"I do not know, father," he said. "How am I to live now, father?"
The old man closed his eyes and lisped something, as though gathering all his strength, and he once more opened his eyes and said:
"You will get along. With God's aid will you get along." The old man was silent awhile, and he smiled and said:
"Remember, Iván, you must not tell who started the fire. Cover up another man's sin! God will forgive two sins."
And the old man took the taper into both hands, folded them over his heart, heaved a sigh, stretched himself, and died.
Iván did not tell on Gavrílo, and nobody found out how the fire had been started.
And Iván's heart was softened toward Gavrílo, and Gavrílo marvelled at Iván, because he did not tell anybody. At first Gavrílo was afraid of him, but later he got used to him. The peasants stopped quarrelling, and so did their families. While they rebuilt their homes, the two families lived in one house, and when the village was built again, and the farmhouses were built farther apart, Iván and Gavrílo again were neighbours, living in the same block.
And Iván and Gavrílo lived neighbourly together, just as their fathers had lived. Iván Shcherbakóv remembered his father's injunction and God's command to put out the fire in the beginning. And if a person did him some harm, he did not try to have his revenge on the man, but to mend matters; and if a person called him a bad name, he did not try to answer with worse words still, but to teach him not to speak badly. And thus he taught, also the women folk and the children. And Iván Shcherbakóv improved and began to live better than ever.