“Now you are talking like Raisky.”
“Ah, Raisky! Is he still so desperate?”
“More than ever, so that I really don’t know how to treat him.”
“Lead him by the nose.”
“How hideous! It would be best to tell him the truth about myself. If he knew all he would be reconciled and would go away, as he said he intended to do long ago.”
“He will hate you, read you a lecture, and perhaps tell your Aunt.”
“God forbid that she should hear the truth except from ourselves. Should I go away for a time?”
“Why? It could not be arranged for you to be away long, and if your absence was short he would be only the more agitated. When you were away what good did it do. There is only one way and that is to conceal the truth from him, to put him on a wrong track. Let him cherish his passion, read verses, and gape at the moon, since he is an incurable Romanticist. Later on he will sober down and travel once more.”
“He is not a Romanticist in the sense you mean,” sighed Vera. “You may fairly call him poet, artist. I at least begin to believe in him, in his delicacy and his truthfulness. I would hide nothing from him if he did not betray his passion for me. If he subdues that, I will be the first to tell him the whole truth.”
“We did not meet,” interrupted Mark, “to talk so much about him.”