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<h2> CHAPTER X BAIKAL AND ANGARA </h2>
<p>LAKE BAIKAL is situated seventeen hundred feet above the level of the sea.
Its length is about six hundred miles, its breadth seventy. Its depth is
not known. Madame de Bourboulon states that, according to the boatmen, it
likes to be spoken of as “Madam Sea.” If it is called “Sir Lake,” it
immediately lashes itself into fury. However, it is reported and believed
by the Siberians that a Russian is never drowned in it.</p>
<p>This immense basin of fresh water, fed by more than three hundred rivers,
is surrounded by magnificent volcanic mountains. It has no other outlet
than the Angara, which after passing Irkutsk throws itself into the
Yenisei, a little above the town of Yeniseisk. As to the mountains which
encase it, they form a branch of the Toungouzes, and are derived from the
vast system of the Altai.</p>
<p>In this territory, subject to peculiar climatical conditions, the autumn
appears to be absorbed in the precocious winter. It was now the beginning
of October. The sun set at five o’clock in the evening, and during the
long nights the temperature fell to zero. The first snows, which would
last till summer, already whitened the summits of the neighboring hills.
During the Siberian winter this inland sea is frozen over to a thickness
of several feet, and is crossed by the sleighs of caravans.</p>
<p>Either because there are people who are so wanting in politeness as to
call it “Sir Lake,” or for some more meteorological reason, Lake Baikal is
subject to violent tempests. Its waves, short like those of all inland
seas, are much feared by the rafts, prahms, and steamboats, which furrow
it during the summer.</p>
<p>It was the southwest point of the lake which Michael had now reached,
carrying Nadia, whose whole life, so to speak, was concentrated in her
eyes. But what could these two expect, in this wild region, if it was not
to die of exhaustion and famine? And yet, what remained of the long
journey of four thousand miles for the Czar’s courier to reach his end?
Nothing but forty miles on the shore of the lake up to the mouth of the
Angara, and sixty miles from the mouth of the Angara to Irkutsk; in all, a
hundred miles, or three days’ journey for a strong man, even on foot.</p>
<p>Could Michael Strogoff still be that man?</p>
<p>Heaven, no doubt, did not wish to put him to this trial. The fatality
which had hitherto pursued his steps seemed for a time to spare him. This
end of the Baikal, this part of the steppe, which he believed to be a
desert, which it usually is, was not so now. About fifty people were
collected at the angle formed by the end of the lake.</p>
<p>Nadia immediately caught sight of this group, when Michael, carrying her
in his arms, issued from the mountain pass. The girl feared for a moment
that it was a Tartar detachment, sent to beat the shores of the Baikal, in
which case flight would have been impossible to them both. But Nadia was
soon reassured.</p>
<p>“Russians!” she exclaimed. And with this last effort, her eyes closed and
her head fell on Michael’s breast.</p>
<p>But they had been seen, and some of these Russians, running to them, led
the blind man and the girl to a little point at which was moored a raft.</p>
<p>The raft was just going to start. These Russians were fugitives of
different conditions, whom the same interest had united at Lake Baikal.
