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    The Bridge on the Drina - PDFDrive.com

    Page 25
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      flow for this, but luckily a report of this reached Stambul and he was recalled

      from Bosnia. May all trace of him be abolished! Now this is something of the

      samesort.TheSchwabeswanttohaveregistersofeverything,evenourheads.'

      They all stared straight in front of them and listened to the schoolmaster who

      was well known to prefer recounting long and detailed stories of the past to

      giving his own opinion shortly and clearly on what was taking place in the

      present.

      Asalways,Alihodjawasthefirsttolosepatience.

      'This does not concern the Schwabes' faith, Muderis Effendi; it concerns their

      interests.Theyarenotplayinganddonotwastetheirtimeevenwhentheyare

      sleeping but look well to their own affairs. We cannot see today what all this

      means,butweshallseeitinamonthortwo,orperhapsayear.For,asthelate

      lamented Shemsibeg Branković used to say: "The Schwabes' mines have long

      fuses!"Thisnumberingofhousesandmen,orsoIseeit,isnecessaryforthem

      because of some new tax, or else they are thinking of getting men for forced

      labourorfortheirarmy,orperhapsboth.Ifyouaskmewhatweshoulddo,this

      ismyopinion.Wehavenotgotthearmytoriseatonceinrevolt.ThatGodsees

      andallmenknow.Butwedonothavetoobeyallthatwearecommanded.No

      oneneedrememberhisnumbernortellhisage.Letthemguesswheneachone

      ofuswasborn.Iftheygotoofarandinterferewithourchildrenandourhonour,

      thenweshallnotgivewaybutwilldefendourselves,andthenletitbeasGod

      wills!'

      They went on discussing the unpalatable measures of the authorities for a long

      time, but in the main they were in agreement with what Alihodja had

      recommended: passive resistance. Men concealed their ages or gave false information, making the excuse that they were illiterate. And as for women no

      oneevendaredtoaskaboutthem,forthatwouldhavebeenconsideredadeadly

      insult. Despite all the instructions and threats of the authorities the tablets with the house numbers were nailed upside down or hidden away in places where

      theywereinvisible.Orelsetheyimmediatelywhitewashedtheirhousesand,as

      ifbychance,thehousenumberwaswhitewashedtoo.

      Seeing that the resistance was deep-seated and sincere, though concealed, the

      authoritiesturnedablindeye,avoidinganystrictapplicationofthelawswithall

      theconsequencesanddisputeswhichwouldinevitablyhaveensued.

      Two years passed. The agitation about the census had been forgotten when the

      recruitmentofyoungmen,irrespectiveoffaithandclass,wasactuallyputinto

      force.OpenrebellionbrokeoutinEasternHerzegovina,inwhichnotonlyTurks

      but also Serbs took part. The leaders of the rebels tried to establish ties with

      foreign countries, especially with Turkey, and claimed that the occupation

      authoritieshadgonebeyondthepowersgrantedthemattheBerlinCongressand

      that they had no right to recruit in the occupied districts which still remained

      undernominalTurkishsuzerainty.InBosniatherewasnoorganizedresistance,

      buttherevoltspreadbywayofFočaandGoraždatothebordersoftheVišegrad

      district. Individual insurgents or the remnants of routed bands tried to seek

      refugeintheSanjakorinSerbia,crossingthebridgeatVišegrad.Asalwaysin

      suchcircumstances,inadditiontotherebellion,banditrybegantoflourish.

      Sooncemore,aftersomanyyears,aguardwasmountedonthe kapia. Thoughit

      was winter and heavy snow had fallen, two gendarmes kept watch on

      the kapia day and night. They stopped all unknown or suspected persons

      crossingthebridge,interrogatedthemandinspectedtheirbelongings.

