<h3>XXXV</h3>
<p>The free and easy deportment of Madame Polozov would probably for the first
moment have disconcerted Sanin—though he was not quite a novice and had
knocked about the world a little—if he had not again seen in this very
freedom and familiarity a good omen for his undertaking. “We must humour
this rich lady’s caprices,” he decided inwardly; and as
unconstrainedly as she had questioned him he answered, “Yes; I am going
to be married.”</p>
<p>“To whom? To a foreigner?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Did you get acquainted with her lately? In Frankfort?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“And what is she? May I know?”</p>
<p>“Certainly. She is a confectioner’s daughter.”</p>
<p>Maria Nikolaevna opened her eyes wide and lifted her eyebrows.</p>
<p>“Why, this is delightful,” she commented in a drawling voice;
“this is exquisite! I imagined that young men like you were not to be met
with anywhere in these days. A confectioner’s daughter!”</p>
<p>“I see that surprises you,” observed Sanin with some dignity;
“but in the first place, I have none of these prejudices …”</p>
<p>“In the first place, it doesn’t surprise me in the least,”
Maria Nikolaevna interrupted; “I have no prejudices either. I’m the
daughter of a peasant myself. There! what can you say to that? What does
surprise and delight me is to have come across a man who’s not afraid to
love. You do love her, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Is she very pretty?”</p>
<p>Sanin was slightly stung by this last question…. However, there was no drawing
back.</p>
<p>“You know, Maria Nikolaevna,” he began, “every man thinks the
face of his beloved better than all others; but my betrothed is really
beautiful.”</p>
<p>“Really? In what style? Italian? antique?”</p>
<p>“Yes; she has very regular features.”</p>
<p>“You have not got her portrait with you?”</p>
<p>“No.” (At that time photography was not yet talked off.
Daguerrotypes had hardly begun to be common.)</p>
<p>“What’s her name?”</p>
<p>“Her name is Gemma.”</p>
<p>“And yours?”</p>
<p>“Dimitri.”</p>
<p>“And your father’s?”</p>
<p>“Pavlovitch.”</p>
<p>“Do you know,” Maria Nikolaevna said, still in the same drawling
voice, “I like you very much, Dimitri Pavlovitch. You must be an
excellent fellow. Give me your hand. Let us be friends.”</p>
<p>She pressed his hand tightly in her beautiful, white, strong fingers. Her hand
was a little smaller than his hand, but much warmer and smoother and whiter and
more full of life.</p>
<p>“Only, do you know what strikes me?”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“You won’t be angry? No? You say she is betrothed to you. But was
that … was that quite necessary?”</p>
<p>Sanin frowned. “I don’t understand you, Maria Nikolaevna.”</p>
<p>Maria Nikolaevna gave a soft low laugh, and shaking her head tossed back the
hair that was falling on her cheeks. “Decidedly—he’s
delightful,” she commented half pensively, half carelessly. “A
perfect knight! After that, there’s no believing in the people who
maintain that the race of idealists is extinct!”</p>
<p>Maria Nikolaevna talked Russian all the time, an astonishingly pure true Moscow
Russian, such as the people, not the nobles speak.</p>
<p>“You’ve been brought up at home, I expect, in a God-fearing, old
orthodox family?” she queried. “You’re from what
province?”</p>
<p>“Tula.”</p>
<p>“Oh! so we’re from the same part. My father … I daresay you know
who my father was?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know.”</p>
<p>“He was born in Tula…. He was a Tula man. Well … well. Come, let us get
to business now.”</p>
<p>“That is … how come to business? What do you mean to say by that?”</p>
<p>Maria Nikolaevna half-closed her eyes. “Why, what did you come here
for?” (when she screwed up her eyes, their expression became very kindly
and a little bantering, when she opened them wide, into their clear, almost
cold brilliancy, there came something ill-natured … something menacing. Her
eyes gained a peculiar beauty from her eyebrows, which were thick, and met in
the centre, and had the smoothness of sable fur). “Don’t you want
me to buy your estate? You want money for your nuptials? Don’t
you?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“And do you want much?”</p>
<p>“I should be satisfied with a few thousand francs at first. Your husband
knows my estate. You can consult him—I would take a very moderate
price.”</p>
<p>Maria Nikolaevna tossed her head from left to right. “<i>In the first
place</i>,” she began in deliberate tones, drumming with the tips of her
fingers on the cuff of Sanin’s coat, “I am not in the habit of
consulting my husband, except about matters of dress—he’s my right
hand in that; <i>and in the second place</i>, why do you say that you will fix
a low price? I don’t want to take advantage of your being very much in
love at the moment, and ready to make any sacrifices…. I won’t accept
sacrifices of any kind from you. What? Instead of encouraging you … come, how
is one to express it properly?—in your noble sentiments, eh? am I to
fleece you? that’s not my way. I can be hard on people, on
occasion—only not in that way.”</p>
<p>Sanin was utterly unable to make out whether she was laughing at him or
