Vera had no relations but her aunt and her grandfather; her mother had long been dead; her father, an engineer, had died three months before at Kazan, on his way from Siberia. Her grandfather had a big grey beard. He was stout, red-faced, and asthmatic, and walked leaning on a cane and sticking his stomach out. Her aunt, a lady of forty-two, drawn in tightly at the waist and fashionably dressed with sleeves high on the shoulder, evidently tried to look young and was still anxious to be charming; she walked with tiny steps with a wriggle of her spine.
âWill you love us?â she said, embracing Vera, âYou are not proud?â
At her grandfatherâs wish there was a thanksgiving service, then they spent a long while over dinnerâ âand Veraâs new life began. She was given the best room. All the rugs in the house had been put in it, and a great many flowers; and when at night she lay down in her snug, wide, very soft bed and covered herself with a silk quilt that smelt of old clothes long stored away, she laughed with pleasure. Auntie Dasha came in for a minute to wish her good night.
âHere you are home again, thank God,â she said, sitting down on the bed. âAs you see, we get along very well and have everything we want. Thereâs only one thing: your grandfather is in a poor way! A terribly poor way! He is short of breath and he has begun to lose his memory. And you remember how strong, how vigorous, he used to be! There was no doing anything with him.â ââ ⌠In old days, if the servants didnât please him or anything else went wrong, he would jump up at once and shout: âTwenty-five strokes! The birch!â But now he has grown milder and you never hear him. And besides, times are changed, my precious; one maynât beat them nowadays. Of course, they oughtnât to be beaten, but they need looking after.â
âAnd are they beaten now, auntie?â asked Vera.
âThe steward beats them sometimes, but I never do, bless their hearts! And your grandfather sometimes lifts his stick from old habit, but he never beats them.â
Auntie Dasha yawned and crossed herself over her mouth and her right ear.