I myself am conducting the affair candidly and openly,
Olsufy Ivanovich.”
“Ah, so that’s how!”
“Yes, Krestyan Ivanovich. That’s how it…”
“And what about him?”
“What about him, Krestyan Ivanovich! He mumbles—this
and that, and I know you, and his excellency’s a benevolent man—and on he goes, and smooches it
around…But so what? He’s gone pretty dotty, as they say, from old age.”
“Ah! so that’s how it is now!”
“Yes, Krestyan Ivanovich. And yet we’re all like
that! an old codger! staring into the grave, at his last gasp, as they say, but then there’s some
women’s gossip, and there he is listening; no doing without him…”
“Gossip, you say?”
“Yes, Krestyan Ivanovich, they’ve made up some
gossip. And our bear and his nephew, our little treasure, have mixed their hands in it; they’ve
banded together with the old women and cooked up the business. What do you think? How have they
contrived to kill a man?…”
“To kill a man?”
“Yes, Krestyan Ivanovich, to kill a man, to kill a
man morally. They’ve spread…I’m still talking about my close acquaintance…”
Krestyan Ivanovich nodded his head.
“They’ve spread a rumor about him…I confess to you,
I’m even ashamed to say it, Krestyan Ivanovich…”
“Hm…”
“They’ve spread a rumor that he has already signed an
agreement to marry, that he’s already engaged elsewhere…And to whom do you think, Krestyan
Ivanovich?”
“Really?”
“To a cookshop owner, an indecent German woman, from
whom he buys his dinners; instead of paying his debts he’s offering her his hand.”
“That’s what they say?”
“Would you believe it, Krestyan Ivanovich? A German
woman, a mean, vile, shameless German woman, Karolina Ivanovna, if you know…”
“I confess, for my part…”
“I understand you, Krestyan Ivanovich, I do, and for
my part I feel that…”
“Tell me, please, where are you living
now?”
“Where am I living now, Krestyan
Ivanovich?”
“Yes…I want…before, it seems, you were
living…”
“I was, Krestyan Ivanovich, I was, I was living
before. How could I not have been!” replied Mr. Goliadkin, accompanying his words with a little
laugh and slightly confusing Krestyan Ivanovich with his reply.
“No, you haven’t taken it the right way; I wanted for
my part…”
“I also wanted, Krestyan Ivanovich, for my part, I
also wanted,” Mr. Goliadkin continued, laughing. “However, Krestyan Ivanovich, I’ve sat too long
with you. I hope you will now permit me…to bid you good morning…”
“Hm…”
“Yes, Krestyan Ivanovich, I understand you; I fully
understand you now,” said our hero, posturing slightly before Krestyan Ivanovich. “And so, permit
me to bid you good morning…”
Here our hero scraped with his foot and walked out of
the room, leaving Krestyan Ivanovich in extreme astonishment. Going down the doctor’s stairs, he
smiled and rubbed his hands joyfully. On the porch, breathing the fresh air and feeling himself
free, he was even actually ready to acknowledge himself the happiest of mortals and then go
straight to the department—when his carriage suddenly clattered up to the entrance; he looked and
remembered everything. Petrushka was already opening the doors. Some strange and extremely
unpleasant sensation gripped the whole of Mr. Goliadkin. He seemed to blush for a moment.
Something pricked him. He was just about to place his foot on the step of the carriage when he
suddenly turned and looked at Krestyan Ivanovich’s windows. That was it! Krestyan Ivanovich was
standing at the window, stroking his side-whiskers with his right hand and looking at our hero
with great curiosity.
“That doctor is stupid,” thought Mr. Goliadkin,
hiding himself in the carriage, “extremely stupid. Maybe he treats his patients well, but all the
same…he’s stupid as a log.” Mr. Goliadkin settled himself, Petrushka shouted “Gee-up!”—and the
carriage again went rolling down to Nevsky Prospect.
CHAPTER III
M R. GOLIADKIN SPENT that whole morning in an awful
bustle. On reaching Nevsky Prospect, our hero ordered the carriage to stop at the Gostiniy Dvor.
5 Jumping out of his carriage, he ran in under the arcade, accompanied by
Petrushka, and went straight to a silver- and goldsmith’s shop. One could see merely by the look
of Mr. Goliadkin that he was all aflutter and had an awful heap of things to do. Having agreed on
a price of fifteen hundred in banknotes for a full dinner and tea service, and bargained his way
into a whimsically shaped cigar box and a full silver shaving kit for the same price, having
inquired, finally, about the price of certain other little objects, useful and agreeable in their
way, Mr. Goliadkin ended by promising to stop by for his purchases without fail the next day or
even send for them that same day, took the number of the shop, listened attentively to the
merchant, who was fussing about a little deposit, and promised to give him a little deposit in
due time. After which he hastily took leave of the bewildered merchant and went down the arcade
pursued by a whole flock of salesclerks, constantly looking back at Petrushka, and painstakingly
searching for some other shop. On the way he dashed into a moneychanger’s shop and broke all his
big notes into smaller ones, and though he lost in the exchange, he broke them all the same, and
his wallet grew significantly fatter, which apparently afforded him great pleasure.
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