speaking seriously, and only said to himself: “Oh, I can see one has to
mind what one’s about with you!”</p>
<p>A man-servant came in with a Russian samovar, tea-things, cream, biscuits,
etc., on a big tray; he set all these good things on the table between Sanin
and Madame Polozov, and retired.</p>
<p>She poured him out a cup of tea. “You don’t object?” she
queried, as she put sugar in his cup with her fingers … though sugar-tongs were
lying close by.</p>
<p>“Oh, please!… From such a lovely hand …”</p>
<p>He did not finish his phrase, and almost choked over a sip of tea, while she
watched him attentively and brightly.</p>
<p>“I spoke of a moderate price for my land,” he went on,
“because as you are abroad just now, I can hardly suppose you have a
great deal of cash available, and in fact, I feel myself that the sale … the
purchase of my land, under such conditions is something exceptional, and I
ought to take that into consideration.”</p>
<p>Sanin got confused, and lost the thread of what he was saying, while Maria
Nikolaevna softly leaned back in her easy-chair, folded her arms, and watched
him with the same attentive bright look. He was silent at last.</p>
<p>“Never mind, go on, go on,” she said, as it were coming to his
aid; “I’m listening to you. I like to hear you; go on
talking.”</p>
<p>Sanin fell to describing his estate, how many acres it contained, and where it
was situated, and what were its agricultural advantages, and what profit could
be made from it … he even referred to the picturesque situation of the house;
while Maria Nikolaevna still watched him, and watched more and more intently
and radiantly, and her lips faintly stirred, without smiling: she bit them. He
felt awkward at last; he was silent a second time.</p>
<p>“Dimitri Pavlovitch,” began Maria Nikolaevna, and sank into thought
again…. “Dimitri Pavlovitch,” she repeated…. “Do you know
what: I am sure the purchase of your estate will be a very profitable
transaction for me, and that we shall come to terms; but you must give me two
days…. Yes, two days’ grace. You are able to endure two days’
separation from your betrothed, aren’t you? Longer I won’t keep you
against your will—I give you my word of honour. But if you want five or
six thousand francs at once, I am ready with great pleasure to let you have it
as a loan, and then we’ll settle later.”</p>
<p>Sanin got up. “I must thank you, Maria Nikolaevna, for your kindhearted
and friendly readiness to do a service to a man almost unknown to you. But if
that is your decided wish, then I prefer to await your decision about my
estate—I will stay here two days.”</p>
<p>“Yes; that is my wish, Dimitri Pavlovitch. And will it be very hard for
you? Very? Tell me.”</p>
<p>“I love my betrothed, Maria Nikolaevna, and to be separated from her is
hard for me.”</p>
<p>“Ah! you’re a heart of gold!” Maria Nikolaevna commented with
a sigh. “I promise not to torment you too much. Are you going?”</p>
<p>“It is late,” observed Sanin.</p>
<p>“And you want to rest after your journey, and your game of ‘fools’ with
my husband. Tell me, were you a great friend of Ippolit Sidorovitch, my
husband?”</p>
<p>“We were educated at the same school.”</p>
<p>“And was he the same then?”</p>
<p>“The same as what?” inquired Sanin. Maria Nikolaevna burst out
laughing, and laughed till she was red in the face; she put her handkerchief to
her lips, rose from her chair, and swaying as though she were tired, went up to
Sanin, and held out her hand to him.</p>
<p>He bowed over it, and went towards the door.</p>
<p>“Come early to-morrow—do you hear?” she called after him. He
looked back as he went out of the room, and saw that she had again dropped into
an easy-chair, and flung both arms behind her head. The loose sleeves of her
tea-gown fell open almost to her shoulders, and it was impossible not to admit
that the pose of the arms, that the whole figure, was enchantingly beautiful.</p>
<h3>XXXVI</h3>
<p>Long after midnight the lamp was burning in Sanin’s room. He sat down to
the table and wrote to “his Gemma.” He told her everything; he
described the Polozovs—husband and wife—but, more than all,
enlarged on his own feelings, and ended by appointing a meeting with her in
three days!!! (with three marks of exclamation). Early in the morning he took
this letter to the post, and went for a walk in the garden of the Kurhaus,
where music was already being played. There were few people in it as yet; he
stood before the arbour in which the orchestra was placed, listened to an
adaptation of airs from “Robert le Diable,” and after drinking some
coffee, turned into a solitary side walk, sat down on a bench, and fell into a
reverie. The handle of a parasol gave him a rapid, and rather vigorous, thump
on the shoulder. He started…. Before him in a light, grey-green barége dress,
in a white tulle hat, and <i>suède</i> gloves, stood Maria Nikolaevna, fresh
and rosy as a summer morning, though the languor of sound unbroken sleep had
not yet quite vanished from her movements and her eyes.</p>
<p>“Good-morning,” she said. “I sent after you to-day, but
you’d already gone out. I’ve only just drunk my second
glass—they’re making me drink the water here, you
know—whatever for, there’s no telling … am I not healthy enough?
