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<h2> CHAPTER XXI. </h2>
<p>"When we moved to Moscow, this gentleman—his name was
Troukhatchevsky—came to my house. It was in the morning. I received
him. In former times we had been very familiar. He tried, by various
advances, to re-establish the familiarity, but I was determined to keep
him at a distance, and soon he gave it up. He displeased me extremely. At
the first glance I saw that he was a filthy debauche. I was jealous of
him, even before he had seen my wife. But, strange thing! some occult
fatal power kept me from repulsing him and sending him away, and, on the
contrary, induced me to suffer this approach. What could have been simpler
than to talk with him a few minutes, and then dismiss him coldly without
introducing him to my wife? But no, as if on purpose, I turned the
conversation upon his skill as a violinist, and he answered that, contrary
to what I had heard, he now played the violin more than formerly. He
remembered that I used to play. I answered that I had abandoned music, but
that my wife played very well.</p>
<p>"Singular thing! Why, in the important events of our life, in those in
which a man's fate is decided,—as mine was decided in that moment,—why
in these events is there neither a past nor a future? My relations with
Troukhatchevsky the first day, at the first hour, were such as they might
still have been after all that has happened. I was conscious that some
frightful misfortune must result from the presence of this man, and, in
spite of that, I could not help being amiable to him. I introduced him to
my wife. She was pleased with him. In the beginning, I suppose, because of
the pleasure of the violin playing, which she adored. She had even hired
for that purpose a violinist from the theatre. But when she cast a glance
at me, she understood my feelings, and concealed her impression. Then
began the mutual trickery and deceit. I smiled agreeably, pretending that
all this pleased me extremely. He, looking at my wife, as all debauches
look at beautiful women, with an air of being interested solely in the
subject of conversation,—that is, in that which did not interest him
at all.</p>
<p>"She tried to seem indifferent. But my expression, my jealous or false
smile, which she knew so well, and the voluptuous glances of the musician,
evidently excited her. I saw that, after the first interview, her eyes
were already glittering, glittering strangely, and that, thanks to my
jealousy, between him and her had been immediately established that sort
of electric current which is provoked by an identity of expression in the
smile and in the eyes.</p>
<p>"We talked, at the first interview, of music, of Paris, and of all sorts
of trivialities. He rose to go. Pressing his hat against his swaying hip,
he stood erect, looking now at her and now at me, as if waiting to see
what she would do. I remember that minute, precisely because it was in my
power not to invite him. I need not have invited him, and then nothing
would have happened. But I cast a glance first at him, then at her. 'Don't
flatter yourself that I can be jealous of you,' I thought, addressing
myself to her mentally, and I invited the other to bring his violin that
very evening, and to play with my wife. She raised her eyes toward me with
astonishment, and her face turned purple, as if she were seized with a
sudden fear. She began to excuse herself, saying that she did not play
well enough. This refusal only excited me the more. I remember the strange
feeling with which I looked at his neck, his white neck, in contrast with
his black hair, separated by a parting, when, with his skipping gait, like
that of a bird, he left my house. I could not help confessing to myself
that this man's presence caused me suffering. 'It is in my power,' thought
I, 'to so arrange things that I shall never see him again. But can it be
that I, <i>I</i>, fear him? No, I do not fear him. It would be too
humiliating!'</p>
<p>"And there in the hall, knowing that my wife heard me, I insisted that he
should come that very evening with his violin. He promised me, and went
away. In the evening he arrived with his violin, and they played together.
But for a long time things did not go well; we had not the necessary
music, and that which we had my wife could not play at sight. I amused
myself with their difficulties. I aided them, I made proposals, and they
finally executed a few pieces,—songs without words, and a little
sonata by Mozart. He played in a marvellous manner. He had what is called
the energetic and tender tone. As for difficulties, there were none for
him. Scarcely had he begun to play, when his face changed. He became
serious, and much more sympathetic. He was, it is needless to say, much
stronger than my wife. He helped her, he advised her simply and naturally,
and at the same time played his game with courtesy. My wife seemed
interested only in the music. She was very simple and agreeable.
