She soon recovered consciousness, raised her head, sat up and began sneezing and coughing, stupidly wiping her wet dress with her hands.
She said nothing.
"She's drunk herself out of her senses," the same woman's voice wailed at her side. "Out of her senses. The other day she tried to hang herself, we cut her down.
I ran out to the shop just now, left my little girl to look after her--and here she's in trouble again!
A neighbour, gentleman, a neighbour, we live close by, the second house from the end, see yonder...."
The crowd broke up. The police still remained round the woman, someone mentioned the police station....
Raskolnikov looked on with a strange sensation of indifference and apathy.
He felt disgusted.
"No, that's loathsome... water... it's not good enough," he muttered to himself.
"Nothing will come of it," he added, "no use to wait.
What about the police office...?
And why isn't Zametov at the police office?
The police office is open till ten o'clock...."
He turned his back to the railing and looked about him.
"Very well then!" he said resolutely; he moved from the bridge and walked in the direction of the police office.
His heart felt hollow and empty.
He did not want to think.
Even his depression had passed, there was not a trace now of the energy with which he had set out "to make an end of it all."
Complete apathy had succeeded to it.
"Well, it's a way out of it," he thought, walking slowly and listlessly along the canal bank.
"Anyway I'll make an end, for I want to....
But is it a way out?
What does it matter!
There'll be the square yard of space--ha!
But what an end!
Is it really the end?
Shall I tell them or not?
Ah... damn!
How tired I am! If I could find somewhere to sit or lie down soon!
What I am most ashamed of is its being so stupid.
But I don't care about that either!
What idiotic ideas come into one's head."
To reach the police office he had to go straight forward and take the second turning to the left. It was only a few paces away.
But at the first turning he stopped and, after a minute's thought, turned into a side street and went two streets out of his way, possibly without any object, or possibly to delay a minute and gain time.
He walked, looking at the ground; suddenly someone seemed to whisper in his ear; he lifted his head and saw that he was standing at the very gate of _the_ house.
He had not passed it, he had not been near it since _that_ evening.
An overwhelming, unaccountable prompting drew him on.
He went into the house, passed through the gateway, then into the first entrance on the right, and began mounting the familiar staircase to the fourth storey.
The narrow, steep staircase was very dark.
He stopped at each landing and looked round him with curiosity; on the first landing the framework of the window had been taken out.
"That wasn't so then," he thought.
Here was the flat on the second storey where Nikolay and Dmitri had been working.
"It's shut up and the door newly painted. So it's to let."
Then the third storey and the fourth.
"Here!"
He was perplexed to find the door of the flat wide open. There were men there, he could hear voices; he had not expected that.
After brief hesitation he mounted the last stairs and went into the flat.
It, too, was being done up; there were workmen in it.
This seemed to amaze him; he somehow fancied that he would find everything as he left it, even perhaps the corpses in the same places on the floor.
And now, bare walls, no furniture; it seemed strange.