And here—oh, you!"
Yevpraksia abruptly turned her head toward the window and sighed noisily.
"It is true what they say, that all the gentry are an abomination," she went on.
"They make children and then throw them in the swamp, like puppies.
What does it matter to them?
They owe no account to anybody. Is there no God in Heaven?
Even a wolf would not act like that."
Porfiry Vladimirych felt like a man sitting on pins and needles.
He restrained himself for a long time, but finally could stand it no longer and said through clenched teeth:
"This is the third day that I've been listening to your talk."
"Well, why should you do all the talking? Other people have a right to say a word, too.
Yes, sir!
You've had a child. What have you done with it?
I bet you let him rot in the hands of a wretched peasant woman in a dirty hut. I suppose the baby is lying somewhere in filth, sucking at a bottle turned sour, with no one to take care of it, and feed and clothe it."
She shed tears and dried her eyes with the end of her neckerchief.
"The Pogorelka lady was right; she said it's horrible here with you.
It is horrible.
No pleasures, no joy, nothing but mean, underhand ways. Prisoners in jail are better off.
At least, if I had a baby now, there would be something to amuse me.
But you have taken it away from me."
Porfiry Vladimirych sat shaking his head in torture.
From time to time he groaned.
"Oh, how painful!" he finally said.
"Painful? Well, you have made the bed, lie on it.
Upon my word, I shall go to Moscow and have a look at my dear little Volodya.
Volodya, Volodya!
Da-a-ar-ling!
Master, shall I take a trip to Moscow?"
"It's no use," answered Porfiry Vladimirych in a hollow voice.
"Then I'll go without asking your permission, and no one can stop me.
Because I am—a mother!"
"What sort of mother are you?
You are a strumpet—that's what you are," Yudushka finally burst out. "Tell me plainly what you want of me."
Yevpraksia, apparently, was not prepared for this question.
She stared at Yudushka and kept silence, as if wondering what she really wanted of him.
"So you call me a strumpet already?" she exclaimed, bursting into tears.
"Yes, a strumpet, a strumpet, a strumpet! Fie, fie, fie!"
Utterly enraged, Porfiry Vladimirych leapt to his feet and ran out of the room.
That was the last flicker of energy.
Then he began rapidly to collapse, while Yevpraksia kept up her campaign.
She had enormous power at her disposal, the stubbornness of stupidity, sometimes truly appalling because always trained upon the same point with the sole object of annoying, teasing, plaguing.
Little by little the confines of the dining-room became too narrow for her. She invaded the study and attacked Yudushka within the precincts of that sanctuary, into which she would not even have thought of entering formerly when her master was "busy."
She would come in, seat herself at the window, stare into space, scratch her shoulder blades on the post of the window, and begin to storm at him.
She was especially fond of harping on the threat of leaving Golovliovo.
As a matter of fact, she had never seriously thought of carrying out her threat, and she would have been astonished had anyone suggested to her that she return to her parental roof. But she suspected that Porfiry Vladimirych feared her desertion more than anything else, and she spared neither time nor energy in taking advantage of this.
She approached the subject cautiously and in a roundabout way.
She would sit a while, scratch her ear, and then remark, as if in a reminiscent frame of mind:
"To-day, I suppose, they are baking pancakes at father's."
At this prefatory remark Yudushka would grow green with rage.
He was just getting ready to plunge into a complicated computation of how much he would get for his milk if all the cows of the neighborhood perished and none but his own, with God's help, remained unharmed and doubled their yield of milk.