THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
Chapter 8 - The Third and Last Interview with Smerdyakov
WHEN he was half-way there, the keen dry wind that had been
blowing early that morning rose again, and a fine dry snow began
falling thickly. It did not lie on the ground, but was whirled about
by the wind, and soon there was a regular snowstorm. There were
scarcely any lamp-posts in the part of the town where Smerdyakov
lived. Ivan strode alone in the darkness, unconscious of the storm,
instinctively picking out his way. His head ached and there was a
painful throbbing in his temples. He felt that his hands were
twitching convulsively. Not far from Marya Kondratyevna's cottage,
Ivan suddenly came upon a solitary drunken little peasant. He was
wearing a coarse and patched coat, and was walking in zigzags,
grumbling and swearing to himself. Then suddenly he would begin
singing in a husky drunken voice:
Ach, Vanka's gone to Petersburg;
I won't wait till he comes back.
But he broke off every time at the second line and began
swearing again; then he would begin the same song again. Ivan felt
an intense hatred for him before he had thought about him at all.
Suddenly he realised his presence and felt an irresistible impulse
to knock him down. At that moment they met, and the peasant with a
violent lurch fell full tilt against Ivan, who pushed him back
furiously. The peasant went flying backwards and fell like a log on
the frozen ground. He uttered one plaintive "O- oh!" and then was
silent. Ivan stepped up to him. He was lying on his back, without
movement or consciousness. "He will be frozen," thought Ivan, and he
went on his way to Smerdyakov's.
In the passage, Marya Kondratyevna, who ran out to open the door
with a candle in her hand, whispered that Smerdyakov was very ill;
"It's not that he's laid up, but he seems not himself, and he even
told us to take the tea away; he wouldn't have any."
"Why, does he make a row?" asked Ivan coarsely.
"Oh dear no, quite the contrary, he's very quiet. Only please
don't talk to him too long," Marya Kondratyevna begged him. Ivan
opened the door and stepped into the room.
It was over-heated as before, but there were changes in the
room. One of the benches at the side had been removed, and in its
place had been put a large old mahogany leather sofa, on which a bed
had been made up, with fairly clean white pillows. Smerdyakov was
sitting on the sofa, wearing the same dressing-gown. The table had
been brought out in front of the sofa, so that there was hardly room
to move. On the table lay a thick book in yellow cover, but Smerdyakov
was not reading it. He seemed to be sitting doing nothing. He met Ivan
with a slow silent gaze, and was apparently not at all surprised at
his coming. There was a great change in his face; he was much
thinner and sallower. His eyes were sunken and there were blue marks
under them.
"Why, you really are ill?" Ivan stopped short. "I won't keep you
long, I wont even take off my coat. Where can one sit down?"
He went to the other end of the table, moved up a chair and sat
down on it.
"Why do you look at me without speaking? We only come with one
question, and I swear I won't go without an answer. Has the young
lady, Katerina Ivanovna, been with you?"
Smerdyakov still remained silent, looking quietly at Ivan as
before. Suddenly, with a motion of his hand, he turned his face away.
"What's the matter with you?" cried Ivan.
"Nothing."
"What do you mean by 'nothing'?"
"Yes, she has. It's no matter to you. Let me alone."
"No, I won't let you alone. Tell me, when was she here?"
"Why, I'd quite forgotten about her," said Smerdyakov, with a
scornful smile, and turning his face to Ivan again, he stared at him
with a look of frenzied hatred, the same look that he had fixed on him
at their last interview, a month before.
"You seem very ill yourself, your face is sunken; you don't look
like yourself," he said to Ivan.
"Never mind my health, tell me what I ask you.,
"But why are your eyes so yellow? The whites are quite yellow. Are
you so worried?" He smiled contemptuously and suddenly laughed
outright.
"Listen; I've told you I won't go away without an answer!" Ivan
cried, intensely irritated.
"Why do you keep pestering me? Why do you torment me?" said
Smerdyakov, with a look of suffering.
"Damn it! I've nothing to do with you. Just answer my question and
I'll go away."
"I've no answer to give you," said Smerdyakov, looking down again.
"You may be sure I'll make you answer!"
"Why are you so uneasy?" Smerdyakov stared at him, not simply with
contempt, but almost with repulsion. "Is this because the trial begins
to-morrow? Nothing will happen to you; can't you believe that at last?
Go home, go to bed and sleep in peace, don't be afraid of anything."
