| PART 2
Chapter 24
 (continued)The horse, stiffening out its legs, with an effort stopped its
 rapid course, and the officer of the horse-guards looked round
 him like a man waking up from a heavy sleep, and just managed to
 smile.  A crowd of friends and outsiders pressed round him. Vronsky intentionally avoided that select crowd of the upper
 world, which was moving and talking with discreet freedom before
 the pavilions.  He knew that Madame Karenina was there, and
 Betsy, and his brother's wife, and he purposely did not go near
 them for fear of something distracting his attention.  But he was
 continually met and stopped by acquaintances, who told him about
 the previous races, and kept asking him why he was so late. At the time when the racers had to go to the pavilion to receive
 the prizes, and all attention was directed to that point,
 Vronsky's elder brother, Alexander, a colonel with heavy fringed
 epaulets, came up to him.  He was not tall, though as broadly
 built as Alexey, and handsomer and rosier than he; he had a red
 nose, and an open, drunken-looking face. "Did you get my note?" he said.  "There's never any finding you." Alexander Vronsky, in spite of the dissolute life, and in
 especial the drunken habits, for which he was notorious, was
 quite one of the court circle. Now, as he talked to his brother of a matter bound to be
 exceedingly disagreeable to him, knowing that the eyes of many
 people might be fixed upon him, he kept a smiling countenance, as
 though he were jesting with his brother about something of little
 moment. "I got it, and I really can't make out what YOU are worrying
 yourself about," said Alexey. "I'm worrying myself because the remark has just been made to me
 that you weren't here, and that you were seen in Peterhof on
 Monday." "There are matters which only concern those directly interested
 in them, and the matter you are so worried about is..." |