For in the latter case, as probably even you, dear son, with your poetical brain, can grasp, he was cheating me: for while one job is worth a rouble, say, another may be worth four times as much; so I should be a fool if I gave him for a rouble what was worth four.
I began to look into it and make my conjectures, and bit by bit I began to come upon traces, one thing I’d get out of him, another out of some outsider, and I’d get at a third by my own wits.
If you ask me what was my idea in so doing, I’ll answer, well, for one thing that the prince seemed somewhat too keen about it; he seemed in a great panic about something.
For after all, what had he to be frightened of?
He’d carried a girl off from her father, and when she was with child he had abandoned her.
What was there remarkable in that?
A charming, pleasant bit of mischief, and nothing more.
That was nothing for a man like the prince to be afraid of!
Yet he was afraid... And that made me suspicious.
I came on some very interesting traces, my boy, through Heinrich, among other things.
He was dead, of course, but from one of his cousins (now married to a baker here, in Petersburg) who had been passionately in love with him in old days, and had gone on loving him for fifteen years, regardless of the stout papa baker to whom she had incidentally borne eight children – from this cousin, I say, I managed by means of many and various manoeuvres to learn an important fact, that Heinrich, after the German habit, used to write her letters and diaries, and before his death he sent her some of his papers.
She was a fool. She didn’t understand what was important in the letters, and only understood the parts where he talked of the moon, of ‘mein lieber Augustin,’ and of Wieland, too, I believe.
But I got hold of the necessary facts, and through those letters I hit on a new clue.
I found out, too, about Mr. Smith, about the money filched from him by his daughter, and about the prince’s getting hold of that money; at last, in the midst of exclamations, rigmaroles, and allegories of all sorts, I got a glimpse of the essential truth; that is, Vanya, you understand, nothing positive.
Silly Heinrich purposely concealed that, and only hinted at it; well, and these hints, all this taken together, began to blend into a heavenly harmony in my mind. The prince was legally married to the young lady.
Where they were married, how, when precisely, whether abroad or here, the whereabouts of the documents is all unknown.
In fact, friend Vanya, I’ve torn my hair out in despair, searching for them in vain; in fact, I’ve hunted day and night.
I unearthed Smith at last, but he went and died.
I hadn’t even time to get a look at him.
Then, through chance, I suddenly learned that a woman I had suspicions of had died in Vassilyevsky Island. I made inquiries and got on the track.
I rushed off to Vassilyevsky, and there it was, do, you remember, we met.
I made a big haul that time.
In short, Nellie was a great help to me at that point ...”
“Listen,” I interrupted, “surely you don’t suppose that Nellie knows?”
“What?”
“That she is Prince Valkovsky’s daughter?
“Why, you know yourself that she’s the prince’s daughter,” he answered, looking at me with a sort of angry reproach. “Why ask such idle questions, you foolish fellow?
What matters is not simply that she’s the prince’s daughter, but that she’s his legitimate daughter – do you understand that?
“Impossible!” I cried.
“I told myself it was ‘impossible’ at first. But it turns out that it is possible and in all probability is true,”
“No, Masloboev, that’s not so, your fancy is running away with you!” I cried.
“She doesn’t know anything about it, and what’s more she’s his illegitimate daughter.
If the mother had had any sort of documentary evidence to produce, would she have put up with the awful life she led here in Petersburg, and what’s more, have left her child to such an utterly forlorn fate Nonsense!
It’s impossible!”
“I’ve thought the same myself; in fact, it’s a puzzle to me this day.
But then, again, the thing is that Nellie’s mother was the craziest and most senseless woman in the world.
She was extraordinary woman; consider all the circumstances, her romanticism, all that stargazing nonsense in it’s wildest and craziest form.
Take one point : from the very beginning she dreamed of something like a heaven upon earth, of angels; her love was boundless, her faith was limitless, and I’m convinced that she went mad afterwards, not because he got tired of her and cast her off, but because she was deceived in him, because he was capable of deceiving her and abandoning her, because her idol was turned into clay, had spat on her, and humiliated her Her romantic and irrational soul could not endure this transformation, and the insult besides.
Do you realize what an insult it was?
In her horror and, above all, her pride, she drew back from him with infinite contempt.
She broke all ties, tore up her papers, spat upon his money, forgetting that it was not her money, but her father’s, refused it as so much dirt in order to crush her seducer by her spiritual grandeur, to look upon him having robbed her, and to have the right to despise him all her life. And very likely she said that she considered it a dishonour to call herself his wife.
We have no divorce in Russia, but de facto they were separated, and how could she ask him for her after that!
Remember that the mad creature said to Nellie on her deathbed, ‘Don’t go to him; work, perish, but don’t go to him, whoever may try to take you.’ So that even then she was dreaming that she would be sought out, and so would be able once more to avenge herself by crushing the seeker with her contempt. In short, she fed on evil dreams instead of bread.
I’ve got a great deal out of Nellie, brother; in fact, I get a good deal still.
Her mother was ill, of course, in consumption;, the disease specially develops bitterness and every sort of irritability yet I know for certain, through a crony of the woman Bubnov’s that she did write to the prince, yes, to the prince, actually to the prince...”
“She wrote!
And did he get the letter?” I cried.
“That’s just it. I don’t know whether he did or not.
On one occasion Nellie’s mother approached that crony. (Do you remember that painted wench? Now she’s in the penitentiary.) Well, she’d written the letter and she gave it to her to take, but didn’t send it after all and took it back. That was three weeks before her death. . . a significant fact; if once she brought herself to send it, even though she did take it back, she might have sent it again – I don’t know; but there is one reason for believing that she really did not send it, for the prince, I fancy, only found out for certain that she had been in Petersburg, and where she’d been living, after her death.
He must have been relieved!”