Later
on
Raskolnikov
happened
to
find
out
why
the
huckster
and
his
wife
had invited Lizaveta.
It
was
a
very
ordinary
matter
and
there
was
nothing
exceptional
about
it. A
family
who
had
come
to
the
town
and
been
reduced
to
poverty
were
selling
their
household
goods
and
clothes,
all
women's things.
As
the
things
would
have
fetched
little
in
the
market,
they
were
looking
for
a dealer.
This
was
Lizaveta's business.
She
undertook
such
jobs
and
was
frequently employed,
as
she
was
very
honest
and
always
fixed a
fair
price
and
stuck
to
it.
She
spoke
as
a
rule
little
and,
as
we
have
said already,
she
was
very
submissive
and
timid.
But
Raskolnikov had
become
superstitious
of
late.
The
traces
of
superstition
remained
in
him
long
after,
and
were
almost
ineradicable.
And
in
all
this
he
was
always
afterwards disposed
to
see
something
strange
and
mysterious,
as
it
were,
the
presence
of
some
peculiar
influences
and
coincidences.
In
the
previous
winter
a
student
he
knew
called
Pokorev,
who
had left
for
Harkov, had
chanced
in
conversation
to
give
him
the
address
of
Alyona Ivanovna,
the
old
pawnbroker,
in
case
he
might
want
to
pawn anything.
For
a
long
while
he
did
not
go
to
her,
for
he
had
lessons
and
managed
to
get
along
somehow.
Six
weeks
ago
he
had
remembered
the
address;
he
had
two
articles
that
could
be
pawned:
his
father's
old
silver
watch
and
a
little
gold
ring
with
three
red
stones, a
present
from
his
sister
at
parting.
He
decided
to
take
the
ring.
When
he
found
the
old
woman
he
had felt
an
insurmountable
repulsion
for
her
at
the
first
glance,
though
he
knew
nothing
special
about
her.
He
got
two
roubles
from
her
and
went
into
a
miserable
little
tavern
on
his
way
home.
He
asked
for
tea, sat
down
and
sank
into
deep
thought. A
strange
idea
was
pecking
at
his
brain
like
a
chicken
in
the
egg,
and
very,
very
much
absorbed
him.
Almost
beside
him
at
the
next
table
there
was
sitting a student,
whom
he
did
not
know
and
had
never
seen,
and
with
him
a
young
officer.
They
had
played
a
game
of
billiards
and
began drinking tea.
All
at
once
he
heard
the
student
mention
to
the
officer
the
pawnbroker Alyona Ivanovna
and
give
him
her
address.
This
of
itself
seemed
strange
to
Raskolnikov;
he
had
just
come
from
her
and
here
at
once
he
heard
her
name.
Of
course
it
was
a chance,
but
he
could
not
shake
off
a
very
extraordinary
impression,
and
here
someone
seemed
to
be
speaking
expressly
for
him;
the
student
began telling
his
friend
various
details
about
Alyona Ivanovna. "She
is
first-rate,"
he
said. "You
can
always
get
money
from
her.
She
is
as
rich
as
a Jew,
she
can
give
you
five
thousand
roubles
at
a time
and
she
is
not
above
taking
a
pledge
for
a rouble.
Lots
of
our
fellows
have
had dealings
with
her.
But
she
is
an
awful
old
harpy...."
And
he
began
describing
how
spiteful
and
uncertain
she
was,
how
if
you
were
only
a
day
late
with
your
interest
the
pledge
was
lost;
how
she
gave a
quarter
of
the
value
of
an
article
and
took
five
and
even
seven
percent
a
month
on
it
and
so
on.
The
student
chattered on,
saying
that
she
had a
sister
Lizaveta,
whom
the
wretched
little
creature
was
continually
beating,
and
kept
in
complete
bondage
like
a small child,
though
Lizaveta
was
at
least
six
feet high. "There's a
phenomenon
for
you," cried
the
student
and
he
laughed.
They
began talking
about
Lizaveta.
The
student
spoke
about
her
with
a
peculiar
relish
and
was
continually
laughing
and
the
officer
listened
with
great
interest
and
asked
him
to
send
Lizaveta
to
do
some
mending
for
him. Raskolnikov
did
not
miss
a
word
and
learned everything
about
her. Lizaveta
was
younger
than
the
old
woman
and
was
her
half-sister, being
the
child
of
a
different
mother.
