PART V
3. CHAPTER III
 (continued)
"What for? That's what I can't understand, but that what I am telling
 you is the fact, that's certain! So far from my being mistaken, you
 infamous criminal man, I remember how, on account of it, a question
 occurred to me at once, just when I was thanking you and pressing your
 hand. What made you put it secretly in her pocket? Why you did it
 secretly, I mean? Could it be simply to conceal it from me, knowing
 that my convictions are opposed to yours and that I do not approve of
 private benevolence, which effects no radical cure? Well, I decided
 that you really were ashamed of giving such a large sum before me.
 Perhaps, too, I thought, he wants to give her a surprise, when she
 finds a whole hundred-rouble note in her pocket. (For I know, some
 benevolent people are very fond of decking out their charitable
 actions in that way.) Then the idea struck me, too, that you wanted to
 test her, to see whether, when she found it, she would come to thank
 you. Then, too, that you wanted to avoid thanks and that, as the
 saying is, your right hand should not know . . . something of that
 sort, in fact. I thought of so many possibilities that I put off
 considering it, but still thought it indelicate to show you that I
 knew your secret. But another idea struck me again that Sofya
 Semyonovna might easily lose the money before she noticed it, that was
 why I decided to come in here to call her out of the room and to tell
 her that you put a hundred roubles in her pocket. But on my way I went
 first to Madame Kobilatnikov's to take them the 'General Treatise on
 the Positive Method' and especially to recommend Piderit's article
 (and also Wagner's); then I come on here and what a state of things I
 find! Now could I, could I, have all these ideas and reflections if I
 had not seen you put the hundred-rouble note in her pocket?" 
When Lebeziatnikov finished his long-winded harangue with the logical
 deduction at the end, he was quite tired, and the perspiration
 streamed from his face. He could not, alas, even express himself
 correctly in Russian, though he knew no other language, so that he was
 quite exhausted, almost emaciated after this heroic exploit. But his
 speech produced a powerful effect. He had spoken with such vehemence,
 with such conviction that everyone obviously believed him. Pyotr
 Petrovitch felt that things were going badly with him. 
 |