Chapter VIII

706 Words

CHAPTER VIII It was late, eleven o’clock, when they began to get into the carriages to go home. They took their seats, and the only ones missing were Nadyezhda Fyodorovna and Atchmianov, who were running after one another, laughing, the other side of the stream. “Make haste, my friends,” shouted Samoylenko. “You oughtn’t to give ladies wine,” said Von Koren in a low voice. Laevsky, exhausted by the picnic, by the hatred of Von Koren, and by his own thoughts, went to meet Nadyezhda Fyodorovna, and when, gay and happy, feeling light as a feather, breathless and laughing, she took him by both hands and laid her head on his breast, he stepped back and said dryly: “You are behaving like a . . . cocotte.” It sounded horribly coarse, so that he felt sorry for her at once. On his angry, exha

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