She
was
thirty-five.
She
worked
day
and
night
for
her
sister,
and
besides doing
the
cooking
and
the
washing,
she
did
sewing
and
worked
as
a
charwoman
and
gave
her
sister
all
she
earned.
She
did
not
dare
to
accept
an
order
or
job
of
any
kind
without
her
sister's permission.
The
old
woman
had
already
made
her
will,
and
Lizaveta
knew
of
it,
and
by
this
will
she
would
not
get
a farthing;
nothing
but
the
movables, chairs
and
so
on;
all
the
money
was
left
to
a
monastery
in
the
province
of
N——,
that
prayers
might
be
said
for
her
in
perpetuity. Lizaveta
was
of
lower
rank
than
her
sister, unmarried
and
awfully
uncouth
in
appearance, remarkably
tall
with
long
feet
that
looked
as
if
they
were
bent outwards.
She
always
wore
battered
goatskin shoes,
and
was
clean
in
her
person.
What
the
student
expressed
most
surprise
and
amusement
about
was
the
fact
that
Lizaveta
was
continually
with
child. "But
you
say
she
is
hideous?"
observed
the
officer. "Yes,
she
is
so
dark-skinned
and
looks
like
a soldier dressed up,
but
you
know
she
is
not
at
all
hideous.
She
has
such
a good-natured face
and
eyes. Strikingly so.
And
the
proof
of
it
is
that
lots
of
people
are
attracted
by
her.
She
is
such
a soft,
gentle
creature,
ready
to
put
up
with
anything,
always
willing,
willing
to
do
anything.
And
her
smile
is
really
very
sweet." "You
seem
to
find
her
attractive
yourself," laughed
the
officer. "From
her
queerness. No, I'll
tell
you
what. I
could
kill
that
damned
old
woman
and
make
off
with
her
money, I
assure
you,
without
the
faintest conscience-prick,"
the
student
added
with
warmth.
The
officer
laughed
again
while
Raskolnikov shuddered.
How
strange
it
was! "Listen, I
want
to
ask
you
a
serious
question,"
the
student
said hotly. "I
was
joking
of
course,
but
look
here;
on
one
side
we
have
a stupid, senseless, worthless, spiteful, ailing,
horrid
old
woman,
not
simply useless
but
doing
actual
mischief,
who
has
not
an
idea
what
she
is
living
for
herself,
and
who
will
die
in
a
day
or
two
in
any
case.
You
understand?
You
understand?" "Yes, yes, I understand,"
answered
the
officer,
watching
his
excited
companion
attentively. "Well,
listen
then.
On
the
other
side,
fresh
young
lives
thrown
away
for
want
of
help
and
by
thousands,
on
every
side! A
hundred
thousand
good
deeds
could
be
done
and
helped,
on
that
old
woman's
money
which
will
be
buried
in
a monastery! Hundreds,
thousands
perhaps,
might
be
set
on
the
right
path;
dozens
of
families
saved
from
destitution,
from
ruin,
from
vice,
from
the
Lock
hospitals—and
all
with
her
money. Kill her,
take
her
money
and
with
the
help
of
it
devote
oneself
to
the
service
of
humanity
and
the
good
of
all.
What
do
you
think,
would
not
one
tiny
crime
be
wiped
out
by
thousands
of
good
deeds?
For
one
life
thousands
would
be
saved
from
corruption
and
decay.
One
death,
and
a
hundred
lives
in
exchange—it's
simple
arithmetic! Besides,
what
value
has
the
life
of
that
sickly, stupid, ill-natured
old
woman
in
the
balance
of
existence!
No
more
than
the
life
of
a louse,
of
a black-beetle,
less
in
fact
because
the
old
woman
is
doing harm.
She
is
wearing
out
the
lives
of
others;
the
other
day
she
bit
Lizaveta's
finger
out
of
spite;
it
almost
had
to
be
amputated." "Of
course
she
does
not
deserve
to
live," remarked
the
officer, "but
there
it
is, it's nature." "Oh, well, brother,
but
we
have
to
correct
and
direct
nature, and,
but
for
that,
we
should
drown
in
an
ocean
of
prejudice.
