The Daughter of the Commandant - Page 70/87

"My husband!" rejoined she; "he is not my husband. Never will I be his

wife. I am resolved rather to die, and I shall die if I be not

delivered."

Pugatchef cast a furious glance upon Chvabrine.

"You dared deceive me," cried he. "Do you know, villain, what you

deserve?"

Chvabrine dropped on his knees. Then contempt overpowered in me all

feelings of hatred and revenge. I looked with disgust upon a gentleman

at the feet of a Cossack deserter. Pugatchef allowed himself to be

moved.

"I pardon you this time," he said, to Chvabrine; "but next offence I

will remember this one." Then, addressing Marya, he said to her, gently,

"Come out, pretty one; I give you your liberty. I am the Tzar."

Marya Ivanofna threw a quick look at him, and divined that the murderer

of her parents was before her eyes. She covered her face with her hands,

and fell unconscious.

I was rushing to help her, when my old acquaintance, Polashka, came very

boldly into the room, and took charge of her mistress.

Pugatchef withdrew, and we all three returned to the parlour.

"Well, your lordship," Pugatchef said to me, laughing, "we have

delivered the pretty girl; what do you say to it? Ought we not to send

for the pope and get him to marry his niece? If you like I will be your

marriage godfather, Chvabrine best man; then we will set to and drink

with closed doors."

What I feared came to pass.

No sooner had he heard Pugatchef's proposal than Chvabrine lost his

head.

"Tzar," said he, furiously, "I am guilty, I have lied to you; but

Grineff also deceives you. This young girl is not the pope's niece; she

is the daughter of Ivan Mironoff, who was executed when the fort was

taken."

Pugatchef turned his flashing eyes on me.

"What does all this mean?" cried he, with indignant surprise.

But I made answer boldly-"Chvabrine has told you the truth."

"You had not told me that," rejoined Pugatchef, whose brow had suddenly

darkened.

"But judge yourself," replied I; "could I declare before all your

people that she was Mironoff's daughter? They would have torn her in

pieces, nothing could have saved her."

"Well, you are right," said Pugatchef. "My drunkards would not have

spared the poor girl; my gossip, the pope's wife, did right to deceive

them."

"Listen," I resumed, seeing how well disposed he was towards me, "I do

not know what to call you, nor do I seek to know. But God knows I stand

ready to give my life for what you have done for me. Only do not ask of

me anything opposed to my honour and my conscience as a Christian. You

are my benefactor; end as you have begun. Let me go with the poor orphan

whither God shall direct, and whatever befall and wherever you be we

will pray God every day that He watch over the safety of your soul."