her famous counsel and Nekhludoff himself, was to him simply
disgusting. And, stuffing his mouth with his beard, and making
grimaces, he in a very natural manner pretended to know nothing of the
entire affair, except that the grounds of appeal were insufficient,
and therefore agreed with the President to affirm the judgment.
The appeal was denied.
CHAPTER XIV.
"It is awful!" said Nekhludoff to the lawyer, as they entered the
waiting-room. "In the plainest possible case they cavil at idle forms.
It is awful!"
"The case was spoiled at the trial," said Fanirin.
"Selenin, too, was against reversal. It is awful, awful!" Nekhludoff
continued to repeat. "What is to be done now?"
"We will petition the Emperor. Head it yourself while you are here. I
will prepare the petition."
At that moment Wolf in his uniform and stars hung on his breast
entered the waiting-room and approached Nekhludoff.
"I am sorry, my dear Prince, but the grounds were insufficient," he
said, shrugging his narrow shoulders; and, closing his eyes, he
proceeded on his way.
After Wolf came Selenin, who had learned from the Senators that
Nekhludoff, his former friend, was present.
"I did not expect to meet you here," he said, approaching Nekhludoff
and smiling with his lips, while his eyes remained sad.
"And I did not know that you were the Attorney General."
"Associate," Selenin corrected him. "But what brought you to the
Senate?"
"I came here hoping to find justice, and to save an innocent woman."
"What woman?"
"The case that has just been decided."
"Oh, the Maslova case!" said Selenin. "An entirely groundless
appeal."
"The question is not of the appeal, but of the woman, who is innocent
and undergoing punishment."
Selenin sighed.
"Quite possible, but----"
"It is not merely possible, but certain."
"How do you know?"
"I know because I was on the jury. I know wherein we made the
mistake."
Selenin became thoughtful.
"It should have been declared on the trial," he said.
"I did so."
"It should have been made part of the record. If that had appeared in
the appeal----"
Selenin, who was always busy, and did not mingle in society, had
evidently not heard of Nekhludoff's romance. Nekhludoff, however,
decided not to speak to him of his relations to Maslova.
"But it is evident even now that the verdict was preposterous," he
said.
"The Senate has no right to say so. If the Senate attempted to
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