      A fortnight later a detachment of streifkorps appeared in the town and relieved the gendarmes on the kapia. The streifkorps had been organized when the rebellion in Herzegovina had begun to assume serious proportions. They were

      mobile storm troops, picked men equipped for action in difficult terrain, and

      madeupofwellpaidvolunteers.Amongstthemweremenwhohadrespondedto

      the first call-up with the occupation troops and did not want to return to their

      homes,butremainedtoserveinthe streiikorps. Othershadbeensecondedfrom

      the gendarmerie to the new mobile units. Finally, there were also a certain

      numberoflocalinhabitantswhoservedasinformersandguides.

      Throughout that winter, which was neither short nor mild, a guard of

      two streiikorps menkeptwatchonthebridge.Usuallytheguardconsistedofone strangerandonelocalman.Theydidnotbuildablockhouse,astheTurkshad

      done during the Karageorge insurrection in Serbia. There was no killing or

      cuttingoffofheads.Butnonethelessthistime,asalwayswhenthe kapia was

      closed, there were unusual events which left their trace on the town. For hard

      timescannotpasswithoutmisfortuneforsomeone.

      Amongthe streiikorps menwhomountedguardonthe kapia wasayoungman,

      Gregor Fedun, a Ruthenian from Eastern Galicia. This young man was then in

      histwenty-thirdyear,ofgiganticstaturebutchildlikemind,strongasabearbut

      modest as a girl. He had almost completed his military service when his

      regimentwassenttoBosnia.HehadtakenpartinfightingatMaglajandonthe

      Glasinac Mountains and had then spent eighteen months on garrison duty in

      Eastern Bosnia. When his time was up, he had not wanted to go back to his

      GaliciantownofKolomeaandtohisfather'shousewhichwasrichinchildren

      butinlittleelse.HewasinPestwithhisgroupwhenthecallforvolunteersto

      enrolinthe streiikorps wasmade.AsasoldierwhoknewBosniathroughseveral

      months of fighting, Fedun was accepted at once. He was sincerely glad at the

      thought that he was again to see the Bosnian townships and hamlets where he

      hadspentbothhardandpleasantdays,ofwhichhismemoryrecalledthedaysof

      hardship as more beautiful and lively even than the pleasant ones. He melted

      with joy and was filled with pride, imagining the faces of his parents, brothers

      andsisterswhentheyreceivedthefirstsilverflorinswhichhewouldsendthem

      fromhisample streiikorps pay.Aboveallhehadthegoodfortunenottobesent

      intoEasternHerzegovina wherethefighting withtheinsurgents wastiringand

      oftenverydangerous,buttothetownontheDrinawherehisdutiesconsistedof

      patrollingandguard-keeping.

      There he spent the winter, stamping his feet and blowing on his fingers on

      the kapia intheclearfrostynights,whenthestonescrackedinthefrostandthe

      sky paled above the town so that the large autumn stars became tiny, wicked

      little candles. There he awaited the spring and watched its first signs on

      the kapia: that dull, heavy booming of the ice on the Drina which a man feels deepdowninhise
    ntrails,andthatsullensoughingofsomenewwindwhichhas

      howledallnightthroughthenakedforestsonthemountainsclosepressedabove

      thebridge.

      The young man mounted guard in his turn and felt how the spring, with all its

      signsontheearthandonthewaters,wasslowlyenteringintohimalso,flooding

      his whole being and troubling his senses and his thoughts. He kept watch and

      hummed all the Ruthenian songs which were sung in his own country. As he sangitseemedtohim,moreandmoreeveryspringday,asifhewerewaitingfor

      someoneonthatexposedandwindyspot.

      At the beginning of March, headquarters sent an order to the detachment

      guarding the bridge to double their precautions since, according to reliable

      information,thenotoriousbrigandJakovČekrlijahadcrossedfromHerzegovina

      into Bosnia and was now hiding somewhere near Višegrad whence, in all

      likelihood, he would try to reach either the Serbian or the Turkish frontier.

      The streifkorps menonguardweregivenapersonaldescriptionofhim,withthe

      comment that the brigand, though physically small and insignificant, was very

      strong, daring and exceptionally cunning, and had already several times

      succeededinescapingandoutwittingthepatrolsthathadsurroundedhim.

