Page 285 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 285

looked tired and weak. His forehead, upon which huge pur-
           ple bruises had come out during the night, was bandaged
           with a red handkerchief; his nose too was swollen terribly
           in the night, and some smaller bruises covered it in patches,
            giving his whole face a peculiarly spiteful and irritable look.
           The old man was aware of this, and turned a hostile glance
            on Alyosha as he came in.
              ‘The coffee is cold,’ he cried harshly; ‘I won’t offer you
            any. I’ve ordered nothing but a Lenten fish soup to-day, and
           I don’t invite anyone to share it. Why have you come?’
              ‘To find out how you are,’ said Alyosha.
              ‘Yes. Besides, I told you to come yesterday. It’s all of no
            consequence. You need not have troubled. But I knew you’d
            come poking in directly.’
              He  said  this  with  almost  hostile  feeling.  At  the  same
           time he got up and looked anxiously in the looking-glass
           (perhaps for the fortieth time that morning) at his nose. He
            began, too, binding his red handkerchief more becomingly
            on his forehead.
              ‘Red’s better. It’s just like the hospital in a white one,’ he
            observed  sententiously.  ‘Well,  how  are  things  over  there?
           How is your elder?’
              ‘He is very bad; he may die to-day,’ answered Alyosha.
           But his father had not listened, and had forgotten his own
            question at once.
              ‘Ivan’s gone out,’ he said suddenly. ‘He is doing his utmost
           to carry off Mitya’s betrothed. That’s what he is staying here
           for,’ he added maliciously, and, twisting his mouth, looked
            at Alyosha.

                                           The Brothers Karamazov
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