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"I am quite agreeable," responded the latter. During the whole

proceedings he had not stirred and only snorting stealthily and

stealthily rubbing the ends of his fingers, had fixed his foxy eyes by

turns on me, on my father, and on Yushka. We afforded him real

gratification!

My aunt's suggestion revolted me to the depths of my soul. It was not

that I regretted the watch; but the person to whom she proposed to

present it was absolutely hateful to me. This Hrisanf Lukitch (his

surname was Trankvillitatin), a stalwart, robust, lanky divinity

student, was in the habit of coming to our house--goodness knows what

for!--to help the children with their lessons, my aunt

asserted; but he could not help us with our lessons because he had

never learnt anything himself and was as stupid as a horse. He was

rather like a horse altogether: he thudded with his feet as though

they had been hoofs, did not laugh but neighed, opening his jaws till

you could see right down his throat--and he had a long face, a hooked

nose and big, flat jaw-bones; he wore a shaggy frieze, full-skirted

coat, and smelt of raw meat. My aunt idolised him and called him a

good-looking man, a cavalier and even a grenadier. He had a habit of

tapping children on the forehead with the nails of his long fingers,

hard as stones (he used to do it to me when I was younger), and as he

tapped he would chuckle and say with surprise: "How your head

resounds, it must be empty." And this lout was to possess my

watch!--No, indeed, I determined in my own mind as I ran out of the

drawing-room and flung myself on my bed, while my cheek glowed crimson

from the slap I had received and my heart, too, was aglow with the

bitterness of the insult and the thirst for revenge--no, indeed! I

would not allow that cursed Hrisashka to jeer at me.... He would put

on the watch, let the chain hang over his stomach, would neigh with

delight; no, indeed!

"Quite so, but how was it to be done, how to prevent it?"

I determined to steal the watch from my aunt.

VIII

Luckily Trankvillitatin was away from the town at the time: he could

not come to us before the next day; I must take advantage of the

night! My aunt did not lock her bedroom door and, indeed, none of the

keys in the house would turn in the locks; but where would she put the

watch, where would she hide it? She kept it in her pocket till the

evening and even took it out and looked at it more than once; but at

night--where would it be at night?--Well, that was just my work to

find out, I thought, shaking my fists.

I was burning with boldness and terror and joy at the thought of the

approaching crime. I was continually nodding to myself; I knitted my

brows. I whispered: "Wait a bit!" I threatened someone, I was wicked,

I was dangerous ... and I avoided David!--no one, not even he, must

have the slightest suspicion of what I meant to do....

I would act alone and alone I would answer for it!

Slowly the day lagged by, then the evening, at last the night came. I

did nothing; I even tried not to move: one thought was stuck in my

head like a nail. At dinner my father, who was, as I have said,

naturally gentle, and who was a little ashamed of his harshness--boys

of sixteen are not slapped in the face--tried to be affectionate to

me; but I rejected his overtures, not from slowness to forgive, as he

imagined at the time, but simply that I was afraid of my feelings

getting the better of me; I wanted to preserve untouched all the heat

of my vengeance, all the hardness of unalterable determination. I went

to bed very early; but of course I did not sleep and did not even shut

my eyes, but on the contrary opened them wide, though I did pull the

quilt over my head. I did not consider beforehand how to act. I had no

plan of any kind; I only waited till everything should be quiet in the

house. I only took one step: I did not remove my stockings. My aunt's

room was on the second floor. One had to pass through the dining-room

and the hall, go up the stairs, pass along a little passage and

there ... on the right was the door! I must not on any account take

with me a candle or a lantern; in the corner of my aunt's room a little

lamp was always burning before the ikon shrine; I knew that. So I

should be able to see. I still lay with staring eyes and my mouth open

and parched; the blood was throbbing in my temples, in my ears, in my

throat, in my back, all over me! I waited ... but it seemed as though

some demon were mocking me; time passed and passed but still silence

did not reign.

IX

Never, I thought, had David been so late getting to sleep.... David,

the silent David, even began talking to me! Never had they gone on so

long banging, talking, walking about the house! And what could they be

talking about? I wondered; as though they had not had the whole day to

talk in! Sounds outside persisted, too; first a dog barked on a

shrill, obstinate note; then a drunken peasant was making an uproar

somewhere and would not be pacified; then gates kept creaking; then a

wretched cart on racketty wheels kept passing and passing and seeming

as though it would never pass! However, these sounds did not worry me:

on the contrary, I was glad of them; they seemed to distract my

attention. But now at last it seemed as though all were tranquil. Only

the pendulum of our old clock ticked gravely and drowsily in the

dining-room and there was an even drawn-out sound like the hard

breathing of people asleep. I was on the point of getting up, then

again something rustled ... then suddenly sighed, something soft fell

down ... and a whisper glided along the walls.

Or was there nothing of the sort--and was it only imagination mocking

me?

At last all was still. It was the very heart, the very dead of night.

The time had come! Chill with anticipation, I threw off the

bedclothes, let my feet down to the floor, stood up ... one step; a

second.... I stole along, my feet, heavy as though they did not belong