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Pierre
suddenly
flushed
crimson
and
for
a
long
time
tried
not
to
look
at
Natásha
.
When
he
ventured
to
glance
her
way
again
her
face
was
cold
,
stern
,
and
he
fancied
even
contemptuous
.
"
And
did
you
really
see
and
speak
to
Napoleon
,
as
we
have
been
told
?
"
said
Princess
Mary
.
Pierre
laughed
.
"
No
,
not
once
!
Everybody
seems
to
imagine
that
being
taken
prisoner
means
being
Napoleon
's
guest
.
Not
only
did
I
never
see
him
but
I
heard
nothing
about
him
--
I
was
in
much
lower
company
!
"
Supper
was
over
,
and
Pierre
who
at
first
declined
to
speak
about
his
captivity
was
gradually
led
on
to
do
so
.
"
But
it
's
true
that
you
remained
in
Moscow
to
kill
Napoleon
?
"
Natásha
asked
with
a
slight
smile
.
"
I
guessed
it
then
when
we
met
at
the
Súkharev
tower
,
do
you
remember
?
"
Pierre
admitted
that
it
was
true
,
and
from
that
was
gradually
led
by
Princess
Mary
's
questions
and
especially
by
Natásha
's
into
giving
a
detailed
account
of
his
adventures
.
At
first
he
spoke
with
the
amused
and
mild
irony
now
customary
with
him
toward
everybody
and
especially
toward
himself
,
but
when
he
came
to
describe
the
horrors
and
sufferings
he
had
witnessed
he
was
unconsciously
carried
away
and
began
speaking
with
the
suppressed
emotion
of
a
man
re-experiencing
in
recollection
strong
impressions
he
has
lived
through
.
Princess
Mary
with
a
gentle
smile
looked
now
at
Pierre
and
now
at
Natásha
.
In
the
whole
narrative
she
saw
only
Pierre
and
his
goodness
.
Natásha
,
leaning
on
her
elbow
,
the
expression
of
her
face
constantly
changing
with
the
narrative
,
watched
Pierre
with
an
attention
that
never
wandered
--
evidently
herself
experiencing
all
that
he
described
.
Not
only
her
look
,
but
her
exclamations
and
the
brief
questions
she
put
,
showed
Pierre
that
she
understood
just
what
he
wished
to
convey
.
It
was
clear
that
she
understood
not
only
what
he
said
but
also
what
he
wished
to
,
but
could
not
,
express
in
words
.
The
account
Pierre
gave
of
the
incident
with
the
child
and
the
woman
for
protecting
whom
he
was
arrested
was
this
:
"
It
was
an
awful
sight
--
children
abandoned
,
some
in
the
flames
...
One
was
snatched
out
before
my
eyes
...
and
there
were
women
who
had
their
things
snatched
off
and
their
earrings
torn
out
...
"
he
flushed
and
grew
confused
.
"
Then
a
patrol
arrived
and
all
the
men
--
all
those
who
were
not
looting
,
that
is
--
were
arrested
,
and
I
among
them
.
"