PART 7
Chapter 21
 
After a capital dinner and a great deal of cognac drunk at
 Bartnyansky's, Stepan Arkadyevitch, only a little later than the
 appointed time, went in to Countess Lidia Ivanovna's. 
"Who else is with the countess?--a Frenchman?" Stepan
 Arkadyevitch asked the hall porter, as he glanced at the familiar
 overcoat of Alexey Alexandrovitch and a queer, rather
 artless-looking overcoat with clasps. 
"Alexey Alexandrovitch Karenin and Count Bezzubov," the porter
 answered severely. 
"Princess Myakaya guessed right," thought Stepan Arkadyevitch, as
 he went upstairs.  "Curious!  It would be quite as well, though,
 to get on friendly terms with her.  She has immense influence. 
 If she would say a word to Pomorsky, the thing would be a
 certainty." 
It was still quite light out-of-doors, but in Countess Lidia
 Ivanovna's little drawing room the blinds were drawn and the
 lamps lighted.  At a round table under a lamp sat the countess
 and Alexey Alexandrovitch, talking softly.  A short, thinnish
 man, very pale and handsome, with feminine hips and knock-kneed
 legs, with fine brilliant eyes and long hair lying on the collar
 of his coat, was standing at the end of the room gazing at the
 portraits on the wall.  After greeting the lady of the house and
 Alexey Alexandrovitch, Stepan Arkadyevitch could not resist
 glancing once more at the unknown man. 
"Monsieur Landau!" the countess addressed him with a softness and
 caution that impressed Oblonsky.  And she introduced them. 
Landau looked round hurriedly, came up, and smiling, laid his
 moist, lifeless hand in Stepan Arkadyevitch's outstretched hand
 and immediately walked away and fell to gazing at the portraits
 again.  The countess and Alexey Alexandrovitch looked at each
 other significantly. 
"I am very glad to see you, particularly today," said Countess
 Lidia Ivanovna, pointing Stepan Arkadyevitch to a seat beside
 Karenin. 
"I introduced you to him as Landau," she said in a soft voice,
 glancing at the Frenchman and again immediately after at Alexey
 Alexandrovitch, "but he is really Count Bezzubov, as you're
 probably aware.  Only he does not like the title." 
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