Page 950 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 950

to visit in prison before she was really well) she would sit
       down and begin talking to ‘Maximushka’ about trifling mat-
       ters, to keep her from thinking of her sorrow. The old man
       turned out to be a good story-teller on occasions, so that
       at last he became necessary to her. Grushenka saw scarcely
       anyone else beside Alyosha, who did not come every day
       and never stayed long. Her old merchant lay seriously ill
       at this time, ‘at his last gasp’ as they said in the town, and
       he did, in fact, die a week after Mitya’s trial. Three weeks
       before his death, feeling the end approaching, he made his
       sons, their wives and children, come upstairs to him at last
       and bade them not leave him again. From that moment he
       gave strict orders to his servants not to admit Grushenka
       and to tell her if she came, ‘The master wishes you long life
       and happiness and tells you to forget him.’ But Grushenka
       sent almost every day to inquire after him.
         ‘You’ve come at last!’ she cried, flinging down the cards
       and  joyfully  greeting  Alyosha,  ‘and  Maximushka’s  been
       scaring me that perhaps you wouldn’t come. Ah, how I need
       you! Sit down to the table. What will you have coffee?’
         ‘Yes, please,’ said Alyosha, sitting down at the table. ‘I am
       very hungry.’
         ‘That’s right. Fenya, Fenya, coffee,’ cried Grushenka. ‘It’s
       been made a long time ready for you. And bring some lit-
       tle pies, and mind they are hot. Do you know, we’ve had a
       storm over those pies to-day. I took them to the prison for
       him, and would you believe it, he threw them back to me: he
       would not eat them. He flung one of them on the floor and
       stamped on it. So I said to him: ‘I shall leave them with the
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