"I don't understand you.... What have I to be afraid of
to-morrow?" Ivan articulated in astonishment, and suddenly a chill
breath of fear did in fact pass over his soul. Smerdyakov measured him
with his eyes.
"You don't understand?" he drawled reproachfully. "It's a
strange thing a sensible man should care to play such a farce!"
Ivan looked at him speechless. The startling, incredibly
supercilious tone of this man who had once been his valet, was
extraordinary in itself. He had not taken such a tone even at their
last interview.
"I tell you, you've nothing to be afraid of. I won't say
anything about you; there's no proof against you. I say, how your
hands are trembling! Why are your fingers moving like that? Go home,
you did not murder him."
Ivan started. He remembered Alyosha.
"I know it was not I," he faltered.
"Do you?" Smerdyakov caught him up again.
Ivan jumped up and seized him by the shoulder.
"Tell me everything, you viper! Tell me everything!"
Smerdyakov was not in the least scared. He only riveted his eyes
on Ivan with insane hatred.
"Well, it was you who murdered him, if that's it," he whispered
furiously.
Ivan sank back on his chair, as though pondering something. He
laughed malignantly.
"You mean my going away. What you talked about last time?"
"You stood before me last time and understood it all, and you
understand it now."
"All I understand is that you are mad."
"Aren't you tired of it? Here we are face to face; what's the
use of going on keeping up a farce to each other? Are you still trying
to throw it all on me, to my face? You murdered him; you are the
real murderer, I was only your instrument, your faithful servant,
and it was following your words I did it."
"Did it? Why, did you murder him?" Ivan turned cold.
Something seemed to give way in his brain, and he shuddered all
over with a cold shiver. Then Smerdyakov himself looked at him
wonderingly; probably the genuineness of Ivan's horror struck him.
"You don't mean to say you really did not know?" he faltered
mistrustfully, looking with a forced smile into his eyes. Ivan still
gazed at him, and seemed unable to speak.
Ach, Vanka's gone to Petersburg;
I won't wait till he comes back,
suddenly echoed in his head.
"Do you know, I am afraid that you are a dream, a phantom
sitting before me," he muttered.
"There's no phantom here, but only us two and one other. No
doubt he is here, that third, between us."
"Who is he? Who is here? What third person?" Ivan cried in
alarm, looking about him, his eyes hastily searching in every corner.
"That third is God Himself- Providence. He is the third beside
us now. Only don't look for Him, you won't find him."
"It's a lie that you killed him!" Ivan cried madly. "You are
mad, or teasing me again!"
Smerdyakov, as before, watched him curiously, with no sign of
fear. He could still scarcely get over his incredulity; he still
fancied that Ivan knew everything and was trying to "throw it all on
him to his face."
"Wait a minute," he said at last in a weak voice, and suddenly
bringing up his left leg from under the table, he began turning up his
trouser leg. He was wearing long white stockings and slippers.
Slowly he took off his garter and fumbled to the bottom of his
stocking. Ivan gazed at him, and suddenly shuddered in a paroxysm of
terror.
"He's mad!" he cried, and rapidly jumping up, he drew back, so
that he knocked his back against the wall and stood up against it,
stiff and straight. He looked with insane terror at Smerdyakov, who,
entirely unaffected by his terror, continued fumbling in his stocking,
as though he were making an effort to get hold of something with his
fingers and pull it out. At last he got hold of it and began pulling
it out. Ivan saw that it was a piece of paper, or perhaps a roll of
papers. Smerdyakov pulled it out and laid it on the table.
"Here," he said quietly.
"What is it?" asked Ivan, trembling.
"Kindly look at it," Smerdyakov answered, still in the same low
tone.
Ivan stepped up to the table, took up the roll of paper and
began unfolding it, but suddenly drew back his fingers, as though from
contact with a loathsome reptile.
"Your hands keep twitching," observed Smerdyakov, and he
deliberately unfolded the bundle himself. Under the wrapper were three
packets of hundred-rouble notes.
"They are all here, all the three thousand roubles; you need not
count them. Take them," Smerdyakov suggested to Ivan, nodding at the
notes. Ivan sank back in his chair. He was as white as a handkerchief.
"You frightened me... with your stocking," he said, with a strange
grin.
"Can you really not have known till now?" Smerdyakov asked once
more.
"No, I did not know. I kept thinking of Dmitri. Brother,
brother! Ach!" He suddenly clutched his head in both hands.
