âThey are calling for the master,â said a youngster coming up to Eugèneâs wife, who had not noticed the call. Liza called Eugène to look at the dance and at one of the women dancers who particularly pleased her. This was StepanĂda. She wore a yellow skirt, a velveteen sleeveless jacket and a silk kerchief, and was broad, energetic, ruddy, and merry. No doubt she danced well. He saw nothing.
âYes, yes,â he said, removing and replacing his pince-nez. âYes, yes,â he repeated. âSo it seems I cannot be rid of her,â he thought.
He did not look at her, fearing her attraction, and just on that account what his passing glance caught of her seemed to him especially attractive. Besides this he saw by her sparkling look that she saw him and saw that he admired her. He stood there as long as propriety demanded, and seeing that VarvĂĄra AlexĂŠevna had called her âmy dearâ senselessly and insincerely and was talking to her, he turned aside and went away.