Page:Dostoevsky - The Idiot, Collected Edition, 1916.djvu/18
some brute like this would hang on to me at once," he continued to Myshkin.
"But perhaps I do know!" said the official, fidgeting. "Lebedyev knows! You are pleased to reproach me, your excellency, but what if I prove it? Yes, I mean that very Nastasya Filippovna, on account of whom your parent tried to give you a lesson with his stick. Nastasya Filippovna's name is Barashkov, and she's a lady, so to speak, of high position, and even a princess in her own way, and she is connected with a man called Totsky--Aanasy Ivanovitch--with him and no one else, a man of property and great fortune, a member of companies and societies, and he's great friends with General Epanchin on that account...."
"Aha! so that's it, is it?" Rogozhin was genuinely surprised at last. "Ugh, hang it, he actually does know!"
"He knows everything! Lebedyev knows everything! I went about with young Alexandr Lihatchov for two months, your excellency, and it was after his father's death too, and I know wmy way about , so to say, so that he couldn't stir a step without Lebedyev. Now he is in the debtor's prison; but then I had every opportunity to know Armance and Coralie, and Princess Patsky and Nastasya Filippovna, and much else besides."
"Nastasya Filippovna? Why, did Lihatchov..." Rogozhin looked angrily at him. His lips positively twitched and turned white.
"Not at all! Not at all! Not in the least!" the official assured him with nervous haste. "Lihatchov couldn't get at her for any money! No, she is not an Armance. She has nobody but Totsky. And of an evening she sits in her own box at the Grand or the French theatre. The officers may talk a lot about her, but even they can say nothing against her. 'That's the famous Nastasya Filippovna,' they say, and that's all. But nothing further, for there is nothing."
"That's all true," Rogozhin confirmed, frowning gloomily. "Zalyozhev said so at the time. I was running across the Nevsky, prince, in my father's three-year-old coat and she came out of a shop and got into her carriage. I was all aflame in an instant. I met Zalyozhev. He is quite another sort--got up like a hair-dresser's assistant, with an eyeglass in his eye, while at my father's house we wear tarred boots and, are kept on Lenten soup. 'She's no match for you, my boy,' he said;