But
for
that,
there
would
never
have
been a single
great
man.
They
talk
of
duty, conscience—I don't
want
to
say
anything
against
duty
and
conscience;—but
the
point
is,
what
do
we
mean
by
them? Stay, I
have
another
question
to
ask
you. Listen!" "No,
you
stay, I'll
ask
you
a question. Listen!" "Well?" "Of
course
not! I
was
only
arguing
the
justice
of
it.... It's
nothing
to
do
with
me...." "But I think,
if
you
would
not
do
it
yourself, there's
no
justice
about
it....
Let
us
have
another
game."
On
returning
from
the
Hay
Market
he
flung
himself
on
the
sofa
and
sat
for
a
whole
hour
without
stirring. Meanwhile
it
got dark;
he
had
no
candle
and, indeed,
it
did
not
occur
to
him
to
light
up.
He
could
never
recollect
whether
he
had been
thinking
about
anything
at
that
time.
At
last
he
was
conscious
of
his
former
fever
and
shivering,
and
he
realised
with
relief
that
he
could
lie
down
on
the
sofa.
Soon
heavy,
leaden
sleep
came
over
him,
as
it
were
crushing him.
He
slept
an
extraordinarily
long
time
and
without
dreaming. Nastasya, coming
into
his
room
at
ten
o'clock
the
next
morning, had
difficulty
in
rousing
him.
She
brought
him
in
tea
and
bread.
The
tea
was
again
the
second
brew
and
again
in
her
own
tea-pot. "My goodness,
how
he
sleeps!"
she
cried indignantly. "And
he
is
always
asleep."
He
got
up
with
an
effort.
His
head
ached,
he
stood up,
took
a
turn
in
his
garret
and
sank
back
on
the
sofa
again. "Going
to
sleep
again," cried Nastasya. "Are
you
ill, eh?"
He
made
no
reply. "Do
you
want
some
tea?" "Afterwards,"
he
said
with
an
effort, closing
his
eyes
again
and
turning
to
the
wall. Nastasya stood
over
him. "Perhaps
he
really
is
ill,"
she
said,
turned
and
went out.
She
came
in
again
at
two
o'clock
with
soup.
He
was
lying
as
before.
The
tea
stood untouched. Nastasya felt positively
offended
and
began wrathfully
rousing
him. "Why
are
you
lying
like
a log?"
she
shouted,
looking
at
him
with
repulsion.
He
got up,
and
sat
down
again,
but
said
nothing
and
stared
at
the
floor. "Are
you
ill
or
not?"
asked
Nastasya
and
again
received
no
answer. "You'd
better
go
out
and
get
a
breath
of
air,"
she
said
after
a pause. "Will
you
eat
it
or
not?" "Afterwards,"
he
said weakly. "You
can
go."
And
he
motioned
her
out.
She
remained
a
little
longer,
looked
at
him
with
compassion
and
went out. A
few
minutes
afterwards,
he
raised
his
eyes
and
looked
for
a
long
while
at
the
tea
and
the
soup.
Then
he
took
the
bread,
took
up
a spoon
and
began
to
eat.
He
ate a little,
three
or
four
spoonfuls,
without
appetite,
as
it
were
mechanically.
His
head
ached
less.
After
his
meal
he
stretched
himself
on
the
sofa
again,
but
now
he
could
not
sleep;
he
lay
without
stirring,
with
his
face
in
the
pillow.
He
was
haunted
by
day-dreams
and
such
strange
day-dreams;
in
one,
that
kept recurring,
he
fancied
that
he
was
in
Africa,
in
Egypt,
in
some
sort
of
oasis.
The
caravan
was
resting,
the
camels
were
peacefully lying down;
the
palms
stood
all
around
in
a complete circle;
all
the
party
were
at
dinner.
But
he
was
drinking
water
from
a
spring
which
flowed
gurgling
close by.
And
it
was
so
cool,
it
was
wonderful, wonderful, blue, cold
water
running
among
the
parti-coloured
stones
and
over
the
clean sand
which
glistened
here
and
there
like
gold.... Suddenly
he
heard
a clock strike.
