The Continental Classics, Volume XVIII., Mystery Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about The Continental Classics, Volume XVIII., Mystery Tales.

The Continental Classics, Volume XVIII., Mystery Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about The Continental Classics, Volume XVIII., Mystery Tales.
He then fastened a couple of these together, and, taking off his coat—­a stout cotton summer one—­began to sew the loop inside, under the left arm.  His hands shook violently, but he accomplished his task satisfactorily, and when he again put on his coat nothing was visible.  Needle and thread had been procured long ago, and lay on the table in a piece of paper.  The loop was provided for a hatchet.  It would never have done to have appeared in the streets carrying a hatchet, and if he placed it under the coat, it would have been necessary to hold it with his hands; but with the loop all he had to do was to put the iron in it and it would hang of itself under the coat, and with his hands in his pockets he could keep it from shaking, and no one could suspect that he was carrying anything.  He had thought over all this about a fortnight before.

Having finished his task, Raskolnikoff inserted his finger in a small crevice in the floor under his couch, and brought out the pledge with which he had been careful to provide himself.  This pledge was, however, only a sham—­a thin smooth piece of wood about the size and thickness of a silver cigarette case, which he had found in a yard adjoining a carpenter’s shop, and a thin piece of iron of about the same size, which he had picked up in the street.  He fastened the two together firmly with thread, then proceeded to wrap them up neatly in a piece of clean white paper, and tie the parcel in such a manner that it would be difficult to undo it again.  This was all done in order to occupy the attention of the old woman and to seize a favorable opportunity when she would be busy with the knot.  The piece of iron was simply added for weight, in order that she might not immediately detect the fraud.  He had just finished, and had put the packet in his pocket, when in the court below resounded the cry: 

“Six o’clock struck long ago!”

“Long ago!  Good heavens!”

He ran to the door, listened, seized his hat, and went down the stairs cautiously and stealthily as a cat.  He still had the most important thing to do—­to steal the hatchet out of the kitchen.  That a hatchet was the best instrument, he had long since decided.  He had an old garden knife, but on a knife—­especially on his own strength—­he could not rely; he finally fixed on the hatchet.  A peculiarity was to be noticed in all these resolutions of his; the more definitely they were settled, the more absurd and horrible they immediately appeared to his eyes, and never, for a moment, did he feel sure of the execution of his project.  But even if every question had been settled, every doubt cleared away, every difficulty overcome, he would probably have renounced his design on the instant, as something absurd, monstrous, and impossible.  But there were still a host of matters to arrange, of problems to solve.  As to procuring the hatchet, this trifle did not trouble Raskolnikoff in the least, for nothing was easier.  As a matter of fact Nastasia was

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The Continental Classics, Volume XVIII., Mystery Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.