He wrote now from the south of Russia, where he was busily engaged in some private but important business.
All this was capital, but where was his father to get that other seven or eight thousand, to make up a suitable price for the estate?
And what if there should be an outcry, and instead of that imposing picture it should come to a lawsuit?
Something told Stepan Trofimovitch that the sensitive Petrusha would not relinquish anything that was to his interest.
"Why is it—as I've noticed," Stepan Trofimovitch whispered to me once, "why is it that all these desperate socialists and communists are at the same time such incredible skinflints, so avaricious, so keen over property, and, in fact, the more socialistic, the more extreme they are, the keener they are over property... why is it?
Can that, too, come from sentimentalism?"
I don't know whether there is any truth in this observation of Stepan Trofimovitch's. I only know that Petrusha had somehow got wind of the sale of the woods and the rest of it, and that Stepan Trofimovitch was aware of the fact.
I happened, too, to read some of Petrusha's letters to his father. He wrote extremely rarely, once a year, or even less often.
Only recently, to inform him of his approaching visit, he had sent two letters, one almost immediately after the other.
All his letters were short, dry, consisting only of instructions, and as the father and son had, since their meeting in Petersburg, adopted the fashionable "thou" and "thee," Petrusha's letters had a striking resemblance to the missives that used to be sent by landowners of the old school from the town to their serfs whom they had left in charge of their estates.
And now suddenly this eight thousand which would solve the difficulty would be wafted to him by Varvara Petrovna's proposition. And at the same time she made him distinctly feel that it never could be wafted to him from anywhere else.
Of course Stepan Trofimovitch consented.
He sent for me directly she had gone and shut himself up for the whole day, admitting no one else.
He cried, of course, talked well and talked a great deal, contradicted himself continually, made a casual pun, and was much pleased with it. Then he had a slight attack of his "summer cholera"—everything in fact followed the usual course.
Then he brought out the portrait of his German bride, now twenty years deceased, and began plaintively appealing to her:
"Will you forgive me?"
In fact he seemed somehow distracted.
Our grief led us to get a little drunk.
He soon fell into a sweet sleep, however.
Next morning he tied his cravat in masterly fashion, dressed with care, and went frequently to look at himself in the glass.
He sprinkled his handkerchief with scent, only a slight dash of it, however, and as soon as he saw Varvara Petrovna out of the window he hurriedly took another handkerchief and hid the scented one under the pillow.
"Excellent!" Varvara Petrovna approved, on receiving his consent.
"In the first place you show a fine decision, and secondly you've listened to the voice of reason, to which you generally pay so little heed in your private affairs.
There's no need of haste, however," she added, scanning the knot of his white tie, "for the present say nothing, and I will say nothing.
It will soon be your birthday; I will come to see you with her.
Give us tea in the evening, and please without wine or other refreshments, but I'll arrange it all myself.
Invite your friends, but we'll make the list together.
You can talk to her the day before, if necessary. And at your party we won't exactly announce it, or make an engagement of any sort, but only hint at it, and let people know without any sort of ceremony.
And then the wedding a fortnight later, as far as possible without any fuss.... You two might even go away for a time after the wedding, to Moscow, for instance.
I'll go with you, too, perhaps... The chief thing is, keep quiet till then."
Stepan Trofimovitch was surprised.
He tried to falter that he could not do like that, that he must talk it over with his bride. But Varvara Petrovna flew at him in exasperation.
"What for?
In the first place it may perhaps come to nothing."
"Come to nothing!" muttered the bridegroom, utterly dumbfoundered.
"Yes.
I'll see.... But everything shall be as I've told you, and don't be uneasy. I'll prepare her myself.
There's really no need for you.
Everything necessary shall be said and done, and there's no need for you to meddle.
Why should you?
In what character?
Don't come and don't write letters.
And not a sight or sound of you, I beg.
I will be silent too."
She absolutely refused to explain herself, and went away, obviously upset.
Stepan Trofimovitch's excessive readiness evidently impressed her.
Alas! he was utterly unable to grasp his position, and the question had not yet presented itself to him from certain other points of view.
On the contrary a new note was apparent in him, a sort of conquering and jaunty air.
He swaggered.
"I do like that!" he exclaimed, standing before me, and flinging wide his arms.