"I don't
believe
it, I can't
believe
it!" repeated Razumihin, trying
in
perplexity
to
refute
Raskolnikov's arguments. "Don't
believe
it, then!"
answered
Raskolnikov,
with
a cold,
careless
smile. "You
were
noticing
nothing
as
usual,
but
I
was
weighing
every
word." "You
are
suspicious.
That
is
why
you
weighed
their
words... h'm... certainly, I agree, Porfiry's tone
was
rather
strange,
and
still
more
that
wretch
Zametov!...
You
are
right,
there
was
something
about
him—but why? Why?" "He has
changed
his
mind
since
last
night." "Quite
the
contrary!
If
they
had
that
brainless idea,
they
would
do
their
utmost
to
hide
it,
and
conceal
their
cards,
so
as
to
catch
you
afterwards....
But
it
was
all
impudent
and
careless." "If
they
had had facts—I mean,
real
facts—or
at
least
grounds
for
suspicion,
then
they
would
certainly
have
tried
to
hide
their
game,
in
the
hope
of
getting
more
(they
would
have
made
a
search
long
ago
besides).
But
they
have
no
facts,
not
one.
It
is
all
mirage—all ambiguous. Simply a
floating
idea.
So
they
try
to
throw
me
out
by
impudence.
And
perhaps,
he
was
irritated
at
having
no
facts,
and
blurted
it
out
in
his
vexation—or
perhaps
he
has
some
plan...
he
seems
an
intelligent
man.
Perhaps
he
wanted
to
frighten
me
by
pretending
to
know.
They
have
a
psychology
of
their
own, brother.
But
it
is
loathsome
explaining
it
all. Stop!" "And it's insulting, insulting! I
understand
you. But...
since
we
have
spoken
openly
now
(and
it
is
an
excellent
thing
that
we
have
at
last—I
am
glad) I
will
own
now
frankly
that
I noticed
it
in
them
long
ago,
this
idea.
Of
course
the
merest
hint only—an insinuation—but
why
an
insinuation
even?
How
dare
they?
What
foundation
have
they?
If
only
you
knew
how
furious
I
have
been.
Think
only! Simply
because
a
poor
student, unhinged
by
poverty
and
hypochondria,
on
the
eve
of
a
severe
delirious illness (note that), suspicious, vain, proud,
who
has
not
seen
a soul
to
speak
to
for
six
months,
in
rags
and
in
boots
without
soles, has
to
face
some
wretched policemen
and
put
up
with
their
insolence;
and
the
unexpected
debt
thrust
under
his
nose,
the
I.O.U.
presented
by
Tchebarov,
the
new
paint,
thirty
degrees
Reaumur
and
a
stifling
atmosphere, a crowd
of
people,
the
talk
about
the
murder
of
a
person
where
he
had been
just
before,
and
all
that
on
an
empty stomach—he
might
well
have
a
fainting
fit!
And
that,
that
is
what
they
found
it
all
on!
Damn
them! I
understand
how
annoying
it
is,
but
in
your
place, Rodya, I
would
laugh
at
them,
or
better
still,
spit
in
their
ugly
faces,
and
spit
a
dozen
times
in
all
directions. I'd
hit
out
in
all
directions,
neatly
too,
and
so
I'd
put
an
end
to
it.
Damn
them! Don't
be
downhearted. It's a shame!" "He really has
put
it
well, though," Raskolnikov thought. "Damn them?
But
the
cross-examination again, to-morrow?"
he
said
with
bitterness. "Must I really
enter
into
explanations
with
them? I feel
vexed
as
it
is,
that
I
condescended
to
speak
to
Zametov
yesterday
in
the
restaurant...." "Damn it! I
will
go
myself
to
Porfiry. I
will
squeeze
it
out
of
him,
as
one
of
the
family:
he
must
let
me
know
the
ins
and
outs
of
it
all!
