One summer, the morning
after he arrived, at dawn, Vasily quietly went outside. I heard the gate close,
ran up to the window, and saw him passing by, heading toward Mount Piket. For
some reason, I always worried about him, as he was very adventurous. I woke up
mom. At first, she wanted to call out after him, ‘Where are you going?! ’ But I
said, ‘People at the other end of the village will hear you shout. Let’s just
follow him.’ He walked slowly, and we, two terrified crows that we were,
dragged after him at some distance. It was four o’clock in the morning, and the
village was already preparing to wake up in silver dew. The roosters were
crowing back and forth as if competing to see who could sing a louder and more
beautiful song… Vasya invited us to climb higher and meet the dawn together.
He would stop, smack his lips with pleasure, and raise his hands up and out to
the sides as if he were pumping himself full of air. He said that one could
scoop up that air with a bath ladle and get drunk with it. We had no idea that
nature — the turquoise dawn in his home village — helped him so much in his
work. It was as if he got energized from it, and Mount Piket was his launching
pad. He didn’t know back then that he would soon land forever…