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    Chapter V. My Elder Brother - Page 2

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    asked Woloda, chancing to enter the room at that moment and at once perceiving the disorder which I had occasioned in the orderly arrangement of the treasures on his table. "And where is that smelling bottle? Perhaps you--?"

    "I let it fall, and it smashed to pieces; but what does that matter?"

    "Well, please do me the favour never to dare to touch my things again," he said as he gathered up the broken fragments and looked at them vexedly.

    "And will you please do me the favour never to order me to do anything whatever," I retorted. "When a thing's broken, it's broken, and there is no more to be said." Then I smiled, though I hardly felt like smiling.

    "Oh, it may mean nothing to you, but to me it means a good deal," said Woloda, shrugging his shoulders (a habit he had caught from Papa). "First of all you go and break my things, and then you laugh. What a nuisance a little boy can be!"

    "Little boy, indeed? Then you, I suppose, are a man, and ever so wise?"

    "I do not intend to quarrel with you," said Woloda, giving me a slight push. "Go away."

    "Don't you push me!"

    "Go away."

    "I say again--don't you push me!"

    Woloda took me by the hand and tried to drag me away from the table, but I was excited to the last degree, and gave the table such a push with my foot that I upset the whole concern, and brought china and crystal ornaments and everything else with a crash to the floor.

    "You disgusting little brute!" exclaimed Woloda, trying to save some of his falling treasures.

    "At last all is over between us," I thought to myself as I strode from the room. "We are separated now for ever."


    It was not until evening that we again exchanged a word. Yet I felt guilty, and was afraid to look at him, and remained at a loose end all day.

    Woloda, on the contrary, did his lessons as diligently as ever, and passed the time after luncheon in talking and laughing with the girls. As soon, again, as afternoon lessons were over I left the room, for it would have been terribly embarrassing for me to be alone with my brother. When, too, the evening class in history was ended I took my notebook and moved towards the door. Just as I passed Woloda, I pouted and pulled an angry face, though in reality I should have liked to have made my peace with him. At the same moment he lifted his head, and with a barely perceptible and good-humouredly satirical smile looked me full in the face. Our eyes met, and I saw that he understood me, while he, for his part, saw that I knew that he understood me; yet a feeling stronger than myself obliged me to turn away from him.

    "Nicolinka," he said in a perfectly simple and anything but mock- pathetic way, "you have
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