Rebrov worked all that winter on distant allotments. Almost every week someone of their team went back home for a short stay to one of the neighboring villages, and Rebrov exchanged with his Masha gentle and loving letters. Rebrov never went home himself and didn’t see her several months: he wanted to test their love, because he had to go to the Army soon. He tested their love all right, though it didn’t endure their winter parting. By the end of the winter fewer letters reached the snowbound woods, and they became kind of formal and dry, and by the early spring they stopped coming. In April one fellow that came from the neighboring village frankly revealed to it to Rebrov, “She’s having a good time, your Masha.”
Поехал домой Ребров только на майские праздники. Приплыл на ройках в ее деревню, но к ней сразу не пошел, остался у магазина. Тут было людно, шумно, он выпил с одними, с другими, но в душе у него стоял озноб. И вдруг он увидал ее. Она шла по улице под ручку с одним знакомым малым. Ребята, что пили с Ребровым, и знавшие про его любовь, как будто сразу осеклись, замолкли.
Она тоже увидала его. И как будто желая спрятать своего парня от Реброва, вдруг суетливо повернулась – спиной, очень тесно к тому, парню, и грудью к Реброву. Без улыбки, и только с перепуганным лицом, будто птичка защищающая своего птенца..
Rebrov went home only on First of May holidays. That was both official and folk festivities stretching often well up to Ninth of May, the Victory day. He sailed to her village by roiki with his little brother, but he didn’t go to her house but stayed by the store with a bunch of his old half-drunk friends. He drank half a glass of vodka, then some more, but his soul was trembling. Then he suddenly saw her. She walked down the village main street, closely arm in arm with some guy. Rebrov’s friends, who knew about his love, stopped talking at once, and the dead silence fell on store’s porch. She saw Rebrov, too. As if trying to hide her boy from Rebrov she fussily turned, but then stepped forward, with a back to her boy, breasts to Rebrov, with worried and scared eyes, as a bird protecting her nestling.
Ребров шагнул к ней, хотел только поговорить, но она вдруг стала пятиться от него назад, толкая спиной и этого малого. Ребров все сразу понял. В его душе, тронутой уже водкой, как что-то вспыхнуло. Он вынул свой нож и шагнул к ним. Он должен был убить этого малого, а после – все равно, будь, что будет.
Rebrov stepped forward. He just wanted to say “Hi!” to congratulate her with a May’s Day, and maybe to have some talk. But she warily backed from him, bumping at her boy. Rebrov, taken aback, stopped. Something flashed in his affected by vodka mind. And getting his knife out of pocket, he walked to them. Deeply insulted, with everybody around watching, Rebrov felt he should kill this guy now, because nothing else could lift his months-old pain, whatever happens with him afterwards.