The Russian Short Story Megapack. Fyodor Dostoyevsky

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we must have them ready for the police. They will come in a few minutes, to seal up the dead man’s papers!”

      “To seal up the papers? Why?”

      “That is the law. So that everything should be intact, until after the last will and testament of the deceased has been read, according to his wishes.”

      General Nazimoff’s wife paled perceptibly. She knew nothing of such an obstacle, and had not expected it. The doctor was too busy to notice her pallor.

      “Very well; I shall write the announcement at once, and send it to the newspapers. I suppose ‘Novoe Vremya’ and ‘Novosti’ will be enough?”

      “Do as you think best. Write it here, in my room. Here is everything you require; pens, paper. Write, and then read it to me. I shall be back in a moment. I want to put a bandage round my head. It aches so. Wait for me here.” And the general’s wife went from the sitting-room to her bedroom.

      “Rita!” she whispered to her faithful maid, who was hurriedly sewing a mourning gown of crape for her. “Do not let the doctor go till I return. Do you understand? Do what you please, but do not let him go.” The general’s wife slipped from the bedroom into the passage through a small side door, and disappeared.

      The two rooms between hers and the chamber where the dead man lay were quite empty and nearly dark; there were no candles in them. From the chamber came the feeble glimmer of the tiny lamps burning before the icons.* The tapers were not lit yet, as the deacon had not yet arrived. He was to come at the same time as the priest and the coffin. For the moment there was no one near the dead man; in the anteroom sat the Sister of Mercy.

      * Sacred images.

      “You wish to pray?” she asked the general’s wife.

      “Yes, I shall pray there, in his room.”

      She slipped past the dead body without looking at it, to the room that had been the general’s bedroom, and closed the door behind her. She was afraid to lock it, and after all, was it necessary? It would only take a moment. There it is, the box! She knows it of old! And she knows its key of old, too; it is not so long since her husband had no secrets from her.

      The key was quickly slipped into the lock, and the lid rose quickly. The paper? That new, detestable paper, which might deprive her of everything. Ah! there it is!

      To close the lid quickly, and turn the key in the lock; to hide the keys somewhere; here, between the seat and the back of the sofa, on which he lay. That’s it!

      A sigh of relief from fear escaped the beautiful lips of the handsome woman, lips which were pale through those terrible days. She could feel secure at last!

      She must look at the document, the proof of his cruelty, his injustice, his stupidity! She must make sure that there was no mistake! Olga Vseslavovna went up to the window, and taking advantage of the last ray of the gray day, unfolded the will.

      “In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit!” she read. Yes, that is it, the will.

      “How he pronounced those same words, when he was blessing little Olga,” she remembered. “Blessing her! And his hand did not tremble, when he signed this. To deprive her, to deprive them both, of everything, all on account of those hated people? But now—it should never be! On no account! Your down-at-the-heel pedagogue shall not strut about in peacock’s feathers! Olga and I…require the money more!”

      And the general’s wife was tempted to snap her fingers in triumph in the direction of the dead man.

      Suddenly, quite close to the door, the sound of steps was heard. Good heavens! And she held the big sheet of crested paper in her hand! Where could she put it? She had no time to think of folding it up. There! they are coming in already! Who can it be?

      And the will lay on the floor, the general’s wife kneeling on it, as on a prayer carpet, in an attitude of prayer, her clasped hands on the window sill, her wet eyes fixed on a faintly twinkling star, as though calling heaven to witness her inconsolable grief and bereavement.

      It was only the Sister of Mercy.

      “Madam, the people have come, bringing the coffin; and I think the police have also come.”

      “Yes, in a moment. Tell them I am coming immediately.”

      The Sister of Mercy went out.

      “See how she loved her husband. And why was he so unjust to her at the last?” she involuntarily reproached the dead general.

      Meanwhile the general’s wife had risen hastily, folded the will as best she could, in four, in eight folds, and crushing it together in her hand, went quietly from the room, which now filled her with dread.

      She was so confused that she did not even think of looking for her pocket; she simply held her packet tight, and let her hand hang down, hiding it in the folds of her wide dressing-gown. There seemed to be so many people in the room which a moment before was empty, that she felt cowed. Her heart beat pitilessly, and the blood throbbed so violently in her temples that she could not understand what was said to her. They were asking her if they might place the body in the coffin, which had already been placed beside it. Her silence was taken as consent. The skilful undertakers easily lifted the already rigid body.

      Olga Vseslavovna stood at the head of the dead general. Among the crowd of undertakers and servants, she suddenly saw coming toward her, with outstretched hand, and with tears of compassion in her eyes, the Princess Ryadski, the same aristocratic kinswoman who had already taken little Olga to stay with her.

      “I must shake hands with her! And that horrible packet is in my hand! Where shall I put it? How can I hide it?” Before her eyes gleamed the brilliantly lighted, ashen forehead of the dead man, helplessly bent backward and sideways, as the whole body was suspended in the hands of the undertakers, over its last abode.

      A saving thought!

      The general’s wife bent gently over the dead body. She gently supported the head of the corpse, gently laid it on the satin cushion, straightened the frills which surrounded the hard pillow, and, unperceived, left under it the twisted roll of paper.

      “It will be safer there!” The thought flashed through her mind. “He wanted to keep his will himself; well, keep it to eternity, now! What more can you ask?”

      And it even seemed ludicrous to her. She could hardly restrain a smile of triumph, changing it into a sad smile of grief, in reply to her kinswoman’s condolences. The coffin was already lying in state on the bier; it was covered with brocade and flowers. The princess, as kinswoman of the late general, bent low, and first laid on the dead body the wreath she had brought with her.

      “The poor sufferer has entered into rest,” she whispered, shaking her head. “Will the funeral service be soon? Where will it be? Where is Olga Vseslavovna?”

      “She will be here in a moment,” the Sister of Mercy whispered, deeply affected; “she has gone to fix herself. They will begin the funeral service in a few minutes, and she is all in disorder. She is in great grief. Will you not take a seat?”

      “What? Sit down? Thank you,” loftily replied the princess. And she went toward a dignified personage who was entering, adorned with many orders and an aristocratic beard.

      The

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