ON the evening of Easter Sunday the
actual Civil Councillor, Navagin, on his return from
paying calls, picked up the sheet of paper on which
visitors had inscribed their names in the hall, and
went with it into his study. After taking off
his outer garments and drinking some seltzer water,
he settled himself comfortably on a couch and began
reading the signatures in the list. When his eyes
reached the middle of the long list of signatures,
he started, gave an ejaculation of astonishment and
snapped his fingers, while his face expressed the
utmost perplexity.
“Again!” he said, slapping
his knee. “It’s extraordinary!
Again! Again there is the signature of that fellow,
goodness knows who he is! Fedyukov! Again!”
Among the numerous signatures on the
paper was the signature of a certain Fedyukov.
Who the devil this Fedyukov was, Navagin had not a
notion. He went over in his memory all his acquaintances,
relations and subordinates in the service, recalled
his remote past but could recollect no name like Fedyukov.
What was so strange was that this incognito,
Fedyukov, had signed his name regularly every Christmas
and Easter for the last thirteen years. Neither
Navagin, his wife, nor his house porter knew who he
was, where he came from or what he was like.
“It’s extraordinary!”
Navagin thought in perplexity, as he paced about the
study. “It’s strange and incomprehensible!
It’s like sorcery!”
“Call the porter here!” he shouted.
“It’s devilish queer! But I will
find out who he is!”
“I say, Grigory,” he said,
addressing the porter as he entered, “that Fedyukov
has signed his name again! Did you see him?”
“No, your Excellency.”
“Upon my word, but he has signed
his name! So he must have been in the hall.
Has he been?”
“No, he hasn’t, your Excellency.”
“How could he have signed his name without being
there?”
“I can’t tell.”
“Who is to tell, then?
You sit gaping there in the hall. Try and remember,
perhaps someone you didn’t know came in?
Think a minute!”
“No, your Excellency, there
has been no one I didn’t know. Our clerks
have been, the baroness came to see her Excellency,
the priests have been with the Cross, and there has
been no one else. . . .”
“Why, he was invisible when he signed his name,
then, was he?”
“I can’t say: but
there has been no Fedyukov here. That I will swear
before the holy image. . . .”
“It’s queer! It’s
incomprehensible! It’s ex-traordinary!”
mused Navagin. “It’s positively ludicrous.
A man has been signing his name here for thirteen
years and you can’t find out who he is.
Perhaps it’s a joke? Perhaps some clerk
writes that name as well as his own for fun.”
And Navagin began examining Fedyukov’s signature.
The bold, florid signature in the
old-fashioned style with twirls and flourishes was
utterly unlike the handwriting of the other signatures.
It was next below the signature of Shtutchkin, the
provincial secretary, a scared, timorous little man
who would certainly have died of fright if he had
ventured upon such an impudent joke.
“The mysterious Fedyukov has
signed his name again!” said Navagin, going
in to see his wife. “Again I fail to find
out who he is.”
Madame Navagin was a spiritualist,
and so for all phenomena in nature, comprehensible
or incomprehensible, she had a very simple explanation.
“There’s nothing extraordinary
about it,” she said. “You don’t
believe it, of course, but I have said it already and
I say it again: there is a great deal in the
world that is supernatural, which our feeble intellect
can never grasp. I am convinced that this Fedyukov
is a spirit who has a sympathy for you . . . If
I were you, I would call him up and ask him what he
wants.”
“Nonsense, nonsense!”
Navagin was free from superstitions,
but the phenomenon which interested him was so mysterious
that all sorts of uncanny devilry intruded into his
mind against his will. All the evening he was
imagining that the incognito Fedyukov was the spirit
of some long-dead clerk, who had been discharged from
the service by Navagin’s ancestors and was now
revenging himself on their descendant; or perhaps it
was the kinsman of some petty official dismissed by
Navagin himself, or of a girl seduced by him. . .
.
All night Navagin dreamed of a gaunt
old clerk in a shabby uniform, with a face as yellow
as a lemon, hair that stood up like a brush, and pewtery
eyes; the clerk said something in a sepulchral voice
and shook a bony finger at him. And Navagin almost
had an attack of inflammation of the brain.
