“We had a man in ’45 who was wounded in the same place,” said Antonov, when we had put on our caps and again sat down by the fire. “We carried him about with us on a gun for two days—do you remember Shevchenko, Zhdanov—and then we just left him there under a tree.”
At this moment an infantryman with tremendous whiskers and moustaches, carrying a musket and pouch, came up to our fire.
“Give me a light for my pipe, comrades,” said he.
“All right, smoke away: there’s fire enough,” remarked Chikin.
“I suppose it’s about Dargo 19 you are telling, comrade,” said the infantry soldier to Antonov.
“Yes, about Dargo in ’45,” Antonov replied.
The infantryman shook his head, screwed up his eyes, and sat down on his heels near us.