<h3>Chapter 29</h3>
<p>One of Anna’s objects in coming back to Russia had been to see her son.
From the day she left Italy the thought of it had never ceased to agitate her.
And as she got nearer to Petersburg, the delight and importance of this meeting
grew ever greater in her imagination. She did not even put to herself the
question how to arrange it. It seemed to her natural and simple to see her son
when she should be in the same town with him. But on her arrival in Petersburg
she was suddenly made distinctly aware of her present position in society, and
she grasped the fact that to arrange this meeting was no easy matter.</p>
<p>She had now been two days in Petersburg. The thought of her son never left her
for a single instant, but she had not yet seen him. To go straight to the
house, where she might meet Alexey Alexandrovitch, that she felt she had no
right to do. She might be refused admittance and insulted. To write and so
enter into relations with her husband—that it made her miserable to think
of doing; she could only be at peace when she did not think of her husband. To
get a glimpse of her son out walking, finding out where and when he went out,
was not enough for her; she had so looked forward to this meeting, she had so
much she must say to him, she so longed to embrace him, to kiss him.
Seryozha’s old nurse might be a help to her and show her what to do. But
the nurse was not now living in Alexey Alexandrovitch’s house. In this
uncertainty, and in efforts to find the nurse, two days had slipped by.</p>
<p>Hearing of the close intimacy between Alexey Alexandrovitch and Countess Lidia
Ivanovna, Anna decided on the third day to write to her a letter, which cost
her great pains, and in which she intentionally said that permission to see her
son must depend on her husband’s generosity. She knew that if the letter
were shown to her husband, he would keep up his character of magnanimity, and
would not refuse her request.</p>
<p>The commissionaire who took the letter had brought her back the most cruel and
unexpected answer, that there was no answer. She had never felt so humiliated
as at the moment when, sending for the commissionaire, she heard from him the
exact account of how he had waited, and how afterwards he had been told there
was no answer. Anna felt humiliated, insulted, but she saw that from her point
of view Countess Lidia Ivanovna was right. Her suffering was the more poignant
that she had to bear it in solitude. She could not and would not share it with
Vronsky. She knew that to him, although he was the primary cause of her
distress, the question of her seeing her son would seem a matter of very little
consequence. She knew that he would never be capable of understanding all the
depth of her suffering, that for his cool tone at any allusion to it she would
begin to hate him. And she dreaded that more than anything in the world, and so
she hid from him everything that related to her son. Spending the whole day at
home she considered ways of seeing her son, and had reached a decision to write
to her husband. She was just composing this letter when she was handed the
letter from Lidia Ivanovna. The countess’s silence had subdued and
depressed her, but the letter, all that she read between the lines in it, so
exasperated her, this malice was so revolting beside her passionate, legitimate
tenderness for her son, that she turned against other people and left off
blaming herself.</p>
<p>“This coldness—this pretense of feeling!” she said to
herself. “They must needs insult me and torture the child, and I am to
submit to it! Not on any consideration! She is worse than I am. I don’t
lie, anyway.” And she decided on the spot that next day, Seryozha’s
birthday, she would go straight to her husband’s house, bribe or deceive
the servants, but at any cost see her son and overturn the hideous deception
with which they were encompassing the unhappy child.</p>
<p>She went to a toy shop, bought toys and thought over a plan of action. She
would go early in the morning at eight o’clock, when Alexey
Alexandrovitch would be certain not to be up. She would have money in her hand
to give the hall-porter and the footman, so that they should let her in, and
not raising her veil, she would say that she had come from Seryozha’s
godfather to congratulate him, and that she had been charged to leave the toys
at his bedside. She had prepared everything but the words she should say to her
son. Often as she had dreamed of it, she could never think of anything.</p>
<p>The next day, at eight o’clock in the morning, Anna got out of a hired
sledge and rang at the front entrance of her former home.</p>
<p>“Run and see what’s wanted. Some lady,” said Kapitonitch,
who, not yet dressed, in his overcoat and galoshes, had peeped out of the
window and seen a lady in a veil standing close up to the door. His assistant,
a lad Anna did not know, had no sooner opened the door to her than she came in,
and pulling a three-rouble note out of her muff put it hurriedly into his hand.</p>
<p>“Seryozha—Sergey Alexeitch,” she said, and was going on.
