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<h2> XX — PREPARATIONS FOR THE PARTY </h2>
<p>To judge from the extraordinary activity in the pantry, the shining
cleanliness which imparted such a new and festal guise to certain articles
in the salon and drawing-room which I had long known as anything but
resplendent, and the arrival of some musicians whom Prince Ivan would
certainly not have sent for nothing, no small amount of company was to be
expected that evening.</p>
<p>At the sound of every vehicle which chanced to pass the house I ran to the
window, leaned my head upon my arms, and peered with impatient curiosity
into the street.</p>
<p>At last a carriage stopped at our door, and, in the full belief that this
must be the Iwins, who had promised to come early, I at once ran
downstairs to meet them in the hall.</p>
<p>But, instead of the Iwins, I beheld from behind the figure of the footman
who opened the door two female figures-one tall and wrapped in a blue
cloak trimmed with marten, and the other one short and wrapped in a green
shawl from beneath which a pair of little feet, stuck into fur boots,
peeped forth.</p>
<p>Without paying any attention to my presence in the hall (although I
thought it my duty, on the appearance of these persons to salute them),
the shorter one moved towards the taller, and stood silently in front of
her. Thereupon the tall lady untied the shawl which enveloped the head of
the little one, and unbuttoned the cloak which hid her form; until, by the
time that the footmen had taken charge of these articles and removed the
fur boots, there stood forth from the amorphous chrysalis a charming girl
of twelve, dressed in a short muslin frock, white pantaloons, and smart
black satin shoes. Around her, white neck she wore a narrow black velvet
ribbon, while her head was covered with flaxen curls which so perfectly
suited her beautiful face in front and her bare neck and shoulders behind
that I, would have believed nobody, not even Karl Ivanitch, if he, or she
had told me that they only hung so nicely because, ever since the morning,
they had been screwed up in fragments of a Moscow newspaper and then
warmed with a hot iron. To me it seemed as though she must have been born
with those curls.</p>
<p>The most prominent feature in her face was a pair of unusually large
half-veiled eyes, which formed a strange, but pleasing, contrast to the
small mouth. Her lips were closed, while her eyes looked so grave that the
general expression of her face gave one the impression that a smile was
never to be looked for from her: wherefore, when a smile did come, it was
all the more pleasing.</p>
<p>Trying to escape notice, I slipped through the door of the salon, and then
thought it necessary to be seen pacing to and fro, seemingly engaged in
thought, as though unconscious of the arrival of guests.</p>
<p>BY the time, however, that the ladies had advanced to the middle of the
salon I seemed suddenly to awake from my reverie and told them that
Grandmamma was in the drawing room, Madame Valakhin, whose face pleased me
extremely (especially since it bore a great resemblance to her
daughter's), stroked my head kindly.</p>
<p>Grandmamma seemed delighted to see Sonetchka. She invited her to come to
her, put back a curl which had fallen over her brow, and looking earnestly
at her said, "What a charming child!"</p>
<p>Sonetchka blushed, smiled, and, indeed, looked so charming that I myself
blushed as I looked at her.</p>
<p>"I hope you are going to enjoy yourself here, my love," said Grandmamma.
"Pray be as merry and dance as much as ever you can. See, we have two
beaux for her already," she added, turning to Madame Valakhin, and
stretching out her hand to me.</p>
<p>This coupling of Sonetchka and myself pleased me so much that I blushed
again.</p>
<p>Feeling, presently, that, my embarrassment was increasing, and hearing the
sound of carriages approaching, I thought it wise to retire. In the hall I
encountered the Princess Kornakoff, her son, and an incredible number of
daughters. They had all of them the same face as their mother, and were
very ugly. None of them arrested my attention. They talked in shrill tones
as they took off their cloaks and boas, and laughed as they bustled about—probably
at the fact that there were so many of them!</p>
<p>Etienne was a boy of fifteen, tall and plump, with a sharp face, deep-set
bluish eyes, and very large hands and feet for his age. Likewise he was
awkward, and had a nervous, unpleasing voice. Nevertheless he seemed very
pleased with himself, and was, in my opinion, a boy who could well bear
being beaten with rods.</p>
<p>For a long time we confronted one another without speaking as we took
stock of each other. When the flood of dresses had swept past I made shift
to begin a conversation by asking him whether it had not been very close
in the carriage.</p>
<p>"I don't know," he answered indifferently. "I never ride inside it, for it
makes me feel sick directly, and Mamma knows that. Whenever we are driving
anywhere at night-time I always sit on the box. I like that, for then one
sees everything. Philip gives me the reins, and sometimes the whip too,
and then the people inside get a regular—well, you know," he added
with a significant gesture "It's splendid then."</p>
<p>"Master Etienne," said a footman, entering the hall, "Philip wishes me to
ask you where you put the whip."</p>
<p>"Where I put it? Why, I gave it back to him."</p>
<p>"But he says that you did not."</p>
<p>"Well, I laid it across the carriage-lamps!"</p>
<p>"No, sir, he says that you did not do that either. You had better confess
that you took it and lashed it to shreds. I suppose poor Philip will have
to make good your mischief out of his own pocket." The footman (who looked
a grave and honest man) seemed much put out by the affair, and determined
to sift it to the bottom on Philip's behalf.</p>
<p>Out of delicacy I pretended to notice nothing and turned aside, but the
other footmen present gathered round and looked approvingly at the old
servant.</p>
<p>"Hm—well, I DID tear it in pieces," at length confessed Etienne,
shrinking from further explanations. "However, I will pay for it. Did you
ever hear anything so absurd?" he added to me as he drew me towards the
drawing-room.</p>
<p>"But excuse me, sir; HOW are you going to pay for it? I know your ways of
paying. You have owed Maria Valericana twenty copecks these eight months
now, and you have owed me something for two years, and Peter for—"</p>
<p>"Hold your tongue, will you!" shouted the young fellow, pale with rage, "I
shall report you for this."</p>
<p>"Oh, you may do so," said the footman. "Yet it is not fair, your
highness," he added, with a peculiar stress on the title, as he departed
with the ladies' wraps to the cloak-room. We ourselves entered the salon.</p>
<p>"Quite right, footman," remarked someone approvingly from the ball behind
us.</p>
<p>Grandmamma had a peculiar way of employing, now the second person
singular, now the second person plural, in order to indicate her opinion
of people. When the young Prince Etienne went up to her she addressed him
as "YOU," and altogether looked at him with such an expression of contempt
that, had I been in his place, I should have been utterly crestfallen.
Etienne, however, was evidently not a boy of that sort, for he not only
took no notice of her reception of him, but none of her person either. In
fact, he bowed to the company at large in a way which, though not
graceful, was at least free from embarrassment.</p>
<p>Sonetchka now claimed my whole attention. I remember that, as I stood in
the salon with Etienne and Woloda, at a spot whence we could both see and
be seen by Sonetchka, I took great pleasure in talking very loud (and all
my utterances seemed to me both bold and comical) and glancing towards the
door of the drawing-room, but that, as soon as ever we happened to move to
another spot whence we could neither see nor be seen by her, I became
dumb, and thought the conversation had ceased to be enjoyable. The rooms
were now full of people—among them (as at all children's parties) a
number of elder children who wished to dance and enjoy themselves very
much, but who pretended to do everything merely in order to give pleasure
to the mistress of the house.</p>
<p>When the Iwins arrived I found that, instead of being as delighted as
usual to meet Seriosha, I felt a kind of vexation that he should see and
be seen by Sonetchka.</p>
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