1 Pierre sat opposite Dolokhov and Nicholas Rostov.
2 The old count came up to them and pressed Dolokhov's hand.
3 That expression was often on Dolokhov's face when looking at him.
4 Dolokhov, Denisov, and Rostov were now sitting opposite Pierre and seemed very gay.
5 Pierre, with downcast eyes, drank out of his glass without looking at Dolokhov or answering him.
6 Young Rostov stood at a window with Dolokhov, whose acquaintance he had lately made and highly valued.
7 Nicholas Rostov, with Denisov and his new acquaintance, Dolokhov, sat almost at the middle of the table.
8 He was just going to take it when Dolokhov, leaning across, snatched it from his hand and began reading it.
9 Dolokhov, Mary Ivanovna's son," she said in a mysterious whisper, "has compromised her completely, they say.
10 Pierre absolutely disbelieved both the princess' hints and the letter, but he feared now to look at Dolokhov, who was sitting opposite him.
11 He involuntarily remembered how Dolokhov, who had fully recovered his former position after the campaign, had returned to Petersburg and come to him.
12 Every time he chanced to meet Dolokhov's handsome insolent eyes, Pierre felt something terrible and monstrous rising in his soul and turned quickly away.
13 Availing himself of his friendly relations with Pierre as a boon companion, Dolokhov had come straight to his house, and Pierre had put him up and lent him money.
14 Involuntarily recalling his wife's past and her relations with Dolokhov, Pierre saw clearly that what was said in the letter might be true, or might at least seem to be true had it not referred to his wife.
15 Pierre recalled how Helene had smilingly expressed disapproval of Dolokhov's living at their house, and how cynically Dolokhov had praised his wife's beauty to him and from that time till they came to Moscow had not left them for a day.
16 He remembered the expression Dolokhov's face assumed in his moments of cruelty, as when tying the policeman to the bear and dropping them into the water, or when he challenged a man to a duel without any reason, or shot a post-boy's horse with a pistol.
17 The unsolved problem that tormented him was caused by hints given by the princess, his cousin, at Moscow, concerning Dolokhov's intimacy with his wife, and by an anonymous letter he had received that morning, which in the mean jocular way common to anonymous letters said that he saw badly through his spectacles, but that his wife's connection with Dolokhov was a secret to no one but himself.
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