For a fortnight he was silent and
gloomy and kept walking up and down and thinking.
In the end he overcame his sceptical vanity, and going
into his wife’s room he said in a hollow voice:
“Zina, call up Fedyukov!”
The spiritualistic lady was delighted;
she sent for a sheet of cardboard and a saucer, made
her husband sit down beside her, and began upon the
magic rites.
Fedyukov did not keep them waiting long. . . .
“What do you want?” asked Navagin.
“Repent,” answered the saucer.
“What were you on earth?”
“A sinner. . . .”
“There, you see!” whispered his wife,
“and you did not believe!”
Navagin conversed for a long time
with Fedyukov, and then called up Napoleon, Hannibal,
Askotchensky, his aunt Klavdya Zaharovna, and they
all gave him brief but correct answers full of deep
significance. He was busy with the saucer for
four hours, and fell asleep soothed and happy that
he had become acquainted with a mysterious world that
was new to him. After that he studied spiritualism
every day, and at the office, informed the clerks that
there was a great deal in nature that was supernatural
and marvellous to which our men of science ought to
have turned their attention long ago.
Hypnotism, mediumism, bishopism, spiritualism,
the fourth dimension, and other misty notions took
complete possession of him, so that for whole days
at a time, to the great delight of his wife, he read
books on spiritualism or devoted himself to the saucer,
table-turning, and discussions of supernatural phenomena.
At his instigation all his clerks took up spiritualism,
too, and with such ardour that the old managing clerk
went out of his mind and one day sent a telegram:
“Hell. Government House. I feel that
I am turning into an evil spirit. What’s
to be done? Reply paid. Vassily Krinolinsky.”
After reading several hundreds of
treatises on spiritualism Navagin had a strong desire
to write something himself. For five months he
sat composing, and in the end had written a huge monograph,
entitled: My Opinion. When he had
finished this essay he determined to send it to a
spiritualist journal.
The day on which it was intended to
despatch it to the journal was a very memorable one
for him. Navagin remembers that on that never-to-be-forgotten
day the secretary who had made a fair copy of his
article and the sacristan of the parish who had been
sent for on business were in his study. Nayagin’s
face was beaming. He looked lovingly at his creation,
felt between his fingers how thick it was, and with
a happy smile said to the secretary:
“I propose, Filipp Sergeyitch,
to send it registered. It will be safer. . .
.” And raising his eyes to the sacristan,
he said: “I have sent for you on business,
my good man. I am putting my youngest son to
the high school and I must have a certificate of baptism;
only could you let me have it quickly?”
“Very good, your Excellency!”
said the sacristan, bowing. “Very good,
I understand. . . .”
“Can you let me have it by to-morrow?”
“Very well, your Excellency,
set your mind at rest! To-morrow it shall be
ready! Will you send someone to the church to-morrow
before evening service? I shall be there.
Bid him ask for Fedyukov. I am always there.
. . .”
“What!” cried the general, turning pale.
“Fedyukov.”
“You, . . . you are Fedyukov?”
asked Navagin, looking at him with wide-open eyes.
“Just so, Fedyukov.”
“You. . . . you signed your name in my hall?”
“Yes . . .” the sacristan
admitted, and was overcome with confusion. “When
we come with the Cross, your Excellency, to grand gentlemen’s
houses I always sign my name. . . . I like doing
it. . . . Excuse me, but when I see the list
of names in the hall I feel an impulse to sign mine.
. . .”
In dumb stupefaction, understanding
nothing, hearing nothing, Navagin paced about his
study. He touched the curtain over the door, three
times waved his hands like a jeune premier in
a ballet when he sees her, gave a whistle and
a meaningless smile, and pointed with his finger into
space.
“So I will send off the article
at once, your Excellency,” said the secretary.
These words roused Navagin from his
stupour. He looked blankly at the secretary and
the sacristan, remembered, and stamping, his foot
irritably, screamed in a high, breaking tenor:
“Leave me in peace! Lea-eave
me in peace, I tell you! What you want of me
I don’t understand.”
The secretary and the sacristan went
out of the study and reached the street while he was
still stamping and shouting:
“Leave me in peace! What
you want of me I don’t understand. Lea-eave
me in peace!”