"Listen. Did you kill him alone? With my brother's help or
without?"
"It was only with you, with your help, I killed him, and Dmitri
Fyodorovitch is quite innocent."
"All right, all right. Talk about me later. Why do I keep on
trembling? I can't speak properly."
"You were bold enough then. You said 'everything was lawful,'
and how frightened you are now," Smerdyakov muttered in surprise.
"Won't you have some lemonade? I'll ask for some at once. It's very
refreshing. Only I must hide this first."
And again he motioned at the notes. He was just going to get up
and call at the door to Marya Kondratyevna to make some lemonade and
bring it them, but, looking for something to cover up the notes that
she might not see them, he first took out his handkerchief, and as
it turned out to be very dirty, took up the big yellow book that
Ivan had noticed at first lying on the table, and put it over the
notes. The book was The Sayings of the Holy Father Isaac the Syrian.
Ivan read it mechanically.
"I won't have any lemonade," he said. "Talk of me later. Sit
down and tell me how you did it. Tell me all about it."
"You'd better take off your greatcoat, or you'll be too hot."
Ivan, as though he'd only just thought of it, took off his coat,
and, without getting up from his chair, threw it on the bench.
"Speak, please, speak."
He seemed calmer. He waited, feeling sure that Smerdyakov would
tell him all about it.
"How it was done?" sighed Smerdyakov. "It was done in a most
natural way, following your very words."
"Of my words later," Ivan broke in again, apparently with complete
self-possession, firmly uttering his words, and not shouting as
before. "Only tell me in detail how you did it. Everything, as it
happened. Don't forget anything. The details, above everything, the
details, I beg you."
"You'd gone away, then I fell into the cellar."
"In a fit or in a sham one?"
"A sham one, naturally. I shammed it all. I went quietly down
the steps to the very bottom and lay down quietly, and as I lay down I
gave a scream, and struggled, till they carried me out."
"Stay! And were you shamming all along, afterwards, and in the
hospital?"
"No, not at all. Next day, in the morning, before they took me
to the hospital, I had a real attack and a more violent one than
I've had for years. For two days I was quite unconscious."
"All right, all right. Go on."
"They laid me on the bed. I knew I'd be the other side of the
partition, for whenever I was ill, Marfa Ignatyevna used to put me
there, near them. She's always been very kind to me, from my birth up.
At night I moaned, but quietly. I kept expecting Dmitri Fyodorovitch
to come."
"Expecting him? To come to you?"
"Not to me. I expected him to come into the house, for I'd no
doubt that he'd come that night, for being without me and getting no
news, he'd be sure to come and climb over the fence, as he used to,
and do something."
"And if he hadn't come?"
"Then nothing would have happened. I should never have brought
myself to it without him."
"All right, all right. speak more intelligibly, don't hurry; above
all, don't leave anything out!"
"I expected him to kill Fyodor Pavlovitch. I thought that was
certain, for I had prepared him for it... during the last few days....
He knew about the knocks, that was the chief thing. With his
suspiciousness and the fury which had been growing in him all those
days, he was bound to get into the house by means of those taps.
That was inevitable, so I was expecting him."
"Stay," Ivan interrupted; "if he had killed him, he would have
taken the money and carried it away; you must have considered that.
What would you have got by it afterwards? I don't see."
0 "But he would never have found the money. That was only what I
told him, that the money was under the mattress. But that wasn't true.
It had been lying in a box. And afterwards I suggested to Fyodor
Pavlovitch, as I was the only person he trusted, to hide the
envelope with the notes in the corner behind the ikons, for no one
would have guessed that place, especially if they came in a hurry.
So that's where the envelope lay, in the corner behind the ikons. It
would have been absurd to keep it under the mattress; the box, anyway,
could be locked. But all believe it was under the mattress. A stupid
thing to believe. So if Dmitri Fyodorovitch had committed the
murder, finding nothing, he would either have run away in a hurry,
afraid of every sound, as always happens with murderers, or he would
have been arrested. So I could always have clambered up to the ikons
and have taken away the money next moming or even that night, and it
would have all been put down to Dmitri Fyodorovitch. I could reckon
upon that."
"But what if he did not kill him, but only knocked him down?"
"If he did not kill him, of course, I would not have ventured to
take the money, and nothing would have happened. But I calculated that
he would beat him senseless, and I should have time to take it then,
and then I'd make out to Fyodor Pavlovitch that it was no one but
Dmitri Fyodorovitch who had taken the money after beating him."