He
started,
roused
himself,
raised
his
head,
looked
out
of
the
window,
and
seeing
how
late
it
was, suddenly jumped
up
wide
awake
as
though
someone had
pulled
him
off
the
sofa.
He
crept
on
tiptoe
to
the
door, stealthily
opened
it
and
began
listening
on
the
staircase.
His
heart
beat terribly.
But
all
was
quiet
on
the
stairs
as
if
everyone
was
asleep....
It
seemed
to
him
strange
and
monstrous
that
he
could
have
slept
in
such
forgetfulness
from
the
previous
day
and
had
done
nothing, had
prepared
nothing
yet....
And
meanwhile
perhaps
it
had struck six.
And
his
drowsiness
and
stupefaction
were
followed
by
an
extraordinary, feverish,
as
it
were
distracted
haste.
But
the
preparations
to
be
made
were
few.
He
concentrated
all
his
energies
on
thinking
of
everything
and
forgetting
nothing;
and
his
heart
kept beating
and
thumping
so
that
he
could
hardly
breathe.
First
he
had
to
make
a
noose
and
sew
it
into
his
overcoat—a
work
of
a moment.
He
rummaged
under
his
pillow
and
picked
out
amongst
the
linen
stuffed
away
under
it, a
worn
out,
old
unwashed
shirt.
From
its
rags
he
tore a
long
strip, a
couple
of
inches
wide
and
about
sixteen
inches long.
He
folded
this
strip
in
two,
took
off
his
wide,
strong
summer
overcoat
of
some
stout
cotton
material
(his
only
outer
garment)
and
began sewing
the
two
ends
of
the
rag
on
the
inside,
under
the
left armhole.
His
hands
shook
as
he
sewed,
but
he
did
it
successfully
so
that
nothing
showed
outside
when
he
put
the
coat
on
again.
The
needle
and
thread
he
had got
ready
long
before
and
they
lay
on
his
table
in
a
piece
of
paper.
As
for
the
noose,
it
was
a
very
ingenious
device
of
his
own;
the
noose
was
intended
for
the
axe.
It
was
impossible
for
him
to
carry
the
axe
through
the
street
in
his
hands.
And
if
hidden
under
his
coat
he
would
still
have
had
to
support
it
with
his
hand,
which
would
have
been noticeable.
Now
he
had
only
to
put
the
head
of
the
axe
in
the
noose,
and
it
would
hang
quietly
under
his
arm
on
the
inside.
Putting
his
hand
in
his
coat pocket,
he
could
hold
the
end
of
the
handle
all
the
way,
so
that
it
did
not
swing;
and
as
the
coat
was
very
full, a regular sack
in
fact,
it
could
not
be
seen
from
outside
that
he
was
holding
something
with
the
hand
that
was
in
the
pocket.
This
noose, too,
he
had
designed
a
fortnight
before. "It struck
six
long
ago." "Long ago! My God!"
He
rushed
to
the
door, listened,
caught
up
his
hat
and
began
to
descend
his
thirteen
steps
cautiously, noiselessly,
like
a cat.
He
had
still
the
most
important
thing
to
do—to
steal
the
axe
from
the
kitchen.
That
the
deed
must
be
done
with
an
axe
he
had decided
long
ago.
He
had
also
a
pocket
pruning-knife,
but
he
could
not
rely
on
the
knife
and
still
less
on
his
own
strength,
and
so
resolved finally
on
the
axe.
We
may
note
in
passing,
one
peculiarity
in
regard
to
all
the
final
resolutions
taken
by
him
in
the
matter;
they
had
one
strange
characteristic:
the
more
final
they
were,
the
more
hideous
and
the
more
absurd
they
at
once
became
in
his
eyes.
In
spite
of
all
his
agonising
inward
struggle,
he
never
for
a single
instant
all
that
time
could
believe
in
the
carrying
out
of
his
plans. And, indeed,
if
it
had
ever
happened
that
everything
to
the
least
point
could
have
been
considered
and
finally settled,
and
no
uncertainty
of
any
kind
had remained,
he
would,
it
seems,
have
renounced
it
all
as
something
absurd,
monstrous
and
impossible.
But
a
whole
mass
of
unsettled
points
and
uncertainties remained.
