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I will tell him about it to-day , she used to decide, but at once reflected that in Laevskys present mood it would hardly be convenient to talk to him of debts. Thirdly, she had on two occasions in Laevskys absence received a visit from Kirilin, the police captain: once in the morning when Laevsky had gone to bathe, and another time at midnight when he was playing cards. Remembering this, Nadyezhda Fyodorovna flushed crimson, and looked round at the cook as though she might overhear her thoughts. The long, insufferably hot, wearisome days, beautiful languorous evenings and stifling nights, and the whole manner of living, when from morning to night one is at a loss to fill up the useless hours, and the persistent thought that she was the prettiest young woman in the town, and that her youth was passing and being wasted, and Laevsky himself, though honest and idealistic, always the same, always lounging about in his slippers, biting his nails, and wearying her with his caprices, led by degrees to her becoming possessed by desire, and as though she were mad, she thought of nothing else day and night. Breathing, looking, walking, she felt nothing but desire. The sound of the sea told her she must love; the darkness of eveningthe same; the mountainsthe same. And when Kirilin began paying her attentions, she had neither the power nor the wish to resist, and surrendered to him. Now the foreign steamers and the men in white reminded her for some reason of a huge hall; together with the shouts of French she heard the strains of a waltz, and her bosom heaved with unaccountable delight. She longed to dance and talk French. She reflected joyfully that there was nothing terrible about her infidelity. Her soul had no part in her infidelity; she still loved Laevsky, and that was proved by the fact that she was jealous of him, was sorry for him, and missed him when he was away. Kirilin had turned out to be very mediocre, rather coarse though handsome; everything was broken off with him already and there would never be anything more. What had happened was over; it had nothing to do with any one, and if Laevsky found it out he would not believe in it. There was only one bathing-house for ladies on the sea-front; men bathed under the open sky. Going into the bathing-house, Nadyezhda Fyodorovna found there an elderly lady, Marya Konstantinovna Bityugov, and her daughter Katya, a schoolgirl of fifteen; both of them were sitting on a bench undressing. Marya Konstantinovna was a good-natured, enthusiastic, and genteel person, who talked in a drawling and pathetic voice. She had been a governess until she was thirty-two, and then had married Bityugov, a Government officiala bald little man with his hair combed on to his temples and with a very meek disposition. She was still in love with him, was jealous, blushed at the word love, and told every one she was very happy. My dear, she cried enthusiastically, on seeing Nadyezhda Fyodorovna, assuming an expression which all her acquaintances called almond-oily. My dear, how delightful that you have come! Well bathe togetherthats enchanting! Olga quickly flung off her dress and chemise, and began undressing her mistress. Its not quite so hot to-day as yesterday? said Nadyezhda Fyodorovna, shrinking at the coarse touch of the naked cook. Yesterday I almost died of the heat. Oh, yes, my dear; I could hardly breathe myself. Would you believe it? I bathed yesterday three times! Just imagine, my dear, three times! Nikodim Alexandritch was quite uneasy. Is it possible to be so ugly? thought Nadyezhda Fyodorovna, looking at Olga and the officials wife; she glanced at Katya and thought: The little girls not badly made. Your Nikodim Alexandritch is very charming! she said. Im simply in love with him. Ha, ha, ha! cried Marya Konstantinovna, with a forced laugh; thats quite enchanting. |
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