"Stop... I am getting mixed. Then it was Dmitri after all who
killed him; you only took the money?"
"No, he didn't kill him. Well, I might as well have told you now
that he was the murderer.... But I don't want to lie to you now
because... because if you really haven't understood till now, as I see
for myself, and are not pretending, so as to throw your guilt on me to
my very face, you are still responsible for it all, since you knew
of the murder and charged me to do it, and went away knowing all about
it. And so I want to prove to your face this evening that you are
the only real murderer in the whole affair, and I am not the real
murderer, though I did kill him. You are the rightful murderer."
"Why, why, am I a murderer? Oh, God!" Ivan cried, unable to
restrain himself at last, and forgetting that he had put off
discussing himself till the end of the conversation. "You still mean
that Tchermashnya? Stay, tell me, why did you want my consent, if
you really took Tchermashnya for consent? How will you explain that
now?"
"Assured of your consent, I should have known that you wouldn't
have made an outcry over those three thousand being lost, even if
I'd been suspected, instead of Dmitri Fyodorovitch, or as his
accomplice; on the contrary, you would have protected me from
others.... And when you got your inheritance you would have rewarded
me when you were able, all the rest of your life. For you'd have
received your inheritance through me, seeing that if he had married
Agrafena Alexandrovna, you wouldn't have had a farthing."
"Ah! Then you intended to worry me all my life afterwards,"
snarled Ivan. "And what if I hadn't gone away then, but had informed
against you?"
"What could you have informed? That I persuaded you to go to
Tcherinashnya? That's all nonsense. Besides, after our conversation
you would either have gone away or have stayed. If you had stayed,
nothing would have happened. I should have known that you didn't
want it done, and should have attempted nothing. As you went away,
it meant you assured me that you wouldn't dare to inform against me at
the trial, and that you'd overlook my having the three thousand.
And, indeed, you couldn't have prosecuted me afterwards, because
then I should have told it all in the court; that is, not that I had
stolen the money or killed him- I shouldn't have said that- but that
you'd put me up to the theft and the murder, though I didn't consent
to it. That's why I needed your consent, so that you couldn't have
cornered me afterwards, for what proof could you have had? I could
always have cornered you, revealing your eagerness for your father's
death, and I tell you the public would have believed it all, and you
would have been ashamed for the rest of your life."
"Was I then so eager, was I?" Ivan snarled again.
"To be sure you were, and by your consent you silently
sanctioned my doing it." Smerdyakov looked resolutely at Ivan. He
was very weak and spoke slowly and wearily, but some hidden inner
force urged him on. He evidently had some design. Ivan felt that.
"Go on," he said. "Tell me what happened that night."
"What more is there to tell! I lay there and I thought I heard the
master shout. And before that Grigory Vassilyevitch had suddenly got
up and came out, and he suddenly gave a scream, and then all was
silence and darkness. I lay there waiting, my heart beating; I
couldn't bear it. I got up at last, went out. I saw the window open on
the left into the garden, and I stepped to the left to listen
whether he was sitting there alive, and I heard the master moving
about, sighing, so I knew he was alive. 'Ech!' I thought. I went to
the window and shouted to the master, 'It's I.' And he shouted to
me, 'He's been, he's been; he's run away.' He meant Dmitri
Fyodorovitch had been. 'He's killed Grigory! "Where?' I whispered.
'There, in the corner,' he pointed. He was whispering, too. 'Wait a
bit," I said. I went to the corner of the garden to look, and there
I came upon Grigory Vassilyevitch lying by the wall, covered with
blood, senseless. So it's true that Dmitri Fyodorovitch has been here,
was the thought that came into my head, and I determined on the spot
to make an end of it, as Grigory Vassilyevitch, even if he were alive,
would see nothing of it, as he lay there senseless. The only risk
was that Marfa Ignatyevna might wake up. I felt that at the moment,
but the longing to get it done came over me, till I could scarcely
breathe. I went back to the window to the master and said, 'She's
here, she's come; Agrafena Alexandrovna has come, wants to be let in.'
And he started like a baby. 'Where is she?' he fairly gasped, but
couldn't believe it. 'She's standing there,' said I. 'Open.' He looked
out of the window at me, half believing and half distrustful, but
afraid to open. 'Why, he is afraid of me now,' I thought. And it was
funny. I bethought me to knock on the window-frame those taps we'd
agreed upon as a signal that Grushenka had come, in his presence,
before his eyes. He didn't seem to believe my word, but as soon as
he heard the taps, he ran at once to open the door. He opened it. I
would have gone in, but he stood in the way to prevent me passing.
