The squadron crossed the bridge and passed
out of range of the enemy’s guns without losing a single man. It was followed
by the second squadron, and the Cossacks last of all crossed, leaving the
further side of the river clear.
The two squadrons of the Pavlograd
regiment, after crossing the bridge, rode one after the other up the hill.
Their colonel, Karl Bogdanitch Schubert, had joined Denisov’s squadron, and was
riding at a walking pace not far from Rostov ,
taking no notice of him, though this was the first time they had met since the
incident in connection with Telyanin. Rostov ,
feeling himself at the front in the power of the man towards whom be now
admitted that he had been to blame, never took his eyes off the athletic back,
and flaxen head and red neck of the colonel. It seemed to Rostov at one time that Bogdanitch was only
feigning inattention, and that his whole aim was now to test the ensign’s
pluck; and he drew himself up and looked about him gaily. Then he fancied that
Bogdanitch was riding close by him on purpose to show off his own valour. Then
the thought struck him that his enemy was now sending the squadron to a
hopeless attack on purpose to punish him, Rostov .
Then he dreamed of how after the attack he would go up to him as he lay
wounded, and magnanimously hold out his hand in reconciliation. The
high-shouldered figure of Zherkov, who was known to the Pavlograd hussars, as
he had not long before left their regiment, rode up to the colonel. After
Zherkov had been dismissed from the staff of the commander-in-chief, he had not
remained in the regiment, saying that he was not such a fool as to go to hard
labour at the front when he could get more pay for doing nothing on the staff,
and he had succeeded in getting appointed an orderly on the staff of Prince
Bagration. He rode up to his old colonel with an order from the commander of
the rear guard.
“Colonel,” he
said, with his gloomy seriousness, addressing Rostov’s enemy, and looking round
at his comrades, “there’s an order to go back and burn the bridge.”
“An order, who
to?” asked the colonel grimly.
“Well, I don’t
know, colonel, who to,” answered the cornet, seriously, “only the prince
commanded me: ‘Ride and tell the colonel the hussars are to make haste back and
burn the bridge.’ ”
Zherkov was followed by an officer of the
suite, who rode up to the colonel with the same command. After the officer of
the suite the stout figure of Nesvitsky was seen riding up on a Cossack’s
horse, which had some trouble to gallop with him.
“Why,
colonel,” he shouted, while still galloping towards him, “I told you to burn
the bridge, and now some one’s got it wrong; they’re all frantic over there,
there’s no making out anything.”
The colonel in a leisurely way stopped the
regiment and turned to Nesvitsky.
“You told me
about burning materials,” he said; “but about burning it, you never said a
word.”
“Why, my good
man,” said Nesvitsky, as he halted, taking off his forage-cap and passing his
plump hand over his hair, which was drenched with sweat, “what need to say the
bridge was to be burnt when you put burning materials to it?”
“I’m not your
‘good man,’ M. le staff-officer, and you never told me to set fire to the
bridge! I know my duty, and it’s my habit to carry out my orders strictly. You
said the bridge will be burnt, but who was going to burn it I couldn’t tell.”
“Well, that’s
always the way,” said Nesvitsky, with a wave of his arm. “How do you come
here?” he added, addressing Zherkov.
没有评论:
发表评论