And
as
for
Zametov..." "At
last
he
sees
through
him!"
thought
Raskolnikov. "But
why
speak
against yourself?" "Because
only
peasants,
or
the
most
inexperienced
novices
deny
everything flatly
at
examinations.
If
a
man
is
ever
so
little
developed
and
experienced,
he
will
certainly
try
to
admit
all
the
external
facts
that
can't
be
avoided,
but
will
seek
other
explanations
of
them,
will
introduce
some
special, unexpected turn,
that
will
give
them
another
significance
and
put
them
in
another
light. Porfiry
might
well
reckon
that
I
should
be
sure
to
answer
so,
and
say
I had
seen
them
to
give
an
air
of
truth,
and
then
make
some
explanation." "But
he
would
have
told
you
at
once
that
the
workmen
could
not
have
been
there
two
days
before,
and
that
therefore
you
must
have
been
there
on
the
day
of
the
murder
at
eight
o'clock.
And
so
he
would
have
caught
you
over
a detail." "Yes,
that
is
what
he
was
reckoning
on,
that
I
should
not
have
time
to
reflect,
and
should
be
in
a hurry
to
make
the
most
likely
answer,
and
so
would
forget
that
the
workmen
could
not
have
been
there
two
days
before." "But
how
could
you
forget
it?" "Nothing easier.
It
is
in
just
such
stupid
things
clever
people
are
most
easily caught.
The
more
cunning a
man
is,
the
less
he
suspects
that
he
will
be
caught
in
a
simple
thing.
The
more
cunning a
man
is,
the
simpler
the
trap
he
must
be
caught
in. Porfiry
is
not
such
a fool
as
you
think...." "He
is
a
knave
then,
if
that
is
so!" Raskolnikov
could
not
help
laughing.
But
at
the
very
moment,
he
was
struck
by
the
strangeness
of
his
own
frankness,
and
the
eagerness
with
which
he
had
made
this
explanation,
though
he
had kept
up
all
the
preceding
conversation
with
gloomy repulsion,
obviously
with
a motive,
from
necessity. "I
am
getting
a relish
for
certain
aspects!"
he
thought
to
himself.
But
almost
at
the
same
instant
he
became suddenly uneasy,
as
though
an
unexpected
and
alarming
idea
had
occurred
to
him.
His
uneasiness kept
on
increasing.
They
had
just
reached
the
entrance
to
Bakaleyev's. "Go
in
alone!" said Raskolnikov suddenly. "I
will
be
back
directly." "Where
are
you
going? Why,
we
are
just
here." "I can't
help
it.... I
will
come
in
half
an
hour.
Tell
them." "Say
what
you
like, I
will
come
with
you." "You, too,
want
to
torture me!"
he
screamed,
with
such
bitter irritation,
such
despair
in
his
eyes
that
Razumihin's
hands
dropped.
He
stood
for
some
time
on
the
steps,
looking
gloomily
at
Raskolnikov
striding
rapidly
away
in
the
direction
of
his
lodging.
At
last, gritting
his
teeth
and
clenching
his
fist,
he
swore
he
would
squeeze Porfiry
like
a
lemon
that
very
day,
and
went
up
the
stairs
to
reassure Pulcheria Alexandrovna,
who
was
by
now
alarmed
at
their
long
absence.
When
Raskolnikov got home,
his
hair
was
soaked
with
sweat
and
he
was
breathing
heavily.
He
went
rapidly
up
the
stairs, walked
into
his
unlocked
room
and
at
once
fastened
the
latch.
Then
in
senseless
terror
he
rushed
to
the
corner,
to
that
hole
under
the
paper
where
he
had
put
the
things;
put
his
hand
in,
and
for
some
minutes
felt
carefully
in
the
hole,
in
every
crack
and
fold
of
the
paper.
Finding
nothing,
he
got
up
and
drew
a
deep
breath.