'Where is she? Where is she?' He looked at me, all of a tremble.
'Well,' thought I, 'if he's so frightened of me as all that, it's a
bad lookout!' And my legs went weak with fright that he wouldn't let
me in or would call out, or Marfa Ignatyevna would run up, or
something else might happen. I don't remember now, but I must have
stood pale, facing him. I whispered to him, 'Why, she's there,
there, under the window; how is it you don't see her?' I said.
'Bring her then, bring her.' 'She's afraid,' said I; 'she was
frightened at the noise, she's hidden in the bushes; go and call to
her yourself from the study.' He ran to the window, put the candle
in the window. 'Grushenka,' he cried, 'Grushenka, are you here?'
Though he cried that, he didn't want to lean out of the window, he
didn't want to move away from me, for he was panic-stricken; he was so
frightened he didn't dare to turn his back on me. 'Why, here she
is,' said I. I went up to the window and leaned right out of it. 'Here
she is; she's in the bush, laughing at you, don't you see her?' He
suddenly believed it; he was all of a shake- he was awfully crazy
about her- and he leaned right out of the window. I snatched up that
iron paper-weight from his table; do you remember, weighing about
three pounds? I swung it and hit him on the top of the skull with
the corner of it. He didn't even cry out. He only sank down
suddenly, and I hit him again and a third time. And the third time I
knew I'd broken his skull. He suddenly rolled on his back, face
upwards, covered with blood. I looked round. There was no blood on me,
not a spot. I wiped the paper-weight, put it back, went up to the
ikons, took the money out of the envelope, and flung the envelope on
the floor and the pink ribbon beside it. I went out into the garden
all of a tremble, straight to the apple-tree with a hollow in it-
you know that hollow. I'd marked it long before and put a rag and a
piece of paper ready in it. I wrapped all the notes in the rag and
stuffed it deep down in the hole. And there it stayed for over a
fortnight. I took it out later, when I came out of the hospital. I
went back to my bed, lay down and thought, 'If Grigory Vassilyevitch
has been killed outright it may be a bad job for me, but if he is
not killed and recovers, it will be first-rate, for then he'll bear
witness that Dmitri Fyodorovitch has been here, and so he must have
killed him and taken the money.' Then I began groaning with suspense
and impatience, so as to wake Marfa Ignatyevna as soon as possible. At
last she got up and she rushed to me, but when she saw Grigory
Vassilyevitch was not there, she ran out, and I heard her scream in
the garden. And that set it all going and set my mind at rest."
He stopped. Ivan had listened all the time in dead silence without
stirring or taking his eyes off him. As he told his story Smerdyakov
glanced at him from time to time, but for the most part kept his
eyes averted. When he had finished he was evidently agitated and was
breathing hard. The perspiration stood out on his face. But it was
impossible to tell whether it was remorse he was feeling, or what.
"Stay," cried Ivan pondering. "What about the door? If he only
opened the door to you, how could Grigory have seen it open before?
For Grigory saw it before you went."
It was remarkable that Ivan spoke quite amicably, in a different
tone, not angry as before, so if anyone had opened the door at that
moment and peeped in at them, he would certainly have concluded that
they were talking peaceably about some ordinary, though interesting,
subject.
"As for that door and having seen it open, that's only his fancy,"
said Smerdyakov, with a wry smile. "He is not a man, I assure you, but
an obstinate mule. He didn't see it, but fancied he had seen it, and
there's no shaking him. It's just our luck he took that notion into
his head, for they can't fail to convict Dmitri Fyodorovitch after
that."
"Listen... " said Ivan, beginning to seem bewildered again and
making an effort to grasp something. "Listen. There are a lot of
questions I want to ask you, but I forget them... I keep forgetting
and getting mixed up. Yes. Tell me this at least, why did you open the
envelope and leave it there on the floor? Why didn't you simply
carry off the envelope?... When you were telling me, I thought you
spoke about it as though it were the right thing to do... but why, I
can't understand..."
