“Yes, I was
brought up quite differently,” said the elder girl, the handsome young Countess
Vera; and she smiled. But the smile did not improve Vera’s face; on the
contrary her face looked unnatural, and therefore unpleasing. Vera was
good-looking; she was not stupid, was clever at her lessons, and well educated;
she had a pleasant voice, and what she said was true and appropriate. But,
strange to say, every one—both the visitor and the countess—looked at her, as
though wondering why she had said it, and conscious of a certain awkwardness.
“People are
always too clever with their elder children; they try to do something
exceptional with them,” said the visitor.
“We won’t
conceal our errors, ma chère! My dear countess was too clever with Vera,” said
the count. “But what of it? she has turned out capitally all the same,” he
added, with a wink of approval to Vera.
The guests got up and went away, promising
to come to dinner.
“What manners!
Staying on and on!” said the countess, when she had seen her guests out.
Chapter 10
WHEN NATASHA ran out of the drawing-room
she only ran as far as the conservatory. There she stopped listening to the
talk in the drawing-room, and waiting for Boris to come out. She was beginning
to get impatient, and stamping her foot was almost ready to cry at his not
coming at once, when she heard the young man’s footsteps coming out discreetly,
not too slowly nor too quickly. Natasha darted swiftly away and hid among the
tubs of shrubs.
Boris stood still in the middle of the
room, looked round him, brushed a speck of dirt off the sleeve of his uniform,
and going up to the looking-glass examined his handsome face. Natasha, keeping
quiet, peeped out of her hiding-place, waiting to see what he would do. He
stood a little while before the glass, smiled at his reflection, and walked
towards the other door. Natasha was on the point of calling to him, but she
changed her mind. “Let him look for me,” she said to herself. Boris had only
just gone out, when at the other door Sonya came in, flushed and muttering
something angrily through her tears. Natasha checked her first impulse to run
out to her, and remained in her hiding-place, as it were under the invisible
cap, looking on at what was going on in the world. She began to feel a peculiar
novel sort of enjoyment in it. Sonya was murmuring something as she looked
towards the drawing-room door. The door opened and Nikolay came in.
“Sonya! what
is the matter? how can you?” said Nikolay, running up to her.
“Nothing,
nothing, leave me alone!” Sonya was sobbing.
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