| PART 2
Chapter 23
 Vronsky had several times already, though not so resolutely as
 now, tried to bring her to consider their position, and every
 time he had been confronted by the same superficiality and
 triviality with which she met his appeal now.  It was as though
 there were something in this which she could not or would not
 face, as though directly she began to speak of this, she, the
 real Anna, retreated somehow into herself, and another strange
 and unaccountable woman came out, whom he did not love, and whom
 he feared, and who was in opposition to him.  But today he was
 resolved to have it out. "Whether he knows or not," said Vronsky, in his usual quiet and
 resolute tone, "that's nothing to do with us.  We cannot...you
 cannot stay like this, especially now." "What's to be done, according to you?" she asked with the same
 frivolous irony.  She who had so feared he would take her
 condition too lightly was now vexed with him for deducing from it
 the necessity of taking some step. "Tell him everything, and leave him." "Very well, let us suppose I do that," she said.  "Do you know
 what the result of that would be?  I can tell you it all
 beforehand," and a wicked light gleamed in her eyes, that had
 been so soft a minute before.  "'Eh, you love another man, and
 have entered into criminal intrigues with him?'"  (Mimicking her
 husband, she threw an emphasis on the word "criminal," as Alexey
 Alexandrovitch did.) " 'I warned you of the results in the
 religious, the civil, and the domestic relation.  You have not
 listened to me.  Now In cannot let you disgrace my name,--'"
 "and my son," she had meant to say, but about her son she could
 not jest,--"'disgrace my name, and'--and more in the same
 style," she added.  "In general terms, he'll say in his official
 manner, and with all distinctness and precision, that he cannot
 let me go, but will take all measures in his power to prevent
 scandal.  And he will calmly and punctually act in accordance
 with his words.  That's what will happen.  He's not a man, but a
 machine, and a spiteful machine when he's angry," she added,
 recalling Alexey Alexandrovitch as she spoke, with all the
 peculiarities of his figure and manner of speaking, and reckoning
 against him every defect she could find in him, softening nothing
 for the great wrong she herself was doing him. |