And now I have to walk for a whole hour. Will you be my companion? And then
we’ll have some coffee.”</p>
<p>“I’ve had some already,” Sanin observed, getting up;
“but I shall be very glad to have a walk with you.”</p>
<p>“Very well, give me your arm then; don’t be afraid: your betrothed
is not here—she won’t see you.”</p>
<p>Sanin gave a constrained smile. He experienced a disagreeable sensation every
time Maria Nikolaevna referred to Gemma. However, he made haste to bend towards
her obediently…. Maria Nikolaevna’s arm slipped slowly and softly into
his arm, and glided over it, and seemed to cling tight to it.</p>
<p>“Come—this way,” she said to him, putting up her open parasol
over her shoulder. “I’m quite at home in this park; I will take you
to the best places. And do you know what? (she very often made use of this
expression), we won’t talk just now about that sale, we’ll have a
thorough discussion of that after lunch; but you must tell me now about
yourself … so that I may know whom I have to do with. And afterwards, if you
like, I will tell you about myself. Do you agree?”</p>
<p>“But, Maria Nikolaevna, what interest can there be for you …”</p>
<p>“Stop, stop. You don’t understand me. I don’t want to flirt
with you.” Maria Nikolaevna shrugged her shoulders. “He’s got
a betrothed like an antique statue, is it likely I am going to flirt with him?
But you’ve something to sell, and I’m the purchaser. I want to know
what your goods are like. Well, of course, you must show what they are like. I
don’t only want to know what I’m buying, but whom I’m buying
from. That was my father’s rule. Come, begin … come, if not from
childhood—come now, have you been long abroad? And where have you been up
till now? Only don’t walk so fast, we’re in no hurry.”</p>
<p>“I came here from Italy, where I spent several months.”</p>
<p>“Ah, you feel, it seems, a special attraction towards everything Italian.
It’s strange you didn’t find your lady-love there. Are you fond of
art? of pictures? or more of music?”</p>
<p>“I am fond of art…. I like everything beautiful.”</p>
<p>“And music?”</p>
<p>“I like music too.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t at all. I don’t care for anything but Russian
songs—and that in the country and in the spring—with dancing, you
know … red shirts, wreaths of beads, the young grass in the meadows, the smell
of smoke … delicious! But we weren’t talking of me. Go on, tell
me.”</p>
<p>Maria Nikolaevna walked on, and kept looking at Sanin. She was tall—her
face was almost on a level with his face.</p>
<p>He began to talk—at first reluctantly, unskilfully—but afterwards
he talked more freely, chattered away in fact. Maria Nikolaevna was a very good
listener; and moreover she seemed herself so frank, that she led others
unconsciously on to frankness. She possessed that great gift of
“intimateness”—<i>le terrible don de la
familiarité</i>—to which Cardinal Retz refers. Sanin talked of his
travels, of his life in Petersburg, of his youth…. Had Maria Nikolaevna been a
lady of fashion, with refined manners, he would never have opened out so; but
she herself spoke of herself as a “good fellow,” who had no
patience with ceremony of any sort; it was in those words that she
characterised herself to Sanin. And at the same time this “good
fellow” walked by his side with feline grace, slightly bending towards
him, and peeping into his face; and this “good fellow” walked in
the form of a young feminine creature, full of the tormenting, fiery, soft and
seductive charm, of which—for the undoing of us poor weak sinful
men—only Slav natures are possessed, and but few of them, and those never
of pure Slav blood, with no foreign alloy. Sanin’s walk with Maria
Nikolaevna, Sanin’s talk with Maria Nikolaevna lasted over an hour. And
they did not stop once; they kept walking about the endless avenues of the
park, now mounting a hill and admiring the view as they went, and now going
down into the valley, and getting hidden in the thick shadows,—and all
the while arm-in-arm. At times Sanin felt positively irritated; he had never
walked so long with Gemma, his darling Gemma … but this lady had simply taken
possession of him, and there was no escape! “Aren’t you
tired?” he said to her more than once. “I never get tired,”
she answered. Now and then they met other people walking in the park; almost
all of them bowed—some respectfully, others even cringingly. To one of
them, a very handsome, fashionably dressed dark man, she called from a distance
with the best Parisian accent, “<i>Comte, vous savez, il ne faut pas
venir me voir—ni aujourd’hui ni demain</i>.” The man took off
his hat, without speaking, and dropped a low bow.</p>
<p>“Who’s that?” asked Sanin with the bad habit of asking
questions characteristic of all Russians.</p>
<p>“Oh, a Frenchman, there are lots of them here … He’s dancing
attendance on me too. It’s time for our coffee, though. Let’s go
home; you must be hungry by this time, I should say. My better half must have
got his eye-peeps open by now.”</p>
<p>“Better half! Eye-peeps!” Sanin repeated to himself … “And
speaks French so well … what a strange creature!”</p>
<p class="p2">
Maria Nikolaevna was not mistaken. When she went back into the hotel with
Sanin, her “better half” or “dumpling” was already seated, the
invariable fez on his head, before a table laid for breakfast.</p>
<p>“I’ve been waiting for you!” he cried, making a sour face.
