<h3>Chapter 2</h3>
<p>When he got home, Vronsky found there a note from Anna. She wrote, “I am
ill and unhappy. I cannot come out, but I cannot go on longer without seeing
you. Come in this evening. Alexey Alexandrovitch goes to the council at seven
and will be there till ten.” Thinking for an instant of the strangeness
of her bidding him come straight to her, in spite of her husband’s
insisting on her not receiving him, he decided to go.</p>
<p>Vronsky had that winter got his promotion, was now a colonel, had left the
regimental quarters, and was living alone. After having some lunch, he lay down
on the sofa immediately, and in five minutes memories of the hideous scenes he
had witnessed during the last few days were confused together and joined on to
a mental image of Anna and of the peasant who had played an important part in
the bear hunt, and Vronsky fell asleep. He waked up in the dark, trembling with
horror, and made haste to light a candle. “What was it? What? What was
the dreadful thing I dreamed? Yes, yes; I think a little dirty man with a
disheveled beard was stooping down doing something, and all of a sudden he
began saying some strange words in French. Yes, there was nothing else in the
dream,” he said to himself. “But why was it so awful?” He
vividly recalled the peasant again and those incomprehensible French words the
peasant had uttered, and a chill of horror ran down his spine.</p>
<p>“What nonsense!” thought Vronsky, and glanced at his watch.</p>
<p>It was half-past eight already. He rang up his servant, dressed in haste, and
went out onto the steps, completely forgetting the dream and only worried at
being late. As he drove up to the Karenins’ entrance he looked at his
watch and saw it was ten minutes to nine. A high, narrow carriage with a pair
of grays was standing at the entrance. He recognized Anna’s carriage.
“She is coming to me,” thought Vronsky, “and better she
should. I don’t like going into that house. But no matter; I can’t
hide myself,” he thought, and with that manner peculiar to him from
childhood, as of a man who has nothing to be ashamed of, Vronsky got out of his
sledge and went to the door. The door opened, and the hall-porter with a rug on
his arm called the carriage. Vronsky, though he did not usually notice details,
noticed at this moment the amazed expression with which the porter glanced at
him. In the very doorway Vronsky almost ran up against Alexey Alexandrovitch.
The gas jet threw its full light on the bloodless, sunken face under the black
hat and on the white cravat, brilliant against the beaver of the coat.
Karenin’s fixed, dull eyes were fastened upon Vronsky’s face.
Vronsky bowed, and Alexey Alexandrovitch, chewing his lips, lifted his hand to
his hat and went on. Vronsky saw him without looking round get into the
carriage, pick up the rug and the opera-glass at the window and disappear.
Vronsky went into the hall. His brows were scowling, and his eyes gleamed with
a proud and angry light in them.</p>
<p>“What a position!” he thought. “If he would fight, would
stand up for his honor, I could act, could express my feelings; but this
weakness or baseness.... He puts me in the position of playing false, which I
never meant and never mean to do.”</p>
<p>Vronsky’s ideas had changed since the day of his conversation with Anna
in the Vrede garden. Unconsciously yielding to the weakness of Anna—who
had surrendered herself up to him utterly, and simply looked to him to decide
her fate, ready to submit to anything—he had long ceased to think that
their tie might end as he had thought then. His ambitious plans had retreated
into the background again, and feeling that he had got out of that circle of
activity in which everything was definite, he had given himself entirely to his
passion, and that passion was binding him more and more closely to her.</p>
<p>He was still in the hall when he caught the sound of her retreating footsteps.
He knew she had been expecting him, had listened for him, and was now going
back to the drawing-room.</p>
<p>“No,” she cried, on seeing him, and at the first sound of her voice
the tears came into her eyes. “No; if things are to go on like this, the
end will come much, much too soon.”</p>
<p>“What is it, dear one?”</p>
<p>“What? I’ve been waiting in agony for an hour, two hours ... No, I
won’t ... I can’t quarrel with you. Of course you couldn’t
come. No, I won’t.” She laid her two hands on his shoulders, and
looked a long while at him with a profound, passionate, and at the same time
searching look. She was studying his face to make up for the time she had not
seen him. She was, every time she saw him, making the picture of him in her
imagination (incomparably superior, impossible in reality) fit with him as he
really was.</p>
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