As
he
was
reaching
the
steps
of
Bakaleyev's,
he
suddenly fancied
that
something, a chain, a stud
or
even
a
bit
of
paper
in
which
they
had been wrapped
with
the
old
woman's
handwriting
on
it,
might
somehow
have
slipped
out
and
been lost
in
some
crack,
and
then
might
suddenly
turn
up
as
unexpected,
conclusive
evidence against him.
He
stood
as
though
lost
in
thought,
and
a strange, humiliated,
half
senseless
smile
strayed
on
his
lips.
He
took
his
cap
at
last
and
went
quietly
out
of
the
room.
His
ideas
were
all
tangled.
He
went dreamily
through
the
gateway. "Here
he
is
himself," shouted a
loud
voice.
He
raised
his
head.
The
porter
was
standing
at
the
door
of
his
little
room
and
was
pointing
him
out
to
a
short
man
who
looked
like
an
artisan, wearing a
long
coat
and
a waistcoat,
and
looking
at
a distance remarkably
like
a woman.
He
stooped,
and
his
head
in
a greasy
cap
hung
forward.
From
his
wrinkled flabby face
he
looked
over
fifty;
his
little
eyes
were
lost
in
fat
and
they
looked
out
grimly, sternly
and
discontentedly. "What
is
it?" Raskolnikov asked, going
up
to
the
porter.
The
man
stole
a
look
at
him
from
under
his
brows
and
he
looked
at
him
attentively, deliberately;
then
he
turned
slowly
and
went
out
of
the
gate
into
the
street
without
saying
a word. "What
is
it?" cried Raskolnikov. "Why,
he
there
was
asking
whether
a
student
lived
here,
mentioned
your
name
and
whom
you
lodged
with. I
saw
you
coming
and
pointed
you
out
and
he
went away. It's funny."
The
porter
too
seemed
rather
puzzled,
but
not
much
so,
and
after
wondering
for
a
moment
he
turned
and
went
back
to
his
room. Raskolnikov
ran
after
the
stranger,
and
at
once
caught
sight
of
him
walking
along
the
other
side
of
the
street
with
the
same
even,
deliberate
step
with
his
eyes
fixed
on
the
ground,
as
though
in
meditation.
He
soon
overtook him,
but
for
some
time walked
behind
him.
At
last,
moving
on
to
a
level
with
him,
he
looked
at
his
face.
The
man
noticed
him
at
once,
looked
at
him
quickly,
but
dropped
his
eyes
again;
and
so
they
walked
for
a
minute
side
by
side
without
uttering
a word. "You
were
inquiring
for
me...
of
the
porter?" Raskolnikov said
at
last,
but
in
a
curiously
quiet
voice.
The
man
made
no
answer;
he
didn't
even
look
at
him.
Again
they
were
both
silent. "Why
do
you...
come
and
ask
for
me...
and
say
nothing.... What's
the
meaning
of
it?" Raskolnikov's voice
broke
and
he
seemed
unable
to
articulate
the
words
clearly.
The
man
raised
his
eyes
this
time
and
turned
a gloomy
sinister
look
at
Raskolnikov. "Murderer!"
he
said suddenly
in
a
quiet
but
clear
and
distinct
voice. Raskolnikov went
on
walking
beside
him.
His
legs
felt suddenly weak, a cold shiver
ran
down
his
spine,
and
his
heart
seemed
to
stand
still
for
a moment,
then
suddenly began throbbing
as
though
it
were
set
free.
So
they
walked
for
about
a
hundred
paces,
side
by
side
in
silence.
The
man
did
not
look
at
him. "What
do
you
mean...
what
is....
Who
is
a murderer?"
muttered
Raskolnikov
hardly
audibly.
They
had
just
reached
the
cross-roads.
The
man
turned
to
the
left
without
looking
behind
him. Raskolnikov
remained
standing, gazing
after
him.