As
for
getting
the
axe,
that
trifling
business
cost
him
no
anxiety,
for
nothing
could
be
easier. Nastasya
was
continually
out
of
the
house, especially
in
the
evenings;
she
would
run
in
to
the
neighbours
or
to
a shop,
and
always
left
the
door
ajar.
It
was
the
one
thing
the
landlady
was
always
scolding
her
about.
And
so,
when
the
time came,
he
would
only
have
to
go
quietly
into
the
kitchen
and
to
take
the
axe,
and
an
hour
later (when everything
was
over)
go
in
and
put
it
back
again.
But
these
were
doubtful points.
Supposing
he
returned
an
hour
later
to
put
it
back,
and
Nastasya had
come
back
and
was
on
the
spot.
He
would
of
course
have
to
go
by
and
wait
till
she
went
out
again.
But
supposing
she
were
in
the
meantime
to
miss
the
axe,
look
for
it,
make
an
outcry—that
would
mean
suspicion
or
at
least
grounds
for
suspicion.
At
first—long
before
indeed—he had been
much
occupied
with
one
question;
why
almost
all
crimes
are
so
badly
concealed
and
so
easily detected,
and
why
almost
all
criminals
leave
such
obvious
traces?
He
had
come
gradually
to
many
different
and
curious
conclusions,
and
in
his
opinion
the
chief
reason
lay
not
so
much
in
the
material
impossibility
of
concealing
the
crime,
as
in
the
criminal himself.
Almost
every
criminal
is
subject
to
a
failure
of
will
and
reasoning power
by
a
childish
and
phenomenal
heedlessness,
at
the
very
instant
when
prudence
and
caution
are
most
essential.
It
was
his
conviction
that
this
eclipse
of
reason
and
failure
of
will
power
attacked
a
man
like
a disease,
developed
gradually
and
reached
its
highest
point
just
before
the
perpetration
of
the
crime,
continued
with
equal
violence
at
the
moment
of
the
crime
and
for
longer
or
shorter
time after, according
to
the
individual
case,
and
then
passed
off
like
any
other
disease.
The
question
whether
the
disease
gives
rise
to
the
crime,
or
whether
the
crime
from
its
own
peculiar
nature
is
always
accompanied
by
something
of
the
nature
of
disease,
he
did
not
yet
feel
able
to
decide.
When
he
reached
these
conclusions,
he
decided
that
in
his
own
case
there
could
not
be
such
a
morbid
reaction,
that
his
reason
and
will
would
remain
unimpaired
at
the
time
of
carrying
out
his
design,
for
the
simple
reason
that
his
design
was
"not a crime...."
We
will
omit
all
the
process
by
means
of
which
he
arrived
at
this
last
conclusion;
we
have
run
too
far
ahead already....
We
may
add
only
that
the
practical, purely
material
difficulties
of
the
affair
occupied a
secondary
position
in
his
mind. "One has
but
to
keep
all
one's will-power
and
reason
to
deal
with
them,
and
they
will
all
be
overcome
at
the
time
when
once
one
has
familiarised
oneself
with
the
minutest
details
of
the
business...."
But
this
preparation
had
never
been begun.
His
final
decisions
were
what
he
came
to
trust
least,
and
when
the
hour
struck,
it
all
came
to
pass
quite
differently,
as
it
were
accidentally
and
unexpectedly.
One
trifling
circumstance
upset
his
calculations,
before
he
had
even
left
the
staircase.
When
he
reached
the
landlady's kitchen,
the
door
of
which
was
open
as
usual,
he
glanced
cautiously
in
to
see
whether,
in
Nastasya's absence,
the
landlady
herself
was
there,
or
if
not,
whether
the
door
to
her
own
room
was
closed,
so
that
she
might
not
peep
out
when
he
went
in
for
the
axe.
But
what
was
his
amazement
when
he
suddenly
saw
that
Nastasya
was
not
only
at
home
in
the
kitchen,
but
was
occupied there,
taking
linen
out
of
a
basket
and
hanging
it
on
a line.
Seeing
him,
she
left
off
hanging
the
clothes,
turned
to
him
and
stared
at
him
all
the
time
he
was
passing.
