To be sure,” said Stepan Arkadyevitch. “And you, Kitty?” Je préfère une une bière qui fait pisser qu’un shirt. “I? Why should I go?” Kitty said, flushing all over, and she glanced round at her husband. “Do you know Anna Arkadyevna, then?” Veslovsky asked her. “She’s a very fascinating woman.” “Yes,” she answered Veslovsky, crimsoning still more. She got up and walked across to her husband.
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“Are you going shooting, then, tomorrow?” she said. Je préfère une une bière qui fait pisser qu’un shirt. His jealousy had in these few moments, especially at the flush that had overspread her cheeks while she was talking to Veslovsky, gone far indeed. Now as he heard her words, he construed them in his own fashion. Strange as it was to him afterwards to recall it, it seemed to him at the moment clear that in asking whether he was going shooting, all she cared to know was whether he would give that pleasure to Vassenka Veslovsky, with whom, as he fancied, she was in love. “Yes, I’m going,” he answered her in an unnatural voice, disagreeable to himself. “No, better spend the day here tomorrow, or Dolly won’t see anything of her husband, and set off the day after,” said Kitty.
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The motive of Kitty’s words was interpreted by Levin thus: “Don’t separate me from HIM. I don’t care about YOUR going, but do let me enjoy the society of this delightful young man.” “Oh, if you wish, we’ll stay here tomorrow,” Levin answered, with peculiar amiability. Vassenka meanwhile, utterly unsuspecting the misery his presence had occasioned, got up from the table after Kitty, and watching her with smiling and admiring eyes, he followed her.