Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume VIII).djvu/202

 a child of seven, as I had fancied at first, from her diminutive stature, but a girl of thirteen or fourteen. Her whole person was small and thin, but very neat and graceful, and her pretty little face was strikingly like Kassyan's own, though he was certainly not handsome. There were the same thin features, and the same strange expression, shy and confiding, melancholy and shrewd, and her gestures were the same. Kassyan kept his eyes fixed on her; she took her stand at his side. 'Well, have you picked any mushrooms?' he asked. 'Yes,' she answered with a shy smile. 'Did you find many?'

'Yes.' (She stole a swift look at him and smiled again.) 'Are they white ones?' 'Yes.' 'Show me, show me. (She slipped the basket off her arm and half-lifted the big burdock leaf which covered up the mushrooms.) 'Ah!' said Kassyan, bending down over the basket; 'what splendid ones! Well done, Annushka!' 'She's your daughter, Kassyan, isn't she?' I asked. (Annushka's face flushed faintly.) 'No, well, a relative,' replied Kassyan with affected indifference. 'Come, Annushka, run along,' he added at once, 'run along, and God be with you! And take care.' 'But why should she go on foot?' I interrupted. 'We could take her with us.'