“I was on the point of having coffee without you.”</p>
<p>“Never mind, never mind,” Maria Nikolaevna responded cheerfully.
“Are you angry? That’s good for you; without that you’d turn
into a mummy altogether. Here I’ve brought a visitor. Make haste and
ring! Let us have coffee—the best coffee—in Saxony cups on a
snow-white cloth!”</p>
<p>She threw off her hat and gloves, and clapped her hands.</p>
<p>Polozov looked at her from under his brows.</p>
<p>“What makes you so skittish to-day, Maria Nikolaevna?” he said in
an undertone.</p>
<p>“That’s no business of yours, Ippolit Sidoritch! Ring! Dimitri
Pavlovitch, sit down and have some coffee for the second time. Ah, how nice it
is to give orders! There’s no pleasure on earth like it!”</p>
<p>“When you’re obeyed,” grumbled her husband again.</p>
<p>“Just so, when one’s obeyed! That’s why I’m so happy!
Especially with you. Isn’t it so, dumpling? Ah, here’s the
coffee.”</p>
<p>On the immense tray, which the waiter brought in, there lay also a playbill.
Maria Nikolaevna snatched it up at once.</p>
<p>“A drama!” she pronounced with indignation, “a German drama.
No matter; it’s better than a German comedy. Order a box for
me—<i>baignoire</i>—or no … better the <i>Fremden-Loge</i>,”
she turned to the waiter. “Do you hear: the <i>Fremden-Loge</i> it must
be!”</p>
<p>“But if the <i>Fremden-Loge</i> has been already taken by his excellency,
the director of the town (<i>seine Excellenz der Herr
Stadt-Director</i>),” the waiter ventured to demur.</p>
<p>“Give his excellency ten <i>thalers</i>, and let the box be mine! Do you
hear!”</p>
<p>The waiter bent his head humbly and mournfully.</p>
<p>“Dimitri Pavlovitch, you will go with me to the theatre? the German
actors are awful, but you will go … Yes? Yes? How obliging you are! Dumpling,
are you not coming?</p>
<p>“You settle it,” Polozov observed into the cup he had lifted to his
lips.</p>
<p>“Do you know what, you stay at home. You always go to sleep at the
theatre, and you don’t understand much German. I’ll tell you what
you’d better do, write an answer to the overseer—you remember,
about our mill … about the peasants’ grinding. Tell him that I
won’t have it, and I won’t and that’s all about it!
There’s occupation for you for the whole evening.”</p>
<p>“All right,” answered Polozov.</p>
<p>“Well then, that’s first-rate. You’re a darling. And now,
gentlemen, as we have just been speaking of my overseer, let’s talk about
our great business. Come, directly the waiter has cleared the table, you shall
tell me all, Dimitri Pavlovitch, about your estate, what price you will sell it
for, how much you want paid down in advance, everything, in fact! (At last,
thought Sanin, thank God!) You have told me something about it already, you
remember, you described your garden delightfully, but dumpling wasn’t
here…. Let him hear, he may pick a hole somewhere! I’m delighted to think
that I can help you to get married, besides, I promised you that I would go
into your business after lunch, and I always keep my promises, isn’t that
the truth, Ippolit Sidoritch?”</p>
<p>Polozov rubbed his face with his open hand. “The truth’s the
truth. You don’t deceive any one.”</p>
<p>“Never! and I never will deceive any one. Well, Dimitri Pavlovitch,
expound the case as we express it in the senate.”</p>
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