He
saw
him
turn
round
fifty
paces
away
and
look
back
at
him
still
standing there. Raskolnikov
could
not
see
clearly,
but
he
fancied
that
he
was
again
smiling
the
same
smile
of
cold
hatred
and
triumph.
With
slow
faltering
steps,
with
shaking knees, Raskolnikov
made
his
way
back
to
his
little
garret, feeling chilled
all
over.
He
took
off
his
cap
and
put
it
on
the
table,
and
for
ten
minutes
he
stood
without
moving.
Then
he
sank exhausted
on
the
sofa
and
with
a
weak
moan
of
pain
he
stretched
himself
on
it.
So
he
lay
for
half
an
hour.
He
thought
of
nothing.
Some
thoughts
or
fragments
of
thoughts,
some
images
without
order
or
coherence
floated
before
his
mind—faces
of
people
he
had
seen
in
his
childhood
or
met somewhere once,
whom
he
would
never
have
recalled,
the
belfry
of
the
church
at
V.,
the
billiard table
in
a
restaurant
and
some
officers
playing
billiards,
the
smell
of
cigars
in
some
underground
tobacco
shop, a
tavern
room, a
back
staircase
quite
dark,
all
sloppy
with
dirty
water
and
strewn
with
egg-shells,
and
the
Sunday
bells
floating
in
from
somewhere....
The
images
followed
one
another,
whirling
like
a hurricane.
Some
of
them
he
liked
and
tried
to
clutch at,
but
they
faded
and
all
the
while
there
was
an
oppression
within
him,
but
it
was
not
overwhelming, sometimes
it
was
even
pleasant....
The
slight
shivering
still
persisted,
but
that
too
was
an
almost
pleasant
sensation.
He
heard
the
hurried footsteps
of
Razumihin;
he
closed
his
eyes
and
pretended
to
be
asleep. Razumihin
opened
the
door
and
stood
for
some
time
in
the
doorway
as
though
hesitating,
then
he
stepped
softly
into
the
room
and
went
cautiously
to
the
sofa. Raskolnikov
heard
Nastasya's whisper: "Don't
disturb
him!
Let
him
sleep.
He
can
have
his
dinner
later." "Quite so,"
answered
Razumihin.
Both
withdrew
carefully
and
closed
the
door.
Another
half-hour passed. Raskolnikov
opened
his
eyes,
turned
on
his
back
again,
clasping
his
hands
behind
his
head. "Who
is
he?
Who
is
that
man
who
sprang
out
of
the
earth?
Where
was
he,
what
did
he
see?
He
has
seen
it
all, that's clear.
Where
was
he
then?
And
from
where
did
he
see?
Why
has
he
only
now
sprung
out
of
the
earth?
And
how
could
he
see?
Is
it
possible? Hm..."
continued
Raskolnikov,
turning
cold
and
shivering, "and
the
jewel
case
Nikolay found
behind
the
door—was
that
possible? A clue?
You
miss
an
infinitesimal
line
and
you
can
build
it
into
a
pyramid
of
evidence! A
fly
flew
by
and
saw
it!
Is
it
possible?"
He
felt
with
sudden
loathing
how
weak,
how
physically
weak
he
had become. "I
ought
to
have
known it,"
he
thought
with
a bitter smile. "And
how
dared
I, knowing myself, knowing
how
I
should
be,
take
up
an
axe
and
shed
blood! I
ought
to
have
known beforehand.... Ah,
but
I
did
know!"
he
whispered
in
despair.
At
times
he
came
to
a standstill
at
some
thought.
One
sudden
irrelevant
idea
almost
made
him
laugh. Napoleon,
the
pyramids, Waterloo,
and
a wretched skinny
old
woman, a pawnbroker
with
a
red
trunk
under
her
bed—it's a
nice
hash
for
Porfiry Petrovitch
to
digest!
How
can
they
digest
it! It's
too
inartistic. "A
Napoleon
creep
under
an
old
woman's bed! Ugh,
how
loathsome!"