He
turned
away
his
eyes,
and
walked past
as
though
he
noticed nothing.
But
it
was
the
end
of
everything;
he
had
not
the
axe!
He
was
overwhelmed. "What
made
me
think,"
he
reflected,
as
he
went
under
the
gateway, "what
made
me
think
that
she
would
be
sure
not
to
be
at
home
at
that
moment! Why, why,
why
did
I
assume
this
so
certainly?"
He
was
crushed
and
even
humiliated.
He
could
have
laughed
at
himself
in
his
anger.... A
dull
animal
rage
boiled
within
him.
He
stood
hesitating
in
the
gateway.
To
go
into
the
street,
to
go
a walk
for
appearance' sake
was
revolting;
to
go
back
to
his
room,
even
more
revolting. "And
what
a
chance
I
have
lost
for
ever!"
he
muttered, standing aimlessly
in
the
gateway,
just
opposite
the
porter's
little
dark room,
which
was
also
open. Suddenly
he
started.
From
the
porter's room,
two
paces
away
from
him,
something
shining
under
the
bench
to
the
right
caught
his
eye....
He
looked
about
him—nobody.
He
approached
the
room
on
tiptoe, went
down
two
steps
into
it
and
in
a faint voice
called
the
porter. "Yes,
not
at
home! Somewhere
near
though,
in
the
yard,
for
the
door
is
wide
open."
He
dashed
to
the
axe
(it
was
an
axe)
and
pulled
it
out
from
under
the
bench,
where
it
lay
between
two
chunks
of
wood;
at
once,
before
going out,
he
made
it
fast
in
the
noose,
he
thrust
both
hands
into
his
pockets
and
went
out
of
the
room;
no
one
had noticed him! "When
reason
fails,
the
devil
helps!"
he
thought
with
a
strange
grin.
This
chance
raised
his
spirits extraordinarily.
He
walked
along
quietly
and
sedately,
without
hurry,
to
avoid
awakening
suspicion.
He
scarcely
looked
at
the
passers-by, tried
to
escape
looking
at
their
faces
at
all,
and
to
be
as
little
noticeable
as
possible. Suddenly
he
thought
of
his
hat. "Good heavens! I had
the
money
the
day
before
yesterday
and
did
not
get
a
cap
to
wear instead!" A
curse
rose
from
the
bottom
of
his
soul. Glancing
out
of
the
corner
of
his
eye
into
a shop,
he
saw
by
a clock
on
the
wall
that
it
was
ten
minutes
past seven.
He
had
to
make
haste
and
at
the
same
time
to
go
someway round,
so
as
to
approach
the
house
from
the
other
side....
When
he
had
happened
to
imagine
all
this
beforehand,
he
had sometimes
thought
that
he
would
be
very
much
afraid.
But
he
was
not
very
much
afraid
now,
was
not
afraid
at
all, indeed.
His
mind
was
even
occupied
by
irrelevant matters,
but
by
nothing
for
long.
As
he
passed
the
Yusupov garden,
he
was
deeply
absorbed
in
considering
the
building
of
great
fountains,
and
of
their
refreshing
effect
on
the
atmosphere
in
all
the
squares.
By
degrees
he
passed
to
the
conviction
that
if
the
summer
garden
were
extended
to
the
field
of
Mars,
and
perhaps
joined
to
the
garden
of
the
Mihailovsky Palace,
it
would
be
a
splendid
thing
and
a
great
benefit
to
the
town.
Then
he
was
interested
by
the
question
why
in
all
great
towns
men
are
not
simply driven
by
necessity,
but
in
some
peculiar
way
inclined
to
live
in
those
parts
of
the
town
where
there
are
no
gardens
nor
fountains;
where
there
is
most
dirt
and
smell
and
all
sorts
of
nastiness.
Then
his
own
walks
through
the
Hay
Market
came
back
to
his
mind,
and
for
a
moment
he
waked
up
to
reality. "What nonsense!"
he
thought, "better
think
of
nothing
at
all!" "So probably men led
to
execution
clutch mentally
at
every
object
that
meets
them
on
the
way," flashed
through
his
mind,
but
simply flashed,
like
lightning;
he
made
haste
to
dismiss
this
thought....
