine. Captain, give the order.' The volley
       sounded. Vlassof remained erect, his arms crossed on his breast,
       safe and sound. Not a ball had touched him. The soldiers did not
       wish to fire at him. He had to summon them again to fulfill their
       duty, and obey their chief. Then they fired again, and he fell.
       He looked at his sister with his eyes full of horrible suffering.
       Seeing that he lived, and wishing to appear charitable, the captain,
       upon Annouchka's prayers, approached and cut short his sufferings
       by firing a revolver into his ear. Now it was Annouchka's turn.
       She knelt by the body of her brother, kissed his bloody lips, rose
       and said, 'I am ready.' As the guns were raised, an officer came
       running, bearing the pardon of the Tsar. She did not wish it, and
       she whom they had not bound when she was to die had to be restrained
       when she learned she was to live."
       Prince Galitch, amid the anguished silence of all there, started to
       add some words of comment to his sinister recital, but Annouchka
       interrupted:
       "The story is ended," said she. "Not a word, Prince. If I asked
       you to tell it in all its horror, if I wished you to bring back to
       us the atrocious moment of my brother's death, it is so that
       monsieur" (her fingers pointed to Gounsovski) "shall know well,
       once for all, that if I have submitted for some hours now to this
       promiscuous company that has been imposed upon me, now that I have
       paid the debt by accepting this abominable supper, I have nothing
       more to do with this purveyor of bagnios and of hangman's ropes who
       is here."
       "She is mad," he muttered. "She is mad. What has come over her?
       What has happened? Only to-day she was so, so amiable."
       And he stuttered, desolately, with an embarrassed laugh:
       "Ah, the women, the women! Now what have I done to her?"
       "What have you done to me, wretch? Where are Belachof, Bartowsky
       and Strassof? And Pierre Slutch? All the comrades who swore with
       me to revenge my brother? Where are they? On what gallows did you
       have them hung? What mine have you buried them in? And still you
       follow your slavish task. And my friends, my other friends, the
       poor comrades of my artist life, the inoffensive young men who have
       not committed any other crime than to come to see me too often when
       I was lively, and who believed they could talk freely in my
       dressing-room - where are they? Why have they left me, one by one?
       Why have they disappeared? It is you, wretch, who watched them,
       who spied on them, making me, I haven't any doubt, your horrible
       accomplice, mixing me up in your beastly work, you dog! You knew
       what they call me. You have known it for a long time, and you may
       well laugh over it. But I, I never knew until this evening; I
       never learned until this evening all I owe to you. 'Stool pigeon!
       Stool pigeon!' I! Horror! Ah, you dog, you dog! Your mother,
       when you were brought into the world, your mother ..." Here she
       hurled at him the most offensive insult that a Russian can offer a
       man of that race.
       She trembled and sobbed with rage, spat in fury, and stood up ready
       to go, wrapped in her mantle like a great red flag. She was the
       statue of hate and vengeance. She was horrible and terrible. She
       was beautiful. At the final supreme insult, Gounsovski started
       and rose to his feet as though he had received an actual blow in
       the face. He did not look at Annouchka, but fixed his eyes on
       Prince Galitch. His finger pointed him out:
       "There is the man," he hissed, "who has told you all these fine
       things."
       "Yes, it is I," said the Prince, tranquilly.
       "Caracho!" barked Gounsovski, instantaneously regaining his coolness.
       "Ah, yes, but you'll not touch him," clamored the spirited girl of
       the Black Land; "you are not strong enough for that."
       "I know that monsieur has many friends at court," agreed the chief
       of the Secret Service with an ominous calm. "I 'don't wish ill to
       monsieur. You speak, madame, of the way some of your friends have
       had to be sacrificed. I hope that some day you will be better
       informed, and that you will understand I saved all of them I could."
       "Let us go," muttered Annouchka. "I shall spit in his face."
       "Yes, all I could," replied the other, with his habitual gesture of
       hanging on to his glasses. "And I shall continue to do so. I
       promise you not to say anything more disagreeable to the prince
       than as regards his little friend the Bohemian Katharina, whom he
       has treated so generously just now, doubtless because Boris
       Mourazoff pays her too little for the errands she runs each morning
       to the villa of Krestowsky Ostrow."
       At these words the Prince and Annouchka both changed countenance.
       Their anger rose. Annouchka turned her head as though to arrange
       the folds of her cloak. Galitch contented himself with shrugging
       his shoulders impatiently and murmuring:
       "Still some other abomination that you are concocting, monsieur,
       and that we don't know how to reply to."
       After which he bowed to the supper-party, took Annouchka's arm and
       had her move before him. Gounsovski bowed, almost bent in two.
       When he rose he saw before him the three astounded and horrified
       figures of Thaddeus Tchitchnikoff, Ivan Petrovitch and Athanase
       Georgevitch.
       "Messieurs," he said to them, in a colorless voice which seemed not
       to belong to him, "the time has come for us to part. I need not
       say that we have supped as friends and that, if you wish it to be
       so, we can forget everything that has been said here."
       The three others, frightened, at once protested their discretion.
       He added, roughly this time, "Service of the Tsar," and the three
       stammered, "God save the Tsar!" After which he saw them to the
       door. When the door had closed after them, he said, "My little
       Annouchka, you mustn't reckon without me." He hurried toward the
       sofa, where Rouletabille was lying forgotten, and gave him a tap
       on the shoulder.
       "Come, get up. Don't act as though you were asleep. Not an instant
       to lose. They are going to carry through the Trebassof affair this
       evening."
       Rouletabille was already on his legs.
       "Oh, monsieur," said he, "I didn't want you to tell me that. Thanks
       all the same, and good evening."
       He went out.
       Gounsovski rang. A servant appeared.
       "Tell them they may now open all the rooms on this corridor; I'll
       not hold them any longer." Thus had Gounsovski kept himself
       protected.
       Left alone, the head of the Secret Service wiped his brow and drank
       a great glass of iced water which he emptied at a draught. Then he
       said:
       "Koupriane will have his work cut out for him this evening; I wish
       him good luck. As to them, whatever happens, I wash my hands of
       them."
       And he rubbed his hands. _