Finally, he
stopped at a store selling various ladies’ fabrics. Again negotiating purchases for a significant
sum, Mr. Goliadkin, here as well, promised the merchant to stop by without fail, took the number
of the shop, and, to the question about a little deposit, again repeated that there would be a
little deposit in due time. Then he visited several other shops; in all of them he bargained,
asked the price of various objects, sometimes argued for a long time with the merchants, left the
shop and came back three times—in short, manifested an extraordinary activity. From the Gostiniy
Dvor, our hero went to a well-known furniture store, where he arranged a deal on furniture for
six rooms, admired a fashionable and very whimsical lady’s toilet table in the latest taste and,
having assured the merchant that he would send for it all without fail, left the store, as was
his custom, with the promise of a little deposit, then went elsewhere and bargained for other
things. In short, there was apparently no end to his bustling. Finally, it seems, Mr. Goliadkin
himself began to grow quite bored with it all. He even, and God knows by what chance, began, out
of the blue, to suffer pangs of conscience. Not for anything would he now have agreed to meet,
for example, Andrei Filippovich, or even Krestyan Ivanovich. Finally, the town clock struck three
in the afternoon. When Mr. Goliadkin definitively settled in his carriage, of all the purchases
he had made that morning, there actually turned out to be only one pair of gloves and a flask of
scent for a rouble and a half in banknotes. Since it was still early for Mr. Goliadkin, he
ordered his coachman to stop at a famous restaurant on Nevsky Prospect, of which he had
previously only heard, got out of the carriage, and ran to have a bite to eat, to rest, and while
away some time.
Having nibbled as a man nibbles when he is looking
forward to a sumptuous dinner party, that is, taken a little something to appease his tapeworm,
as they say, and drunk a little glass of vodka, Mr. Goliadkin settled into an armchair and,
modestly glancing around, peacefully affixed himself to a skinny government newspaper. After
reading a couple of lines, he got up, looked in the mirror, straightened and smoothed himself
out; then he went over to the window to see if his carriage was there…then sat down again and
took the newspaper. It was noticeable that our hero was in extreme agitation. Having glanced at
his watch and seen that it was only a quarter past four, and that consequently there was still
quite a while to wait, and at the same time considering it improper just to sit like that, Mr.
Goliadkin ordered hot chocolate, for which, however, he felt no great desire at the present
moment. Having drunk the hot chocolate and noticed that the time had advanced a little, he went
to pay. Suddenly someone tapped him on the shoulder.
He turned and saw his two colleagues before him, the
same ones he had met that morning on Liteinaya—still quite young fellows in both age and rank.
Our hero was neither here nor there with them, neither friends nor outright enemies. Naturally,
decency was observed on both sides; but there was no further closeness, and there could not be.
Meeting them at the present moment was extremely unpleasant for Mr. Goliadkin. He winced slightly
and was momentarily confused.
“Yakov Petrovich, Yakov Petrovich!” the two
registrars 6 chirped, “you here? On what…”
“Ah! It’s you, gentlemen!” Mr. Goliadkin interrupted
hastily, slightly embarrassed and scandalized by the clerks’ astonishment and at the same time by
the intimacy of their manners, but anyhow acting the casual and fine fellow willy-nilly. “So
you’ve deserted, gentlemen, heh, heh, heh!…” Here, so as not to demean himself and yet to
condescend to the chancellery youth, with whom he always kept himself within due limits, he tried
to pat one young man on the shoulder; but on this occasion Mr. Goliadkin’s popularism did not
succeed, and instead of a decently intimate gesture, something quite different came
out.
“Well, so our bear is sitting there?…”
“Who’s that, Yakov Petrovich?”
“Well, the bear there, as if you didn’t know who is
called the bear?…” Mr. Goliadkin laughed and turned to the cashier to take his change. “I’m
speaking of Andrei Filippovich, gentlemen,” he went on, having finished with the cashier and this
time turning to the clerks with a quite serious air. The two registrars exchanged meaningful
winks.
“He’s still sitting there, and he asked about you,
Yakov Petrovich,” one of them replied.
“Sitting, ah! In that case let him sit, gentlemen.
And he asked about me, eh?”
“He did, Yakov Petrovich.
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