de Norpois professed to find it. Odette had not believed that Swann would ever consent to marry her; each time that she made the suggestive announcement that some man about town had just married his mistress she had seen him stiffen into a glacial silence, or at the most, if she were directly to challenge him, asking: ā€œDon’t you think it very nice, a very fine thing that he has done, for a woman who sacrificed all her youth to him?ā€ had heard him answer dryly: ā€œBut I don’t say that there’s anything wrong in it.

1319