His
hair
was
soaked
with
sweat,
his
quivering
lips
were
parched,
his
eyes
were
fixed
on
the
ceiling.
He
lost consciousness;
it
seemed
strange
to
him
that
he
didn't
remember
how
he
got
into
the
street.
It
was
late
evening.
The
twilight
had fallen
and
the
full
moon
was
shining
more
and
more
brightly;
but
there
was
a
peculiar
breathlessness
in
the
air.
There
were
crowds
of
people
in
the
street; workmen
and
business
people
were
making
their
way
home;
other
people
had
come
out
for
a walk;
there
was
a
smell
of
mortar, dust
and
stagnant
water. Raskolnikov walked along, mournful
and
anxious;
he
was
distinctly
aware
of
having
come
out
with
a purpose,
of
having
to
do
something
in
a hurry,
but
what
it
was
he
had forgotten. Suddenly
he
stood
still
and
saw
a
man
standing
on
the
other
side
of
the
street,
beckoning
to
him.
He
crossed
over
to
him,
but
at
once
the
man
turned
and
walked
away
with
his
head
hanging,
as
though
he
had
made
no
sign
to
him. "Stay,
did
he
really beckon?" Raskolnikov wondered,
but
he
tried
to
overtake
him.
When
he
was
within
ten
paces
he
recognised
him
and
was
frightened;
it
was
the
same
man
with
stooping
shoulders
in
the
long
coat. Raskolnikov
followed
him
at
a distance;
his
heart
was
beating;
they
went
down
a turning;
the
man
still
did
not
look
round. "Does
he
know
I
am
following
him?"
thought
Raskolnikov.
The
man
went
into
the
gateway
of
a
big
house. Raskolnikov hastened
to
the
gate
and
looked
in
to
see
whether
he
would
look
round
and
sign
to
him.
In
the
court-yard
the
man
did
turn
round
and
again
seemed
to
beckon
him. Raskolnikov
at
once
followed
him
into
the
yard,
but
the
man
was
gone.
He
must
have
gone
up
the
first
staircase. Raskolnikov
rushed
after
him.
He
heard
slow
measured
steps
two
flights
above.
The
staircase
seemed
strangely
familiar.
He
reached
the
window
on
the
first
floor;
the
moon shone
through
the
panes
with
a melancholy
and
mysterious
light;
then
he
reached
the
second
floor. Bah!
this
is
the
flat
where
the
painters
were
at
work...
but
how
was
it
he
did
not
recognise
it
at
once?
The
steps
of
the
man
above
had
died
away. "So
he
must
have
stopped
or
hidden
somewhere."
He
reached
the
third
storey,
should
he
go
on?
There
was
a
stillness
that
was
dreadful....
But
he
went on.
The
sound
of
his
own
footsteps scared
and
frightened him.
How
dark
it
was!
The
man
must
be
hiding
in
some
corner
here. Ah!
the
flat
was
standing
wide
open,
he
hesitated
and
went in.
It
was
very
dark
and
empty
in
the
passage,
as
though
everything had been removed;
he
crept
on
tiptoe
into
the
parlour
which
was
flooded
with
moonlight. Everything
there
was
as
before,
the
chairs,
the
looking-glass,
the
yellow
sofa
and
the
pictures
in
the
frames. A huge, round, copper-red moon
looked
in
at
the
windows. "It's
the
moon
that
makes
it
so
still, weaving
some
mystery,"
thought
Raskolnikov.
He
stood
and
waited,
waited
a
long
while,
and
the
more
silent
the
moonlight,
the
more
violently
his
heart
beat,
till
it
was
painful.
And
still
the
same
hush. Suddenly
he
heard
a
momentary
sharp crack
like
the
snapping
of
a
splinter
and
all
was
still
again. A
fly
flew
up
suddenly
and
struck
the
window
pane
with
a
plaintive
buzz.
