The Blizzard

Read The Blizzard for Free Online Page A

Book: Read The Blizzard for Free Online
Authors: Vladimir Sorokin­
bandages come off.”
    Irritated and exhausted, the doctor unfastened the rug, descended, and walked around the sled. He leaned over, barely able to distinguish the cracked tip of the runner.
    “Damn it!” he cursed.
    “Uh-huh.” Crouper snuffled.
    “We’ll have to bandage it again.”
    “What fer? We’ll go a coupla versts and it’ll come off again.”
    “We must go on! We absolutely must!” The doctor shook his hat.
    “Stubborn, he is…” Crouper looked at him, scratched his head under his hat, and gazed into the distance:
    “Here’s what I’ll tell ye, yur ’onor. The miller lives near here. We’ll hafta go there. It’ll be easier to fix the runner.”
    “A miller? Where?” asked the doctor, turning all about, seeing nothing.
    “Over yonder, where the window’s lit up,” said Crouper, flapping his mitten.
    The doctor peered into the snowy darkness and was indeed able to make out a faint light.
    “I wouldn’t go to his place for ten rubles of money. But ain’t no choice. Don’t want to catch our death out here.”
    “What’s wrong with him?” the doctor asked distractedly.
    “Cusses. But his wife’s a good woman.”
    “Well, then, let’s go right this instant.”
    “Only let’s walk, ’cause the horses’re too tuckered to pull.”
    “Let’s go!” The doctor headed directly for the light and sank into snow up to his knees.
    “Thataway’s the road!” Crouper pointed.
    Swearing and stumbling in his full-length coat, the doctor reached the utterly invisible road. Crouper strained to direct the sled, but he urged the horses on, walking next to them and holding the steering rod.
    The road snaked along the banks of a frozen river, and the sled crept forward at an agonizing pace. Crouper grew tired and out of breath steering it. The doctor walked behind, giving the back of the seat an occasional push. Snow fell, thicker and thicker. At times the snowfall was so dense the doctor thought they were making circles around the bank of a lake. Now and then, the light ahead vanished completely, and then a twinkle would appear.
    “We just had to run over that pyramid,” thought the doctor, grasping the back of the sled. “We would have been in Dolgoye a long time ago. This Kozma is right—there are so many pointless things in the world … Someone manufactures them, transports them to cities and villages, convinces people to buy them, and makes money on bad taste. And people do buy them, they’re thrilled, they don’t even notice the uselessness, the stupidity of the thing … It was just that sort of idiotic object that caused us so much harm today…”
    Constantly correcting the sled, which kept bearing right, off the road, Crouper thought about the hateful miller, about how he’d already vowed to himself two times that he’d never go near there again. Now here he was once more, and he’d have to have dealings with him.
    “Musta made a weak vow,” he thought. “I vowed on Commemoration I’d never set foot … and now here I am a runnin’ to him for help. If’n the vow was strong enough, nothin’ woulda happened, the angels woulda carried me over that mill on wings. And now—rush, knock, beg … Maybe I shouldn’t make no vows? Like Grandpa said: Don’t do no harm, and don’t make promises…”
    Finally, ahead of them two willows arose, half buried in snowdrifts, and beyond them was the miller’s house with its two lit windows, perched right on the riverbank, almost hanging over the water. Through the snowstorm the frozen waterwheel looked to the doctor like a round staircase leading into the river from the house. The image was so convincing that he didn’t question it but assumed that the staircase was a necessary part of the household, used for something important having to do, most likely, with fishing.
    The sled inched up to the miller’s house.
    A dog began to bark behind the gates. Crouper got down, walked over to the house, and knocked on the lit window of a

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