Throughout the evening I feigned, not only for the others, but for myself,
an interest solely in the music. Really, I was continually tortured by
jealousy. From the first minute that the musician's eyes met those of my
wife, I saw that he did not regard her as a disagreeable woman, with whom
on occasion it would be unpleasant to enter into intimate relations.</p>
<p>"If I had been pure, I should not have dreamed of what he might think of
her. But I looked at women, and that is why I understood him and was in
torture. I was in torture, especially because I was sure that toward me
she had no other feeling than of perpetual irritation, sometimes
interrupted by the customary sensuality, and that this man,—thanks
to his external elegance and his novelty, and, above all, thanks to his
unquestionably remarkable talent, thanks to the attraction exercised under
the influence of music, thanks to the impression that music produces upon
nervous natures,—this man would not only please, but would
inevitably, and without difficulty, subjugate and conquer her, and do with
her as he liked.</p>
<p>"I could not help seeing this. I could not help suffering, or keep from
being jealous. And I was jealous, and I suffered, and in spite of that,
and perhaps even because of that, an unknown force, in spite of my will,
impelled me to be not only polite, but more than polite, amiable. I cannot
say whether I did it for my wife, or to show him that I did not fear HIM,
or to deceive myself; but from my first relations with him I could not be
at my ease. I was obliged, that I might not give way to a desire to kill
him immediately, to 'caress' him. I filled his glass at the table, I grew
enthusiastic over his playing, I talked to him with an extremely amiable
smile, and I invited him to dinner the following Sunday, and to play
again. I told him that I would invite some of my acquaintances, lovers of
his art, to hear him.</p>
<p>"Two or three days later I was entering my house, in conversation with a
friend, when in the hall I suddenly felt something as heavy as a stone
weighing on my heart, and I could not account for it. And it was this, it
was this: in passing through the hall, I had noticed something which
reminded me of HIM. Not until I reached my study did I realize what it
was, and I returned to the hall to verify my conjecture. Yes, I was not
mistaken. It was his overcoat (everything that belonged to him, I, without
realizing it, had observed with extraordinary attention). I questioned the
servant. That was it. He had come.</p>
<p>"I passed near the parlor, through my children's study-room. Lise, my
daughter, was sitting before a book, and the old nurse, with my youngest
child, was beside the table, turning the cover of something or other. In
the parlor I heard a slow arpeggio, and his voice, deadened, and a denial
from her. She said: 'No, no! There is something else!' And it seemed to me
that some one was purposely deadening the words by the aid of the piano.</p>
<p>"My God! How my heart leaped! What were my imaginations! When I remember
the beast that lived in me at that moment, I am seized with fright. My
heart was first compressed, then stopped, and then began to beat like a
hammer. The principal feeling, as in every bad feeling, was pity for
myself. 'Before the children, before the old nurse,' thought I, 'she
dishonors me. I will go away. I can endure it no longer. God knows what I
should do if. . . . But I must go in.'</p>
<p>"The old nurse raised her eyes to mine, as if she understood, and advised
me to keep a sharp watch. 'I must go in,' I said to myself, and, without
knowing what I did, I opened the door. He was sitting at the piano and
making arpeggios with his long, white, curved fingers. She was standing in
the angle of the grand piano, before the open score. She saw or heard me
first, and raised her eyes to mine. Was she stunned, was she pretending
not to be frightened, or was she really not frightened at all? In any
case, she did not tremble, she did not stir. She blushed, but only a
little later.</p>
<p>"'How glad I am that you have come! We have not decided what we will play
Sunday,' said she, in a tone that she would not have had if she had been
alone with me.</p>
<p>"This tone, and the way in which she said 'we' in speaking of herself and
of him, revolted me. I saluted him silently. He shook hands with me
directly, with a smile that seemed to me full of mockery. He explained to
me that he had brought some scores, in order to prepare for the Sunday
concert, and that they were not in accord as to the piece to choose,—whether
difficult, classic things, notably a sonata by Beethoven, or lighter
pieces.</p>
<p>"And as he spoke, he looked at me. It was all so natural, so simple, that
there was absolutely nothing to be said against it. And at the same time I
saw, I was sure, that it was false, that they were in a conspiracy to
deceive me.</p>
<p>"One of the most torturing situations for the jealous (and in our social
life everybody is jealous) are those social conditions which allow a very
great and dangerous intimacy between a man and a woman under certain
pretexts. One must make himself the laughing stock of everybody, if he
desires to prevent associations in the ball-room, the intimacy of doctors
with their patients, the familiarity of art occupations, and especially of
music. In order that people may occupy themselves together with the
noblest art, music, a certain intimacy is necessary, in which there is
nothing blameworthy. Only a jealous fool of a husband can have anything to
say against it. A husband should not have such thoughts, and especially
should not thrust his nose into these affairs, or prevent them. And yet,
everybody knows that precisely in these occupations, especially in music,
many adulteries originate in our society.</p>
<p>"I had evidently embarrassed them, because for some time I was unable to
say anything. I was like a bottle suddenly turned upside down, from which
the water does not run because it is too full. I wanted to insult the man,
and to drive him away, but I could do nothing of the kind. On the
contrary, I felt that I was disturbing them, and that it was my fault. I
made a presence of approving everything, this time also, thanks to that
strange feeling that forced me to treat him the more amiably in proportion
as his presence was more painful to me. I said that I trusted to his
taste, and I advised my wife to do the same. He remained just as long as
it was necessary in order to efface the unpleasant impression of my abrupt
entrance with a frightened face. He went away with an air of satisfaction
at the conclusions arrived at. As for me, I was perfectly sure that, in
comparison with that which preoccupied them, the question of music was
indifferent to them. I accompanied him with especial courtesy to the hall
(how can one help accompanying a man who has come to disturb your
tranquillity and ruin the happiness of the entire family?), and I shook
his white, soft hand with fervent amiability."</p>
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