Scrutinizing the note, the porter’s assistant stopped her at the second
glass door.</p>
<p>“Whom do you want?” he asked.</p>
<p>She did not hear his words and made no answer.</p>
<p>Noticing the embarrassment of the unknown lady, Kapitonitch went out to her,
opened the second door for her, and asked her what she was pleased to want.</p>
<p>“From Prince Skorodumov for Sergey Alexeitch,” she said.</p>
<p>“His honor’s not up yet,” said the porter, looking at her
attentively.</p>
<p>Anna had not anticipated that the absolutely unchanged hall of the house where
she had lived for nine years would so greatly affect her. Memories sweet and
painful rose one after another in her heart, and for a moment she forgot what
she was here for.</p>
<p>“Would you kindly wait?” said Kapitonitch, taking off her fur
cloak.</p>
<p>As he took off the cloak, Kapitonitch glanced at her face, recognized her, and
made her a low bow in silence.</p>
<p>“Please walk in, your excellency,” he said to her.</p>
<p>She tried to say something, but her voice refused to utter any sound; with a
guilty and imploring glance at the old man she went with light, swift steps up
the stairs. Bent double, and his galoshes catching in the steps, Kapitonitch
ran after her, trying to overtake her.</p>
<p>“The tutor’s there; maybe he’s not dressed. I’ll let
him know.”</p>
<p>Anna still mounted the familiar staircase, not understanding what the old man
was saying.</p>
<p>“This way, to the left, if you please. Excuse its not being tidy. His
honor’s in the old parlor now,” the hall-porter said, panting.
“Excuse me, wait a little, your excellency; I’ll just see,”
he said, and overtaking her, he opened the high door and disappeared behind it.
Anna stood still waiting. “He’s only just awake,” said the
hall-porter, coming out. And at the very instant the porter said this, Anna
caught the sound of a childish yawn. From the sound of this yawn alone she knew
her son and seemed to see him living before her eyes.</p>
<p>“Let me in; go away!” she said, and went in through the high
doorway. On the right of the door stood a bed, and sitting up in the bed was
the boy. His little body bent forward with his nightshirt unbuttoned, he was
stretching and still yawning. The instant his lips came together they curved
into a blissfully sleepy smile, and with that smile he slowly and deliciously
rolled back again.</p>
<p>“Seryozha!” she whispered, going noiselessly up to him.</p>
<p>When she was parted from him, and all this latter time when she had been
feeling a fresh rush of love for him, she had pictured him as he was at four
years old, when she had loved him most of all. Now he was not even the same as
when she had left him; he was still further from the four-year-old baby, more
grown and thinner. How thin his face was, how short his hair was! What long
hands! How he had changed since she left him! But it was he with his head, his
lips, his soft neck and broad little shoulders.</p>
<p>“Seryozha!” she repeated just in the child’s ear.</p>
<p>He raised himself again on his elbow, turned his tangled head from side to side
as though looking for something, and opened his eyes. Slowly and inquiringly he
looked for several seconds at his mother standing motionless before him, then
all at once he smiled a blissful smile, and shutting his eyes, rolled not
backwards but towards her into her arms.</p>
<p>“Seryozha! my darling boy!” she said, breathing hard and putting
her arms round his plump little body. “Mother!” he said, wriggling
about in her arms so as to touch her hands with different parts of him.</p>
<p>Smiling sleepily still with closed eyes, he flung fat little arms round her
shoulders, rolled towards her, with the delicious sleepy warmth and fragrance
that is only found in children, and began rubbing his face against her neck and
shoulders.</p>
<p>“I know,” he said, opening his eyes; “it’s my birthday
today. I knew you’d come. I’ll get up directly.”</p>
<p>And saying that he dropped asleep.</p>
<p>Anna looked at him hungrily; she saw how he had grown and changed in her
absence. She knew, and did not know, the bare legs so long now, that were
thrust out below the quilt, those short-cropped curls on his neck in which she
had so often kissed him. She touched all this and could say nothing; tears
choked her.</p>
<p>“What are you crying for, mother?” he said, waking completely up.
“Mother, what are you crying for?” he cried in a tearful voice.</p>
<p>“I won’t cry ... I’m crying for joy. It’s so long since
I’ve seen you. I won’t, I won’t,” she said, gulping
down her tears and turning away. “Come, it’s time for you to dress
now,” she added, after a pause, and, never letting go his hands, she sat
down by his bedside on the chair, where his clothes were put ready for him.</p>
<p>“How do you dress without me? How....” she tried to begin talking
simply and cheerfully, but she could not, and again she turned away.</p>
<p>“I don’t have a cold bath, papa didn’t order it. And
you’ve not seen Vassily Lukitch? He’ll come in soon. Why,
you’re sitting on my clothes!”</p>
<p>And Seryozha went off into a peal of laughter. She looked at him and smiled.</p>
<p>“Mother, darling, sweet one!” he shouted, flinging himself on her
again and hugging her. It was as though only now, on seeing her smile, he fully
grasped what had happened.</p>
<p>“I don’t want that on,” he said, taking off her hat. And as
it were, seeing her afresh without her hat, he fell to kissing her again.</p>
<p>“But what did you think about me? You didn’t think I was
dead?”</p>
<p>“I never believed it.”</p>
<p>“You didn’t believe it, my sweet?”</p>
<p>“I knew, I knew!” he repeated his favorite phrase, and snatching
the hand that was stroking his hair, he pressed the open palm to his mouth and
kissed it.</p>
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