The little princess lay supported
by pillows, with a white cap on her head (the pains
had just left her). Strands of her black hair
lay round her inflamed and perspiring cheeks, her charming
rosy mouth with its downy lip was open and she was
smiling joyfully. Prince Andrew entered and paused
facing her at the foot of the sofa on which she was
lying. Her glittering eyes, filled with childlike
fear and excitement, rested on him without changing
their expression. “I love you all and have
done no harm to anyone; why must I suffer so?
Help me!” her look seemed to say. She saw
her husband, but did not realize the significance
of his appearance before her now. Prince Andrew
went round the sofa and kissed her forehead.
“My darling!” he said—a
word he had never used to her before. “God
is merciful….”
She looked at him inquiringly and
with childlike reproach.
“I expected help from you and
I get none, none from you either!” said her
eyes. She was not surprised at his having come;
she did not realize that he had come. His coming
had nothing to do with her sufferings or with their
relief. The pangs began again and Mary Bogdanovna
advised Prince Andrew to leave the room.
The doctor entered. Prince Andrew
went out and, meeting Princess Mary, again joined
her. They began talking in whispers, but their
talk broke off at every moment. They waited and
listened.
“Go, dear,” said Princess Mary.
Prince Andrew went again to his wife
and sat waiting in the room next to hers. A woman
came from the bedroom with a frightened face and became
confused when she saw Prince Andrew. He covered
his face with his hands and remained so for some minutes.
Piteous, helpless, animal moans came through the door.
Prince Andrew got up, went to the door, and tried
to open it. Someone was holding it shut.
“You can’t come in!
You can’t!” said a terrified voice from
within.
He began pacing the room. The
screaming ceased, and a few more seconds went by.
Then suddenly a terrible shriek—it could
not be hers, she could not scream like that—came
from the bedroom. Prince Andrew ran to the door;
the scream ceased and he heard the wail of an infant.
“What have they taken a baby
in there for?” thought Prince Andrew in the
first second. “A baby? What baby…?
Why is there a baby there? Or is the baby born?”
Then suddenly he realized the joyful
significance of that wail; tears choked him, and leaning
his elbows on the window sill be began to cry, sobbing
like a child. The door opened. The doctor
with his shirt sleeves tucked up, without a coat,
pale and with a trembling jaw, came out of the room.
Prince Andrew turned to him, but the doctor gave him
a bewildered look and passed by without a word.
A woman rushed out and seeing Prince Andrew stopped,
hesitating on the threshold. He went into his
wife’s room. She was lying dead, in the
same position he had seen her in five minutes before
and, despite the fixed eyes and the pallor of the
cheeks, the same expression was on her charming childlike
face with its upper lip covered with tiny black hair.
“I love you all, and have done
no harm to anyone; and what have you done to me?”—said
her charming, pathetic, dead face.
In a corner of the room something
red and tiny gave a grunt and squealed in Mary Bogdanovna’s
trembling white hands.
Two hours later Prince Andrew, stepping
softly, went into his father’s room. The
old man already knew everything. He was standing
close to the door and as soon as it opened his rough
old arms closed like a vise round his son’s
neck, and without a word he began to sob like a child.
Three days later the little princess
was buried, and Prince Andrew went up the steps to
where the coffin stood, to give her the farewell kiss.
And there in the coffin was the same face, though
with closed eyes. “Ah, what have you done
to me?” it still seemed to say, and Prince Andrew
felt that something gave way in his soul and that
he was guilty of a sin he could neither remedy nor
forget. He could not weep. The old man too
came up and kissed the waxen little hands that lay
quietly crossed one on the other on her breast, and
to him, too, her face seemed to say: “Ah,
what have you done to me, and why?” And at the
sight the old man turned angrily away.
Another five days passed, and then
the young Prince Nicholas Andreevich was baptized.
The wet nurse supported the coverlet with her while
the priest with a goose feather anointed the boy’s
little red and wrinkled soles and palms.
His grandfather, who was his godfather,
trembling and afraid of dropping him, carried the
infant round the battered tin font and handed him
over to the godmother, Princess Mary. Prince Andrew
sat in another room, faint with fear lest the baby
should be drowned in the font, and awaited the termination
of the ceremony. He looked up joyfully at the
baby when the nurse brought it to him and nodded approval
when she told him that the wax with the baby’s
hair had not sunk in the font but had floated.