"I did that for a good reason. For if a man had known all about
it, as I did for instance, if he'd seen those notes before, and
perhaps had put them in that envelope himself, and had seen the
envelope sealed up and addressed, with his own eyes, if such a man had
done the murder, what should have made him tear open the envelope
afterwards, especially in such desperate haste, since he'd know for
certain the notes must be in the envelope? No, if the robber had
been someone like me, he'd simply have put the envelope straight in
his pocket and got away with it as fast as he could. But it'd be quite
different with Dmitri Fyodorovitch. He only knew about the envelope by
hearsay; he had never seen it, and if he'd found it, for instance,
under the mattress, he'd have torn it open as quickly as possible to
make sure the notes were in it. And he'd have thrown the envelope
down, without having time to think that it would be evidence against
him. Because he was not an habitual thief and had never directly
stolen anything before, for he is a gentleman born, and if he did
bring himself to steal, it would not be regular stealing, but simply
taking what was his own, for he'd told the whole town he meant to
before, and had even bragged aloud before everyone that he'd go and
take his property from Fyodor Pavlovitch. I didn't say that openly
to the prosecutor when I was being examined, but quite the contrary, I
brought him to it by a hint, as though I didn't see it myself, and
as though he'd thought of it himself and I hadn't prompted him; so
that Mr. Prosecutor's mouth positively watered at my suggestion."
"But can you possibly have thought of all that on the spot?" cried
Ivan, overcome with astonishment. He looked at Smerdyakov again with
alarm.
"Mercy on us! Could anyone think of it all in such a desperate
hurry? It was all thought out beforehand."
"Well... well, it was the devil helped you!" Ivan cried again.
"No, you are not a fool, you are far cleverer than I thought..."
He got up, obviously intending to walk across the room. He was
in terrible distress. But as the table blocked his way, and there
was hardly room to pass between the table and the wall, he only turned
round where he stood and sat down again. Perhaps the impossibility
of moving irritated him, as he suddenly cried out almost as
furiously as before.
"Listen, you miserable, contemptible creature! Don't you
understand that if I haven't killed you, it's simply because I am
keeping you to answer to-morrow at the trial. God sees," Ivan raised
his hand, "perhaps I, too, was guilty; perhaps I really had a secret
desire for my father's... death, but I swear I was not as guilty as
you think, and perhaps I didn't urge you on at all. No, no, I didn't
urge you on! But no matter, I will give evidence against myself
to-morrow at the trial. I'm determined to! I shall tell everything,
everything. But we'll make our appearance together. And whatever you
may say against me at the trial, whatever evidence you give, I'll face
it; I am not afraid of you. I'll confirm it all myself! But you must
confess, too! You must, you must; we'll go together. That's how it
shall be!"
Ivan said this solemnly and resolutely and from his flashing
eyes alone it could be seen that it would be so.
"You are ill, I see; you are quite ill. Your eyes are yellow,"
Smerdyakov commented, without the least irony, with apparent
sympathy in fact.
"We'll go together," Ivan repeated. "And if you won't go, no
matter, I'll go alone."
Smerdyakov paused as though pondering.
"There'll be nothing of the sort, and you won't go," he
concluded at last positively.
"You don't understand me," Ivan exclaimed reproachfully.
"You'll be too much ashamed, if you confess it all. And, what's
more, it will be no use at all, for I shall say straight out that I
never said anything of the sort to you, and that you are either ill
(and it looks like it, too), or that you're so sorry for your
brother that you are sacrificing yourself to save him and have
invented it all against me, for you've always thought no more of me
than if I'd been a fly. And who will believe you, and what single
proof have you got?"
"Listen, you showed me those notes just now to convince me."
Smerdyakov lifted the book off the notes and laid it on one side.
"Take that money away with you," Smerdyakov sighed.
"Of course, I shall take it. But why do you give it to me, if
you committed the murder for the sake of it?" Ivan looked at him
with great surprise.
"I don't want it," Smerdyakov articulated in a shaking voice, with
a gesture of refusal. "I did have an idea of beginning a new life with
that money in Moscow or, better still, abroad. I did dream of it,
chiefly because 'all things are lawful.' That was quite right what you
taught me, for you talked a lot to me about that. For if there's no
everlasting God, there's no such thing as virtue, and there's no
need of it. You were right there. So that's how I looked at it."
"Did you come to that of yourself?" asked Ivan, with a wry smile.
"With your guidance."
"And now, I suppose, you believe in God, since you are giving back
the money?"
"No, I don't believe," whispered Smerdyakov.
"Then why are you giving it back?"
"Leave off... that's enough!" Smerdyakov waved his hand again.
