| PART 7
Chapter 23
 (continued)And he had actually flushed with vexation, and had said something
 unpleasant.  She could not recall her answer, but at that point,
 with an unmistakable desire to wound her too, he had said: "I feel no interest in your infatuation over this girl, that's
 true, because I see it's unnatural." The cruelty with which he shattered the world she had built up
 for herself so laboriously to enable her to endure her hard life,
 the injustice with which he had accused her of affectation, of
 artificiality, aroused her. "I am very sorry that nothing but what's coarse and material is
 comprehensible and natural to you," she said and walked out of
 the room. When he had come in to her yesterday evening, they had not
 referred to the quarrel, but both felt that the quarrel had been
 smoothed over, but was not at an end. Today he had not been at home all day, and she felt so lonely
 and wretched in being on bad terms with him that she wanted to
 forget it all, to forgive him, and be reconciled with him; she
 wanted to throw the blame on herself and to justify him. "I am myself to blame.  I'm irritable, I'm insanely jealous.  I
 will make it up with him, and we'll go away to the country; there
 I shall be more at peace." "Unnatural!" she suddenly recalled the word that had stung her
 most of all, not so much the word itself as the intent to wound
 her with which it was said.  "I know what he meant; he meant--
 unnatural, not loving my own daughter, to love another person's
 child.  What does he know of love for children, of my love for
 Seryozha, whom I've sacrificed for him?  But that wish to wound
 me!  No, he loves another woman, it must be so." |