Nicolaïeff shook the reins, made a little encouraging sound with his lips, and the wagon went off at a trot.
“We will stop only to feed them,” said the officer, “and then on the road—forward!”
II.
Just as he entered the street of Douvanka, where everything was in ruins, Sub-lieutenant Koseltzoff was stopped by a wagon-train of cannon-balls and shells going towards Sebastopol, which was halted in the middle of the road.
Two infantrymen, seated in the dust on the stones of an overthrown wall, were eating bread and watermelon.
“Are you going far, fellow-countryman?” said one of them, chewing his mouthful. He was speaking to a soldier standing near them with a small knapsack on his shoulder.
“We are going to join our company; we have come from the country,” replied the soldier, turning his eyes from the watermelon and arranging his knapsack. “For three weeks we have been guarding the company’s hay, but now they have summoned everybody, and we don’t know where our regiment is to-day. They tell us that since last week our fellows have been at Korabelnaïa. Do you know anything about it, gentlemen?”
“It is in the city, brother, in the city,” replied an old soldier of the wagon-train, busy cutting with his pocket-knife the white meat of an unripe melon. “We just came from there. What a terrible business, brother!”
“Don’t you hear how he is firing now? No shelter anywhere! It is frightful how many of our men he has killed!” added the speaker, making a gesture, and straightening up his cap.