Alexey Nikolaitch explained to her the difference between the departments and the complicated system of sending in papers. He was soon exhausted, and his place was taken by the accountant. "A wonderfully disagreeable woman!" said Kistunov, revolted, nervously cracking his fingers and continually going to the decanter of water. "She's a perfect idiot! She's worn me out and she'll exhaust them, the nasty creature! Ough! . . . my heart is throbbing." Half an hour later he rang his bell. Alexey Nikolaitch made his appearance. "How are things going?" Kistunov asked languidly. "We can't make her see anything, Pyotr Alexandritch! We are simply done. We talk of one thing and she talks of something else." "I . . . I can't stand the sound of her voice. . . . I am ill. . . . I can't bear it." "Send for the porter, Pyotr Alexandritch, let him put her out." "No, no," cried Kistunov in alarm. "She will set up a squeal, and there are lots of flats in this building, and goodness knows what they would think of us. . . . Do try and explain to her, my dear fellow. . . ." A minute later the deep drone of Alexey Nikolaitch's voice was audible again. A quarter of an hour passed, and instead of his bass there was the murmur of the accountant's powerful tenor." "Re-mark-ably nasty woman," Kistunov thought indignantly, nervously shrugging his shoulders. "No more brains than a sheep. I believe that's a twinge of the gout again. . . . My migraine is coming back. . . ." In the next room Alexey Nikolaitch, at the end of his resources, at last tapped his finger on the table and then on his own forehead. "The fact of the matter is you haven't a head on your shoulders," he said, "but this." "Come, come," said the old lady, offended. "Talk to your own wife like that. . . . You screw! . . . Don't be too free with your hands." And looking at her with fury, with exasperation, as though he would devour her, Alexey Nikolaitch said in a quiet, stifled voice: "Clear out."