And
by
now
he
was
near;
here
was
the
house,
here
was
the
gate. Suddenly a clock somewhere struck once. "What!
can
it
be
half-past seven? Impossible,
it
must
be
fast!" Luckily
for
him, everything went
well
again
at
the
gates.
At
that
very
moment,
as
though
expressly
for
his
benefit, a
huge
waggon
of
hay
had
just
driven
in
at
the
gate, completely
screening
him
as
he
passed
under
the
gateway,
and
the
waggon had
scarcely
had time
to
drive
through
into
the
yard,
before
he
had slipped
in
a flash
to
the
right.
On
the
other
side
of
the
waggon
he
could
hear
shouting
and
quarrelling;
but
no
one
noticed
him
and
no
one
met him.
Many
windows
looking
into
that
huge
quadrangular
yard
were
open
at
that
moment,
but
he
did
not
raise
his
head—he had
not
the
strength
to.
The
staircase leading
to
the
old
woman's
room
was
close by,
just
on
the
right
of
the
gateway.
He
was
already
on
the
stairs.... Drawing a breath, pressing
his
hand
against
his
throbbing heart,
and
once
more
feeling
for
the
axe
and
setting
it
straight,
he
began softly
and
cautiously
ascending
the
stairs,
listening
every
minute.
But
the
stairs, too,
were
quite
deserted;
all
the
doors
were
shut;
he
met
no
one.
One
flat
indeed
on
the
first
floor
was
wide
open
and
painters
were
at
work
in
it,
but
they
did
not
glance
at
him.
He
stood still,
thought
a
minute
and
went on. "Of
course
it
would
be
better
if
they
had
not
been here, but... it's
two
storeys
above
them."
And
there
was
the
fourth
storey,
here
was
the
door,
here
was
the
flat
opposite,
the
empty one.
The
flat
underneath
the
old
woman's
was
apparently empty also;
the
visiting
card
nailed
on
the
door
had been
torn
off—they had gone away!...
He
was
out
of
breath.
For
one
instant
the
thought
floated
through
his
mind
"Shall I
go
back?"
But
he
made
no
answer
and
began
listening
at
the
old
woman's door, a
dead
silence.
Then
he
listened
again
on
the
staircase,
listened
long
and
intently...
then
looked
about
him
for
the
last
time,
pulled
himself
together,
drew
himself
up,
and
once
more
tried
the
axe
in
the
noose. "Am I
very
pale?"
he
wondered. "Am I
not
evidently agitated?
She
is
mistrustful.... Had I
better
wait
a
little
longer...
till
my
heart
leaves
off
thumping?"
But
his
heart
did
not
leave
off.
On
the
contrary,
as
though
to
spite him,
it
throbbed
more
and
more
violently.
He
could
stand
it
no
longer,
he
slowly
put
out
his
hand
to
the
bell
and
rang.
Half
a
minute
later
he
rang
again,
more
loudly.
No
answer.
To
go
on
ringing
was
useless
and
out
of
place.
The
old
woman
was,
of
course,
at
home,
but
she
was
suspicious
and
alone.
He
had
some
knowledge
of
her
habits...
and
once
more
he
put
his
ear
to
the
door.
Either
his
senses
were
peculiarly
keen
(which
it
is
difficult
to
suppose),
or
the
sound
was
really
very
distinct. Anyway,
he
suddenly
heard
something
like
the
cautious
touch
of
a
hand
on
the
lock
and
the
rustle
of
a
skirt
at
the
very
door. Someone
was
standing stealthily close
to
the
lock
and
just
as
he
was
doing
on
the
outside
was
secretly
listening
within,
and
seemed
to
have
her
ear
to
the
door....
He
moved
a
little
on
purpose
and
muttered
something
aloud
that
he
might
not
have
the
appearance
of
hiding,
then
rang
a
third
time,
but
quietly, soberly,
and
without
impatience, Recalling
it
afterwards,
that
moment
stood
out
in
his
mind
vividly, distinctly,
for
ever;
he
could
not
make
out
how
he
had had
such
cunning,
for
his
mind
was
as
it
were
clouded
at
moments
and
he
was
almost
unconscious
of
his
body....
An
instant
later
he
heard
the
latch unfastened.