A STORY ABOUT A REAL MAN 87 his own people. His own experience as a fighter-pilot had inured him to danger. When he rushed into the fray he never thought of death and even felt a joyous thrill. But for a man to do a thing like that, all alone in the forest.... "When did you find him?" "When?" The old man moved his lips and took another cigarette from the open case. "Now, when was it? Why, of course! It was just a week ago." Degtyarenko ran over the dates in his mind and calculated that Alexei Meresyev had crawled eighteen days. For a wounded man to crawl all that time, and without food—it seemed incredible. "Well, Grandpa, thank you very much!" the airman tightly embraced the old man and pressed him to his breast. "Thank you, brother!" "Don't mention it. There's nothing to thank me for. 'Thank you,' he says! What am I? A stranger, a foreigner, or what?" And then he angrily shouted at his daughter- in-law who was standing in bitter reflection with her cheek resting on her hand. ... "Pick those provisions off the floor! Fancy throwing such precious stuff about! . .. Thanks', he says!" Meanwhile, Lenochka had finished preparing Meresyev for his journey. "It's all right, it's all right, Comrade Senior Lieutenant," she twittered, her words dropping fast like peas from a bag. "Now, in Moscow, they'll put you on your feet in a trice. Moscow is a big city, isn't it, now? They heal worse cases than yours!" From her exaggerated animation and the way she kept on repeating that Meresyev would be put on his feet in a trice, Degtyarenko guessed that her examination had shown that the case was serious and that his friend was in a bad way. "Chattering like a magpie", he growled to himself, scowling at the "sister of medical science". Suddenly he remembered that nobody in the wing took this girl seriously, and that everybody said in jest that all she could cure anybody of was love—and that consoled Degtyarenko somewhat. Wrapped in the blankets, from which the head alone was visible, Alexei reminded Degtyarenko of the mummy