      Fedun had listened to this warning when making his report, and had taken it

      seriously as he did all official communications. But he had considered it to be

      unnecessarilyexaggerated,sincehecouldnotimaginehowanyonecouldcross

      unperceivedthattenpaceswhichconstitutedthewidthofthebridge.Calmand

      unworried he passed several hours, by day and by night, on the kapia. His

      attention was indeed doubled, but it was not taken up with the appearance of

      Jakov,ofwhomtherewasneithersightnorsound,butwiththosecountlesssigns

      andportentsbywhichspringannounceditsarrivalonthe kapia.

      It is not easy to concentrate all one's attention on a single object when one is twenty-threeyearsold,whenone'sbodyisquiveringwithstrengthandlifeand

      when around one, on all sides, spring is burgeoning, shining and filling the air

      withperfume.Thesnowwasmeltingintheravines,theriverranswiftandgrey

      assmokedglass,thewindwhichblewfromthenorth-eastbroughtthebreathof

      snow from the mountains and the first buds to the valleys. All this intoxicated

      anddistractedFedunashepacedoutthespacefromoneterracetotheotheror,

      whenonnightduty,leantagainsttheparapetandhummedhisRutheniansongs

      to the accompaniment of the wind. By day or by night the feeling that he was

      waiting for someone never left him, a feeling tormenting and yet sweet, and

      which seemed to find confirmation in all that was taking place around him, in

      thewaters,theearthandthesky.

      One day about lunchtime a Turkish girl passed the guard. She was of the age

      when Turkish girls, not yet veiled in the heavy feridjah, no longer go with uncovered faces but wrap themselves in a large thin shawl which conceals the

      wholebody,thehairandthehands,chinandforehead,butstillleavesuncovered

      a part of the face: eyes, nose, mouth and cheeks. She was in that short phase betweenchildhoodandwomanhoodwhentheMoslemgirlsshowinnocentlyand

      gailytheirstillchildishandyetwomanlyfeatureswhich,perhapseventhenext

      day,willbecoveredforeverbythe feridjah.

      There was not a living soul on the kapia. Fedun's fellow guard was a certain StevanofPrača,oneofthepeasantsattachedtothe streifkorps. Hewasamanof

      acertainage,bynomeansaversetoplumbrandy,whosatdrowsing,contraryto

      regulations,onthestone sofa.

      Fedun looked at the girl timidly and cautiously. Around her floated her gaily-

      colouredshawl,wavingandshimmeringinthesunlightasifalive,movingwith

      thegustsofwindandinrhythmwiththegirl'space.Hercalmlovelyfacewas

      closely and tightly framed by the stretched weave of the shawl. Her eyes were

      downcast but flickering. So she passed before him and disappeared across the

      bridgeintothemarket.

      Theyoungmanpacedmorebrisklyfromoneterracetotheotherandkeptaneye

      fixedonthemarketplace.Nowitseemedtohimthathereallyhadsomeonefor

      whomtowait.Afterhalfanhour—thenoondaylullwasstillunbrokenonthe

      bridge—theTurkishgirlreturnedfromthemarketandagaincrossedbeforethe

      troubled youth. This time he looked at her a little longer and more boldly, and

      whatwasevenmorewonderfulshetoolookedathim,ashortbutcandidglance,

      withasortofhalf-smile,almostcunninglybutwiththatinnocentcunningwith

      which children get the better of one another at their games. Then she swayed

      awayagain,movingSlowlybutnonethelessvanishingquicklyfromhissight,

      with a thousand bends and movements of the wide shawl wrapped about her

      young but sturdy figure. The oriental design and lively colours of that shawl

      couldlongbeseenbetweenthehousesonthefartherbank.

