Page 296 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 296

‘Don’t go near him, he’ll hurt you,’ cried Smurov in a
       warning voice.
         ‘I shan’t ask him about the wisp of tow, for I expect you
       tease  him  with  that  question  somehow.  But  I’ll  find  out
       from him why you hate him so.’
         ‘Find out then, find out,’ cried the boys laughing.
         Alyosha  crossed  the  bridge  and  walked  uphill  by  the
       fence, straight towards the boy.
         ‘You’d  better  look  out,’  the  boys  called  after  him;  ‘he
       won’t be afraid of you. He will stab you in a minute, on the
       sly, as he did Krassotkin.’
         The boy waited for him without budging. Coming up to
       him, Alyosha saw facing him a child of about nine years
       old.  He  was  an  undersized  weakly  boy  with  a  thin  pale
       face,  with  large  dark  eyes  that  gazed  at  him  vindictively.
       He was dressed in a rather shabby old overcoat, which he
       had  monstrously  outgrown.  His  bare  arms  stuck  out  be-
       yond his sleeves. There was a large patch on the right knee
       of his trousers, and in his right boot just at the toe there
       was a big hole in the leather, carefully blackened with ink.
       Both the pockets of his greatcoat were weighed down with
       stones. Alyosha stopped two steps in front of him, looking
       inquiringly at him, The boy, seeing at once from Alyosha’s
       eyes that he wouldn’t beat him, became less defiant, and ad-
       dressed him first.
         ‘I am alone, and there are six of them. I’ll beat them all,
       alone!’ he said suddenly, with flashing eyes.
         ‘I think one of the stones must have hurt you badly,’ ob-
       served Alyosha.
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