At
that
moment
he
noticed
in
the
corner
between
the
window
and
the
little
cupboard
something
like
a
cloak
hanging
on
the
wall. "Why
is
that
cloak
here?"
he
thought, "it wasn't
there
before...."
He
went
up
to
it
quietly
and
felt
that
there
was
someone
hiding
behind
it.
He
cautiously
moved
the
cloak
and
saw, sitting
on
a chair
in
the
corner,
the
old
woman
bent
double
so
that
he
couldn't
see
her
face;
but
it
was
she.
He
stood
over
her. "She
is
afraid,"
he
thought.
He
stealthily
took
the
axe
from
the
noose
and
struck
her
one
blow,
then
another
on
the
skull.
But
strange
to
say
she
did
not
stir,
as
though
she
were
made
of
wood.
He
was
frightened, bent
down
nearer
and
tried
to
look
at
her;
but
she, too, bent
her
head
lower.
He
bent
right
down
to
the
ground
and
peeped
up
into
her
face
from
below,
he
peeped
and
turned
cold
with
horror:
the
old
woman
was
sitting
and
laughing, shaking
with
noiseless laughter, doing
her
utmost
that
he
should
not
hear
it. Suddenly
he
fancied
that
the
door
from
the
bedroom
was
opened
a
little
and
that
there
was
laughter
and
whispering
within.
He
was
overcome
with
frenzy
and
he
began
hitting
the
old
woman
on
the
head
with
all
his
force,
but
at
every
blow
of
the
axe
the
laughter
and
whispering
from
the
bedroom
grew
louder
and
the
old
woman
was
simply shaking
with
mirth.
He
was
rushing
away,
but
the
passage
was
full
of
people,
the
doors
of
the
flats
stood
open
and
on
the
landing,
on
the
stairs
and
everywhere
below
there
were
people,
rows
of
heads,
all
looking,
but
huddled
together
in
silence
and
expectation.
Something
gripped
his
heart,
his
legs
were
rooted
to
the
spot,
they
would
not
move....
He
tried
to
scream
and
woke up.
He
drew
a
deep
breath—but
his
dream
seemed
strangely
to
persist:
his
door
was
flung
open
and
a
man
whom
he
had
never
seen
stood
in
the
doorway
watching
him
intently. Raskolnikov had
hardly
opened
his
eyes
and
he
instantly closed
them
again.
He
lay
on
his
back
without
stirring. "Is
it
still
a dream?"
he
wondered
and
again
raised
his
eyelids
hardly
perceptibly;
the
stranger
was
standing
in
the
same
place,
still
watching
him.
He
stepped
cautiously
into
the
room,
carefully
closing
the
door
after
him, went
up
to
the
table,
paused
a moment,
still
keeping
his
eyes
on
Raskolnikov,
and
noiselessly
seated
himself
on
the
chair
by
the
sofa;
he
put
his
hat
on
the
floor
beside
him
and
leaned
his
hands
on
his
cane
and
his
chin
on
his
hands.
It
was
evident
that
he
was
prepared
to
wait
indefinitely.
As
far
as
Raskolnikov
could
make
out
from
his
stolen glances,
he
was
a
man
no
longer
young, stout,
with
a full, fair,
almost
whitish beard.
Ten
minutes
passed.
It
was
still
light,
but
beginning
to
get
dusk.
There
was
complete
stillness
in
the
room.
Not
a
sound
came
from
the
stairs.
Only
a
big
fly
buzzed
and
fluttered
against
the
window
pane.
It
was
unbearable
at
last. Raskolnikov suddenly got
up
and
sat
on
the
sofa. "Come,
tell
me
what
you
want." "I
knew
you
were
not
asleep,
but
only
pretending,"
the
stranger
answered
oddly, laughing calmly. "Arkady Ivanovitch Svidrigaďlov,
allow
me
to
introduce
myself...."