The Luck of Thirteen - BestLightNovel.com
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A pleasant priest with a smooth face and ringlets two feet long greeted us and led us to the little Russian hospital which was fitted into the Abbey, warning us not to bang our heads against the heavy oak beams in the corridors.
The Russians welcomed us heartily, preparing the most wonderful tea, Australian b.u.t.ter, white bread made with flour brought from Russia.
Pavlovitch enjoyed himself immensely. Food was thin in the barracks. But he was very worried about the priest's long ringlets.
"I'd soon cure 'im, a month diggin' de trench!" he murmured.
After tea we examined the church. The interior was one miraculous blue: pictures with blue backgrounds, apostles with blue draperies, blue skies, a wonderful lapis lazuli.
Once the Moslems had overpowered the defenders of the church and had got in, the eyes of some of the saints were picked through the plaster.
Legend runs, however, that while they were desecrating the tomb of Tzar Stephan who founded the church, the tomb of the queen, which lay alongside, exploded with a violent report and terror struck the Turks, who fled.
They showed us the queen's tomb, split from top to bottom. The priests naturally claim a miracle; but Pavlovitch said, "I tink dey verry clever, dey done dat wi' gunpowder."
The Tzar Stephan had wished to build the church of gold and precious stones, but a soothsayer said--
"No, my lord, build it of plain stone, for your empire will be robbed from you, and if it be of gold greedy men will tear it to pieces, but if it be of plain stone it will remain a monument for ever."
So he built it of fine marble. The central pillars were forty feet high, and each cut from a single piece, with grotesque carved capitals. The great screen was wonderfully carved and gilded. Wherever one looked was decoration, almost in excess.
Ringlets invited us to tea with the Russian bishop who was in charge. He was a stout, sweet-mannered little man, who shook his head woefully over the war.
Somehow Pavlovitch discovered that he and the bishop were the same age, forty-eight. We contrasted Pavlovitch's spare athletic frame with the well-fed shape of the bishop, and felt instinctively which was the better Christian. Coffee and slatka were brought in. This slatka is always handed to callers in well-regulated Serbian households. It is jam accompanied by many little spoons and gla.s.ses of water. Each guest dips out a spoonful, licks the spoon, drinks the water, and places his spoon in the gla.s.s. There is also a curious custom with regard to the coffee.
If a guest outstays his welcome, a second cup is brought in and ceremoniously placed before him--but, of course, this hint depends upon how it is done.
"It is Friday," remarked Pavlovitch, regretfully. "Odder days we gits mighty good meal." He was very anxious for us to stay the night so that we should fit in a first-cla.s.s breakfast, but the morrow was the Ipek fair, and we could not miss that.
Night was coming so we hurried off and drove away. The horses went quite fast, as we had made them a present of some barley. We had discovered that since the beginning of the war, when they had been requisitioned by the Montenegrin Government, they had lived on nothing but hay, and the owner, who was driving them, said that they would soon die, and that when they did he would not receive a penny and would be a ruined man. He added pathetically--
"One does not like to see one's beasts die like that, for after all one is fond of them."
We arrived after dark, and ordered supper for three. The inn lady was scandalized.
"But that is a common soldier," she said. "There are many fine folk in the dining-room, arrived to-day. The General--"
So we dined upon the landing.
The next day we got up very early, went down to the dining-room and found it was full of sleeping forms; we had coffee in our room.
We wandered round the market. It was still too early, people were arriving and spreading their wares, men were hanging bright carpets on the white walls. Beggars were everywhere, exhibiting their gains in front of them. If one could understand they seemed to cry like this--
"Ere y'are, the old firm; put your generous money on the real thing. I 'as more misery to the square inch than any other 'as to the square yard."
We found bargaining impossible, as they only spoke Albanian, and we could only get as far as "Sar," how much.
Pavlovitch turned up later and was very helpful. We hurried him to a silver shop which was displaying a round silver boss. He beat them down from sixteen to ten dinars, after which we plunged into a side street filled with women squatted cross-legged behind a collection of everything that an industrious woman who owns sheep can confection.
"I have nothing for thee," said an old woman to Jo, who peered into her basket--Pavlovitch translating.
Jo withdrew a tiny pair of stockings--a marvel of knitting in many coloured patterns.
"What about these?" she said.
"Hast thou children?"
"No; but how much?" said Jo.
The price was four piastres. Jo gave four groschen and the old woman peered anxiously at the money in her palm.
"It is too much," she said.
Pavlovitch explained that somehow four groschen worked out to more than four piastres; but we left her to calculate what fractions of a centime she had gained.
Our old innkeeper looked very truculent when we entered.
"Are you going to lunch here?"
"No; we left word."
"Then you can't stay here."
[Ill.u.s.tration: IN THE BAZAAR OF IPEK.]
[Ill.u.s.tration: STREET COFFEE SELLER IN IPEK.]
We pointed out that her meals were bad and very dear. She retaliated by making a fearful noise, and invited us to go and sleep at the Europe; but we remembered the Archbishop's story and stood firm.
"If you don't leave us in peace we will appeal to the Governor."
"Do, do. Go to the Governor," said the old lady, her little girl, a wry-mouthed charwoman and a little boy whom Jo had noticed stealing our cigarettes. The dog joined in and barked vociferously.
We went to the Governor who was near by. "They don't understand innkeeping here, and she is a drunken old s.l.u.t," he said, and sent for her husband.
We went defiantly again to the Europe for lunch.
Jo had been expressing her wish to Pavlovitch to visit a harem. He came to tell us that it had been arranged, as the chief of the police was a friend of his, and he had asked a rich Moslem to let her visit his wives. The Moslem had graciously a.s.sented, saying that he would do it as a great favour to the chief of the police, and that no "European" woman had ever visited an Ipek harem.
We went down the broad street with its brilliant houses, admiring the gaudy colours of the women's trousers. "What a pity," we said, "that such a word as _loud_ was invented in the English language."
Outside a huge doorway were sitting the chief of police and the wealthy Albanian. We were introduced with great ceremony, and the Moslem, losing no time, took Jo through the doorway into a courtyard. At the end was another door guarded by a responsible-looking Albanian. He stood aside, and she entered another court full of trees and a basket-work hut. She pa.s.sed through the lower story, which was full of grain, and ascended into a beautiful room with a seat built all round it.
It was entirely furnished with carpets. He waved his hand to the seat, called to his wives much as a sportsman summons his dogs, and left.
They came in, three women, simply dressed in chemise and flowered cotton bloomers. Their voices were shaking with excitement, and they were fearfully upset because Jo got up to shake hands with them.
They only spoke Albanian, and a few words of Serb. One had been very beautiful, but her teeth were decayed, another was a healthy-looking young woman, and the third was frankly hideous.
They brought coffee, the chief wife presenting it with her hand across her chest--a polite way of saying--