The sick woman turned towards the window, and began slowly crossing herself, her great eyes fastened on the big village church as the carriage drove by it.
The two carriages stopped together at the station. The sick woman’s husband and the doctor got out of the other carriage and came up to her.
“How do you feel?” asked the doctor, taking her pulse.
“Well, how are you, my dear—not tired?” asked her husband, in French. “Wouldn’t you like to get out?”
Matryosha, gathering up her bundles, squeezed into a corner so as not to be in their way as they talked.
“Just the same,” answered the lady. “I won’t get out.”
Her husband stayed a little while beside the carriage, then went into the posting-station. Matryosha got out of the carriage and ran on tiptoe through the mud to the gates.
“If I am ill, it’s no reason you shouldn’t have your lunch,” the invalid said with a faint smile to the doctor, who was standing at the carriage window.
“None of them care anything about me,” she added to herself, as soon as the doctor had moved with sedate step away from her and run at a trot up the steps of the station-house. “They are all right, so they don’t care. O my God!”
“Well, Edward Ivanovitch,” said her husband, meeting the doctor and rubbing his hands, with a cheery smile. “I’ve ordered the case of wine to be brought in; what do you say to a bottle?”
“I shouldn’t say no,” answered the doctor.