Driven back by the Tartar scouts, they hoped to obtain a refuge at
Irkutsk, but not being able to get there by land, the invaders having
occupied both banks of the Angara, they hoped to reach it by descending
the river which flows through the town.</p>
<p>Their plan made Michael’s heart leap; a last chance was before him, but he
had strength to conceal this, wishing to keep his incognito more strictly
than ever.</p>
<p>The fugitives’ plan was very simple. A current in the lake runs along by
the upper bank to the mouth of the Angara; this current they hoped to
utilize, and with its assistance to reach the outlet of Lake Baikal. From
this point to Irkutsk, the rapid waters of the river would bear them along
at a rate of eight miles an hour. In a day and a half they might hope to
be in sight of the town.</p>
<p>No kind of boat was to be found; they had been obliged to make one; a
raft, or rather a float of wood, similar to those which usually are
drifted down Siberian rivers, was constructed. A forest of firs, growing
on the bank, had supplied the necessary materials; the trunks, fastened
together with osiers, made a platform on which a hundred people could have
easily found room.</p>
<p>On board this raft Michael and Nadia were taken. The girl had returned to
herself; some food was given to her as well as to her companion. Then,
lying on a bed of leaves, she soon fell into a deep sleep.</p>
<p>To those who questioned him, Michael Strogoff said nothing of what had
taken place at Tomsk. He gave himself out as an inhabitant of Krasnoiarsk,
who had not been able to get to Irkutsk before the Emir’s troops arrived
on the left bank of the Dinka, and he added that, very probably, the bulk
of the Tartar forces had taken up a position before the Siberian capital.</p>
<p>There was not a moment to be lost; besides, the cold was becoming more and
more severe. During the night the temperature fell below zero; ice was
already forming on the surface of the Baikal. Although the raft managed to
pass easily over the lake, it might not be so easy between the banks of
the Angara, should pieces of ice be found to block up its course.</p>
<p>At eight in the evening the moorings were cast off, and the raft drifted
in the current along the shore. It was steered by means of long poles,
under the management of several muscular moujiks. An old Baikal boatman
took command of the raft. He was a man of sixty-five, browned by the sun,
and lake breezes. A thick white beard flowed over his chest; a fur cap
covered his head; his aspect was grave and austere. His large great-coat,
fastened in at the waist, reached down to his heels. This taciturn old
fellow was seated in the stern, and issued his commands by gestures.
Besides, the chief work consisted in keeping the raft in the current,
which ran along the shore, without drifting out into the open.</p>
<p>It has been already said that Russians of all conditions had found a place
on the raft. Indeed, to the poor moujiks, the women, old men, and
children, were joined two or three pilgrims, surprised on their journey by
the invasion; a few monks, and a priest. The pilgrims carried a staff, a
gourd hung at the belt, and they chanted psalms in a plaintive voice: one
came from the Ukraine, another from the Yellow sea, and a third from the
Finland provinces. This last, who was an aged man, carried at his waist a
little padlocked collecting-box, as if it had been hung at a church door.
Of all that he collected during his long and fatiguing pilgrimage, nothing
was for himself; he did not even possess the key of the box, which would
only be opened on his return.</p>
<p>The monks came from the North of the Empire. Three months before they had
left the town of Archangel. They had visited the sacred islands near the
coast of Carelia, the convent of Solovetsk, the convent of Troitsa, those
of Saint Antony and Saint Theodosia, at Kiev, that of Kazan, as well as
the church of the Old Believers, and they were now on their way to
Irkutsk, wearing the robe, the cowl, and the clothes of serge.</p>
<p>As to the papa, or priest, he was a plain village pastor, one of the six
hundred thousand popular pastors which the Russian Empire contains. He was
clothed as miserably as the moujiks, not being above them in social
position; in fact, laboring like a peasant on his plot of ground;
baptising, marrying, burying. He had been able to protect his wife and
children from the brutality of the Tartars by sending them away into the
Northern provinces. He himself had stayed in his parish up to the last
moment; then he was obliged to fly, and, the Irkutsk road being stopped,
had come to Lake Baikal.</p>
<p>These priests, grouped in the forward part of the raft, prayed at regular
intervals, raising their voices in the silent night, and at the end of
each sentence of their prayer, the “Slava Bogu,” Glory to God! issued from
their lips.</p>
<p>No incident took place during the night. Nadia remained in a sort of
stupor, and Michael watched beside her; sleep only overtook him at long
intervals, and even then his brain did not rest. At break of day, the
raft, delayed by a strong breeze, which counteracted the course of the
current, was still forty versts from the mouth of the Angara. It seemed
probable that the fugitives could not reach it before three or four
o’clock in the evening. This did not trouble them; on the contrary, for
they would then descend the river during the night, and the darkness would
also favor their entrance into Irkutsk.</p>
<p>The only anxiety exhibited at times by the old boatman was concerning the
formation of ice on the surface of the water. The night had been
excessively cold; pieces of ice could be seen drifting towards the West.