"You used to say yourself that everything was lawful, so now why are
you so upset, too? You even want to go and give evidence against
yourself.... Only there'll be nothing of the sort! You won't go to
give evidence," Smerdyakov decided with conviction.
"You'll see," said Ivan.
"It isn't possible. You are very clever. You are fond of money,
I know that. You like to be respected, too, for you're very proud; you
are far too fond of female charms, too, and you mind most of all about
living in undisturbed comfort, without having to depend on anyone-
that's what you care most about. You won't want to spoil your life for
ever by taking such a disgrace on yourself. You are like Fyodor
Pavlovitch, you are more like him than any of his children; you've the
same soul as he had."
"You are not a fool," said Ivan, seeming struck. The blood
rushed to his face. "You are serious now!" he observed, looking
suddenly at Smerdyakov with a different expression.
"It was your pride made you think I was a fool. Take the money."
Ivan took the three rolls of notes and put them in his pocket
without wrapping them in anything.
"I shall show them at the court to-morrow," he said.
"Nobody will believe you, as you've plenty of money of your own;
you may simply have taken it out of your cash-box and brought it to
the court."
Ivan rose from his seat.
"I repeat," he said, "the only reason I haven't killed you is that
I need you for to-morrow, remember that, don't forget it!"
"Well, kill me. Kill me now," Smerdyakov said, all at once looking
strangely at Ivan. "You won't dare do that even!" he added, with a
bitter smile. "You won't dare to do anything, you, who used to be so
bold!"
"Till to-morrow," cried Ivan, and moved to go out.
"Stay a moment.... Show me those notes again."
Ivan took out the notes and showed them to him. Smerdyakov
looked at them for ten seconds.
"Well, you can go," he said, with a wave of his hand. "Ivan
Fyodorovitch!" he called after him again.
"What do you want?" Ivan turned without stopping.
"Good-bye!"
"Till to-morrow!" Ivan cried again, and he walked out of the
cottage.
The snowstorm was still raging. He walked the first few steps
boldly, but suddenly began staggering. "It's something physical," he
thought with a grin. Something like joy was springing up in his heart.
He was conscious of unbounded resolution; he would make an end of
the wavering that had so tortured him of late. His determination was
taken, "and now it will not be changed," he thought with relief. At
that moment he stumbled against something and almost fell down.
Stopping short, he made out at his feet the peasant he had knocked
down, still lying senseless and motionless. The snow had almost
covered his face. Ivan seized him and lifted him in his arms. Seeing a
light in the little house to the right he went up, knocked at the
shutters, and asked the man to whom the house belonged to help him
carry the peasant to the police station, promising him three
roubles. The man got ready and came out. I won't describe in detail
how Ivan succeeded in his object, bringing the peasant to the
police-station and arranging for a doctor to see him at once,
providing with a liberal hand for the expenses. I will only say that
this business took a whole hour, but Ivan was well content with it.
His mind wandered and worked incessantly.
"If I had not taken my decision so firmly for to-morrow," he
reflected with satisfaction, "I should not have stayed a whole hour to
look after the peasant, but should have passed by, without caring
about his being frozen. I am quite capable of watching myself, by
the way," he thought at the same instant, with still greater
satisfaction, "although they have decided that I am going out of my
mind!"
Just as he reached his own house he stopped short, asking
himself suddenly hadn't he better go at once to the prosecutor and
tell him everything. He decided the question by turning back to the
house. "Everything together to-morrow!" he whispered to himself,
and, strange to say, almost all his gladness and selfsatisfaction
passed in one instant.
As he entered his own room he felt something like a touch of ice
on his heart, like a recollection or, more exactly, a reminder, of
something agonising and revolting that was in that room now, at that
moment, and had been there before. He sank wearily on his sofa. The
old woman brought him a samovar; he made tea, but did not touch it. He
sat on the sofa and felt giddy. He felt that he was ill and
helpless. He was beginning to drop asleep, but got up uneasily and
walked across the room to shake off his drowsiness. At moments he
fancied he was delirious, but it was not illness that he thought of
most. Sitting down again, he began looking round, as though
searching for something. This happened several times. At last his eyes
were fastened intently on one point. Ivan smiled, but an angry flush
suffused his face. He sat a long time in his place, his head propped
on both arms, though he looked sideways at the same point, at the sofa
that stood against the opposite wall. There was evidently something,
some object, that irritated him there, worried him and tormented him.