      Onlythendidtheyoungmanwakefromhisreverie.Hestoodinthesameplace

      and in the same position as he had been at the moment when she had passed

      before him. With a start he fingered his rifle and looked around him with the

      sensationofamanwhohasletsliphisopportunity.Stevanwasstilldozinginthe

      deceptiveMarchsun.Itseemedtotheyoungmanthatbothofthemhadinsome

      way failed in their duty and that a whole army platoon could have passed by

      them without him being able to say how many of them there were, or what

      significancetheymighthavehadforhimselforforothers.Ashamedofhimself,

      hewokeStevaninexaggeratedzealandtheybothremainedonguarduntiltheir

      reliefarrived.

      Allthatday,bothwhenhewasoffdutyandwhilehewasmountingguard,the

      pictureoftheyoungTurkishgirlpassedlikeavisioncountlesstimesthroughhis

      mind.Nextday,onceagainaboutnoonwhentherewereveryfewpeopleonthe

      bridge, she again crossed. Fedun again saw that face framed in the brightly-

      colouredshawl.Allwasasithadbeenthedaybefore.Onlytheirglanceswere

      longer, livelier and bolder, almost as if they were playing a game together.

      Stevanwasagaindrowsingonthestonebenchandlater,ashealwaysdid,swore

      thathehadnotbeenasleepandthatevenwhenhewasathomeinbedhecould

      notcloseaneye.Onthewaybackthegirlseemedalmostreadytostop,looked

      the streifkorps boystraightintheeyeswhilehemutteredacoupleofvagueand

      unimportantwords,feelingashedidsothathislegsfailedhimthroughemotion

      andforgettingcompletelywherehewas.

      Onlyindreamsdowedaresomuch.Whenthegirlwasoncemorelosttosight

      onthefartherbanktheyoungmanshiveredwithfright.Itwasincrediblethata

      young Turkish girl should think of looking at an Austrian soldier. Such an

      un
    heard-ofandunprecedentedthingcouldonlyhappenindreams,indreamsor

      in spring on the kapia. He knew very well that nothing in this land or in his positionwasasscandalousandasdangerousastotouchaMoslemwoman.They

      hadtoldhimthatwhenhehadbeeninthearmyandagaininthe streifkorps. The

      punishmentforsuchdaringwasaheavyone.Therehadbeensomewhohadpaid

      with their lives at the hands of the insulted and infuriated Turks. All that he

      knew,andmostsincerelydesiredtokeeptheordersandregulations,butnonethe

      lessheactedcontrarytothem.Themisfortuneofunluckymenliesinjustthis,

      that those things which for them are impossible and forbidden become in a

      momenteasyandattainable,oratleastappearso.Yetwhenoncesuchthingsare

      firmlyfixedintheirdesirestheyseemonceagainastheywere,unattainableand

      forbidden, with all the consequences that they have for those who, despite

      everything,stillattemptthem.

      On the third day too, about noon, the Turkish girl appeared. And as it is in

      dreamsalltookplaceashewouldhavewished,likeauniquerealitytowhichall

      else was subordinate. Stevan was again drowsing, convinced and always ready

      to convince others that he had not closed an eye; there were no passers-by on

      the kapia. The young man spoke again, muttering a few words, and the girl

      slowedherpaceandreplied,equallytimidlyandvaguely.

      The dangerous and incredible game went on. On the fourth day the girl in

      passing, choosing a moment when there was no one on the kapia, asked in a whisperwhenhewouldnextbeonguard.Hetoldherthathewouldbeonduty

      onthe kapia againatdusk.

      'Iwillbringmyoldgrandmothertothemarketplace,wheresheistospendthe

      night,andIwillreturnalone,'whisperedthegirlwithoutstoppingorturningher

      head,butdartingaprovocativeandeloquentglanceathim.Andineachofthose

      veryordinarywordswasthehiddenjoythatshewouldsoonseehimagain.

      Six hours later Fedun was once more on the kapia with his sleepy comrade.

      After the rain a chill twilight had fallen which seemed to him full of promise.

     


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