Nothing was to be dreaded from these, since they could not drift into the
Angara, having already passed the mouth; but pieces from the Eastern end
of the lake might be drawn by the current between the banks of the river;
this would cause difficulty, possibly delay, and perhaps even an
insurmountable obstacle which would stop the raft.</p>
<p>Michael therefore took immense interest in ascertaining what was the state
of the lake, and whether any large number of ice blocks appeared. Nadia
being now awake, he questioned her often, and she gave him an account of
all that was going on.</p>
<p>Whilst the blocks were thus drifting, curious phenomena were taking place
on the surface of the Baikal. Magnificent jets, from springs of boiling
water, shot up from some of those artesian wells which Nature has bored in
the very bed of the lake. These jets rose to a great height and spread out
in vapor, which was illuminated by the solar rays, and almost immediately
condensed by the cold. This curious sight would have assuredly amazed a
tourist traveling in peaceful times on this Siberian sea.</p>
<p>At four in the evening, the mouth of the Angara was signaled by the old
boatman, between the high granite rocks of the shore. On the right bank
could be seen the little port of Livenitchnaia, its church, and its few
houses built on the bank. But the serious thing was that the ice blocks
from the East were already drifting between the banks of the Angara, and
consequently were descending towards Irkutsk. However, their number was
not yet great enough to obstruct the course of the raft, nor the cold
great enough to increase their number.</p>
<p>The raft arrived at the little port and there stopped. The old boatman
wished to put into harbor for an hour, in order to make some repairs. The
trunks threatened to separate, and it was important to fasten them more
securely together to resist the rapid current of the Angara.</p>
<p>The old boatman did not expect to receive any fresh fugitives at
Livenitchnaia, and yet, the moment the raft touched, two passengers,
issuing from a deserted house, ran as fast as they could towards the
beach.</p>
<p>Nadia seated on the raft, was abstractedly gazing at the shore. A cry was
about to escape her. She seized Michael’s hand, who at that moment raised
his head.</p>
<p>“What is the matter, Nadia?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Our two traveling companions, Michael.”</p>
<p>“The Frenchman and the Englishman whom we met in the defiles of the Ural?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>Michael started, for the strict incognito which he wished to keep ran a
risk of being betrayed. Indeed, it was no longer as Nicholas Korpanoff
that Jolivet and Blount would now see him, but as the true Michael
Strogoff, Courier of the Czar. The two correspondents had already met him
twice since their separation at the Ichim post-house—the first time
at the Zabediero camp, when he laid open Ivan Ogareff’s face with the
knout; the second time at Tomsk, when he was condemned by the Emir. They
therefore knew who he was and what depended on him.</p>
<p>Michael Strogoff rapidly made up his mind. “Nadia,” said he, “when they
step on board, ask them to come to me!”</p>
<p>It was, in fact, Blount and Jolivet, whom the course of events had brought
to the port of Livenitchnaia, as it had brought Michael Strogoff. As we
know, after having been present at the entry of the Tartars into Tomsk,
they had departed before the savage execution which terminated the fête.
They had therefore never suspected that their former traveling companion
had not been put to death, but blinded by order of the Emir.</p>
<p>Having procured horses they had left Tomsk the same evening, with the
fixed determination of henceforward dating their letters from the Russian
camp of Eastern Siberia. They proceeded by forced marches towards Irkutsk.
They hoped to distance Feofar-Khan, and would certainly have done so, had
it not been for the unexpected apparition of the third column, come from
the South, up the valley of the Yenisei. They had been cut off, as had
been Michael, before being able even to reach the Dinka, and had been
obliged to go back to Lake Baikal.</p>
<p>They had been in the place for three days in much perplexity, when the
raft arrived. The fugitives’ plan was explained to them. There was
certainly a chance that they might be able to pass under cover of the
night, and penetrate into Irkutsk. They resolved to make the attempt.</p>
<p>Alcide directly communicated with the old boatman, and asked a passage for
himself and his companion, offering to pay anything he demanded, whatever
it might be.</p>
<p>“No one pays here,” replied the old man gravely; “every one risks his
life, that is all!”</p>
<p>The two correspondents came on board, and Nadia saw them take their places
in the forepart of the raft. Harry Blount was still the reserved
Englishman, who had scarcely addressed a word to her during the whole
passage over the Ural Mountains. Alcide Jolivet seemed to be rather more
grave than usual, and it may be acknowledged that his gravity was
justified by the circumstances.</p>
<p>Jolivet had, as has been said, taken his seat on the raft, when he felt a
hand laid on his arm. Turning, he recognized Nadia, the sister of the man
who was no longer Nicholas Korpanoff, but Michael Strogoff, Courier of the
Czar. He was about to make an exclamation of surprise when he saw the
young girl lay her finger on her lips.</p>
<p>“Come,” said Nadia. And with a careless air, Alcide rose and followed her,
making a sign to Blount to accompany him.</p>
<p>But if the surprise of the correspondents had been great at meeting Nadia
on the raft it was boundless when they perceived Michael Strogoff, whom
they had believed to be no longer living.</p>
<p>Michael had not moved at their approach. Jolivet turned towards the girl.
