Anna Karenina - Part 7 - Page 58/103

Stepan Arkadyevitch was about to go away when Korney came in to

announce: "Sergey Alexyevitch!"

"Who's Sergey Alexyevitch?" Stepan Arkadyevitch was beginning,

but he remembered immediately.

"Ah, Seryozha!" he said aloud. "Sergey Alexyevitch! I thought it

was the director of a department. Anna asked me to see him too,"

he thought.

And he recalled the timid, piteous expression with which Anna had

said to him at parting: "Anyway, you will see him. Find out

exactly where he is, who is looking after him. And Stiva...if

it were possible! Could it be possible?" Stepan Arkadyevitch

knew what was meant by that "if it were possible,"--if it were

possible to arrange the divorce so as to let her have her son....

Stepan Arkadyevitch saw now that it was no good to dream of that,

but still he was glad to see his nephew.

Alexey Alexandrovitch reminded his brother-in-law that they never

spoke to the boy of his mother, and he begged him not to mention

a single word about her.

"He was very ill after that interview with his mother, which we

had not foreseen," said Alexey Alexandrovitch. "Indeed, we

feared for his life. But with rational treatment, and

sea-bathing in the summer, he regained his strength, and now, by

the doctor's advice, I have let him go to school. And certainly

the companionship of school has had a good effect on him, and he

is perfectly well, and making good progress."

"What a fine fellow he's grown! He's not Seryozha now, but quite

full-fledged Sergey Alexyevitch!" said Stepan Arkadyevitch,

smiling, as he looked at the handsome, broad-shouldered lad in

blue coat and long trousers, who walked in alertly and

confidently. The boy looked healthy and good-humored. He bowed

to his uncle as to a stranger, but recognizing him, he blushed

and turned hurriedly away from him, as though offended and

irritated at something. The boy went up to his father and handed

him a note of the marks he had gained in school.

"Well, that's very fair," said his father, "you can go."

"He's thinner and taller, and has grown out of being a child into

a boy; I like that," said Stepan Arkadyevitch. "Do you remember

me?"

The boy looked back quickly at his uncle.

"Yes, _mon oncle_," he answered, glancing at his father, and

again he looked downcast.

His uncle called him to him, and took his hand.

"Well, and how are you getting on?" he said, wanting to talk to

him, and not knowing what to say.