'I. . . haven't seen Petrusha for a long time now... Did you meet abroad?' Stepan Trofimovich barely muttered to the visitor.
'Both here and abroad.'
'Alexei Nilych himself has just returned from abroad, after a four-year absence,' Liputin picked up. 'He went to advance himself in his profession, and came here having reasons to hope he could obtain a position for the building of our railroad bridge, and is now awaiting an answer. He knows Mrs. Drozdov and Lizaveta Nikolaevna through Pyotr Stepanovich.'
The engineer sat looking ruffled and listened with awkward impatience. It seemed to me that he was angry about something.
'He knows Nikolai Vsevolodovich, too, sir.'
'You know Nikolai Vsevolodovich, too?' Stepan Trofimovich inquired.
'Him, too.'
'I ... I haven't seen Petrusha for an extremely long time, and... I find I have so little right to be called a father...
'I just left him... he'll be coming himself,' Mr. Kirillov again hastened to get off. He was decidedly angry.
'He'll be coming! At last I... you see, I haven't seen Petrusha for so very long!' Stepan Trofimovich had gotten mired in this phrase. 'I'm now awaiting my poor boy, before whom... oh, before whom I am so guilty! That is, as a matter of fact, I mean to say, when I left him then in Petersburg, I ... in short, I regarded him as nothing,
'You're serious about him crossing his pillow?' the engineer suddenly inquired with some special curiosity.
'Yes, he crossed...'
'No, never mind. Go on.'
Stepan Trofimovich looked questioningly at Liputin.
'I thank you very much for your visit, but, I confess, right now I'm ... unable... However, allow me to ask, where are you staying?'
'In Bogoyavlensky Street, at Filippov's house.'
'Ah, the same place where Shatov lives,' I remarked involuntarily.
'Precisely the same house,' Liputin exclaimed, 'only Shatov is staying upstairs in the garret, and he is downstairs, at Captain Lebyadkin's. He also knows Shatov, and he knows Shatov's wife. He met her very closely abroad.'
'What nonsense!' the engineer snapped, blushing all over. 'How you add on, Liputin! Now how did I see Shatov's wife; just once far off, not close at all... Shatov I know. Why do you add on various things?'
He turned sharply on the sofa, seized his hat, then put it down again, and, having settled himself as before, fixed his black and now flashing eyes on Stepan Trofimovich with some sort of defiance. I was quite unable to understand such strange irritability.
'Excuse me,' Stepan Trofimovich remarked imposingly, 'I understand that this may be a most delicate matter...'
'There's no most delicate matter here, and it's even shameful, and I shouted 'nonsense' not at you but at Liputin, because he adds on. Excuse me if you took it to your name. I know Shatov, but I don't know his wife at all... not at all!'
'I understand, I understand, and if I insisted, it was only because I love our poor friend,
'I don't know the Russian people either, and... there's no time to study!' the engineer snapped again, and again turned sharply on the sofa. Stepan Trofimovich broke off in the middle of his speech.
'He's studying, he's studying,' Liputin picked up, 'he's already begun studying, and is composing a most curious article on the reasons for the increasing number of suicides in Russia and generally on the reasons for the increase or restriction of the spread of suicides in society. He's reached some surprising results.'
The engineer became terribly agitated.
'You have no right about that,' he began to mutter angrily. 'Not an article. No such foolishness. I asked you confidentially, quite by chance. Not an article at all; I don't publish, and you have no right...'