“He does not see you, gentlemen,” said Nadia. “The Tartars have burnt out
his eyes! My poor brother is blind!”</p>
<p>A feeling of lively compassion exhibited itself on the faces of Blount and
his companion. In a moment they were seated beside Michael, pressing his
hand and waiting until he spoke to them.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen,” said Michael, in a low voice, “you ought not to know who I
am, nor what I am come to do in Siberia. I ask you to keep my secret. Will
you promise me to do so?”</p>
<p>“On my honor,” answered Jolivet.</p>
<p>“On my word as a gentleman,” added Blount.</p>
<p>“Good, gentlemen.”</p>
<p>“Can we be of any use to you?” asked Harry Blount. “Could we not help you
to accomplish your task?”</p>
<p>“I prefer to act alone,” replied Michael.</p>
<p>“But those blackguards have destroyed your sight,” said Alcide.</p>
<p>“I have Nadia, and her eyes are enough for me!”</p>
<p>In half an hour the raft left the little port of Livenitchnaia, and
entered the river. It was five in the evening and getting dusk. The night
promised to be dark and very cold also, for the temperature was already
below zero.</p>
<p>Alcide and Blount, though they had promised to keep Michael’s secret, did
not leave him. They talked in a low voice, and the blind man, adding what
they told him to what he already knew, was able to form an exact idea of
the state of things. It was certain that the Tartars had actually invested
Irkutsk, and that the three columns had effected a junction. There was no
doubt that the Emir and Ivan Ogareff were before the capital.</p>
<p>But why did the Czar’s courier exhibit such haste to get there, now that
the Imperial letter could no longer be given by him to the Grand Duke, and
when he did not even know the contents of it? Alcide Jolivet and Blount
could not understand it any more than Nadia had done.</p>
<p>No one spoke of the past, except when Jolivet thought it his duty to say
to Michael, “We owe you some apology for not shaking hands with you when
we separated at Ichim.”</p>
<p>“No, you had reason to think me a coward!”</p>
<p>“At any rate,” added the Frenchman, “you knouted the face of that villain
finely, and he will carry the mark of it for a long time!”</p>
<p>“No, not a long time!” replied Michael quietly.</p>
<p>Half an hour after leaving Livenitchnaia, Blount and his companion were
acquainted with the cruel trials through which Michael and his companion
had successively passed. They could not but heartily admire his energy,
which was only equaled by the young girl’s devotion. Their opinion of
Michael was exactly what the Czar had expressed at Moscow: “Indeed, this
is a Man!”</p>
<p>The raft swiftly threaded its way among the blocks of ice which were
carried along in the current of the Angara. A moving panorama was
displayed on both sides of the river, and, by an optical illusion, it
appeared as if it was the raft which was motionless before a succession of
picturesque scenes. Here were high granite cliffs, there wild gorges, down
which rushed a torrent; sometimes appeared a clearing with a still smoking
village, then thick pine forests blazing. But though the Tartars had left
their traces on all sides, they themselves were not to be seen as yet, for
they were more especially massed at the approaches to Irkutsk.</p>
<p>All this time the pilgrims were repeating their prayers aloud, and the old
boatman, shoving away the blocks of ice which pressed too near them,
imperturbably steered the raft in the middle of the rapid current of the
Angara.</p>
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