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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<p>Morning came with its cares and bustle. Everyone got up and began to move
about and talk, dressmakers came again. Marya Dmitrievna appeared, and
they were called to breakfast. Natasha kept looking uneasily at everybody
with wide-open eyes, as if wishing to intercept every glance directed
toward her, and tried to appear the same as usual.</p>
<p>After breakfast, which was her best time, Marya Dmitrievna sat down in her
armchair and called Natasha and the count to her.</p>
<p>"Well, friends, I have now thought the whole matter over and this is my
advice," she began. "Yesterday, as you know, I went to see Prince
Bolkonski. Well, I had a talk with him.... He took it into his head to
begin shouting, but I am not one to be shouted down. I said what I had to
say!"</p>
<p>"Well, and he?" asked the count.</p>
<p>"He? He's crazy... he did not want to listen. But what's the use of
talking? As it is we have worn the poor girl out," said Marya Dmitrievna.
"My advice to you is finish your business and go back home to Otradnoe...
and wait there."</p>
<p>"Oh, no!" exclaimed Natasha.</p>
<p>"Yes, go back," said Marya Dmitrievna, "and wait there. If your betrothed
comes here now—there will be no avoiding a quarrel; but alone with
the old man he will talk things over and then come on to you."</p>
<p>Count Rostov approved of this suggestion, appreciating its reasonableness.
If the old man came round it would be all the better to visit him in
Moscow or at Bald Hills later on; and if not, the wedding, against his
wishes, could only be arranged at Otradnoe.</p>
<p>"That is perfectly true. And I am sorry I went to see him and took her,"
said the old count.</p>
<p>"No, why be sorry? Being here, you had to pay your respects. But if he
won't—that's his affair," said Marya Dmitrievna, looking for
something in her reticule. "Besides, the trousseau is ready, so there is
nothing to wait for; and what is not ready I'll send after you. Though I
don't like letting you go, it is the best way. So go, with God's
blessing!"</p>
<p>Having found what she was looking for in the reticule she handed it to
Natasha. It was a letter from Princess Mary.</p>
<p>"She has written to you. How she torments herself, poor thing! She's
afraid you might think that she does not like you."</p>
<p>"But she doesn't like me," said Natasha.</p>
<p>"Don't talk nonsense!" cried Marya Dmitrievna.</p>
<p>"I shan't believe anyone, I know she doesn't like me," replied Natasha
boldly as she took the letter, and her face expressed a cold and angry
resolution that caused Marya Dmitrievna to look at her more intently and
to frown.</p>
<p>"Don't answer like that, my good girl!" she said. "What I say is true!
Write an answer!" Natasha did not reply and went to her own room to read
Princess Mary's letter.</p>
<p>Princess Mary wrote that she was in despair at the misunderstanding that
had occurred between them. Whatever her father's feelings might be, she
begged Natasha to believe that she could not help loving her as the one
chosen by her brother, for whose happiness she was ready to sacrifice
everything.</p>
<p>"Do not think, however," she wrote, "that my father is ill-disposed toward
you. He is an invalid and an old man who must be forgiven; but he is good
and magnanimous and will love her who makes his son happy." Princess Mary
went on to ask Natasha to fix a time when she could see her again.</p>
<p>After reading the letter Natasha sat down at the writing table to answer
it. "Dear Princess," she wrote in French quickly and mechanically, and
then paused. What more could she write after all that had happened the
evening before? "Yes, yes! All that has happened, and now all is changed,"
she thought as she sat with the letter she had begun before her. "Must I
break off with him? Must I really? That's awful..." and to escape from
these dreadful thoughts she went to Sonya and began sorting patterns with
her.</p>
<p>After dinner Natasha went to her room and again took up Princess Mary's
letter. "Can it be that it is all over?" she thought. "Can it be that all
this has happened so quickly and has destroyed all that went before?" She
recalled her love for Prince Andrew in all its former strength, and at the
same time felt that she loved Kuragin. She vividly pictured herself as
Prince Andrew's wife, and the scenes of happiness with him she had so
often repeated in her imagination, and at the same time, aglow with
excitement, recalled every detail of yesterday's interview with Anatole.</p>
<p>"Why could that not be as well?" she sometimes asked herself in complete
bewilderment. "Only so could I be completely happy; but now I have to
choose, and I can't be happy without either of them. Only," she thought,
"to tell Prince Andrew what has happened or to hide it from him are both
equally impossible. But with that one nothing is spoiled. But am I really
to abandon forever the joy of Prince Andrew's love, in which I have lived
so long?"</p>
<p>"Please, Miss!" whispered a maid entering the room with a mysterious air.
"A man told me to give you this-" and she handed Natasha a letter.</p>
<p>"Only, for Christ's sake..." the girl went on, as Natasha, without
thinking, mechanically broke the seal and read a love letter from Anatole,
of which, without taking in a word, she understood only that it was a
letter from him—from the man she loved. Yes, she loved him, or else
how could that have happened which had happened? And how could she have a
love letter from him in her hand?</p>
<p>With trembling hands Natasha held that passionate love letter which
Dolokhov had composed for Anatole, and as she read it she found in it an
echo of all that she herself imagined she was feeling.</p>
<p>"Since yesterday evening my fate has been sealed; to be loved by you or to
die. There is no other way for me," the letter began. Then he went on to
say that he knew her parents would not give her to him—for this
there were secret reasons he could reveal only to her—but that if
she loved him she need only say the word yes, and no human power could
hinder their bliss. Love would conquer all. He would steal her away and
carry her off to the ends of the earth.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes! I love him!" thought Natasha, reading the letter for the
twentieth time and finding some peculiarly deep meaning in each word of
it.</p>
<p>That evening Marya Dmitrievna was going to the Akharovs' and proposed to
take the girls with her. Natasha, pleading a headache, remained at home.</p>
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