SOR RUBEK.
[His eyes dwelling on her.] You are really a strange little person.
MAIA.
Am I so strange?
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
Yes, I think so.
MAIA.
But why, pray? Perhaps because I'm not desperately in love with mooning
about up here--?
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
Which of us was it that was absolutely bent on our coming north this
summer?
MAIA.
I admit, it was I.
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
It was certainly not I, at any rate.
MAIA.
But good heavens, who could have dreamt that everything would have
altered so terribly at home here? And in so short a time, too! Why, it
is only just four years since I went away--
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
Since you were married, yes.
MAIA.
Married? What has that to do with the matter?
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
[Continuing.] --since you became the Frau Professor, and found yourself
mistress of a charming home--I beg your pardon--a very handsome house, I
ought to say. And a villa on the Lake of Taunitz, just at the point that
has become most fashionable, too--. In fact it is all very handsome and
distinguished, Maia, there's no denying that. And spacious too. We need
not always be getting in each other's way--
MAIA.
[Lightly.] No, no, no--there's certainly no lack of house-room, and that
sort of thing--
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
Remember, too, that you have been living in altogether more spacious
and distinguished surroundings--in more polished society than you were
accustomed to at home.
MAIA.
[Looking at him.] Ah, so you think it is _I_ that have changed?
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
Indeed I do, Maia.
MAIA.
I alone? Not the people here?
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
Oh yes, they too--a little, perhaps. And not at all in the direction of
amiability. That I readily admit.
MAIA.
I should think you must admit it, indeed.
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
[Changing the subject.] Do you know how it affects me when I look at the
life of the people around us here?
MAIA.
No. Tell me.
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
It makes me think of that night we spent in the train, when we were
coming up here--
MAIA.
Why, you were sound asleep all the time.
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
Not quite. I noticed how silent it became at all the little roadside
stations. I heard the silence--like you, Maia--
MAIA.
H'm,--like me, yes.
PROFESSOR RUBEK. --and that assured me that we had crossed the
frontier--that we were really at home. For the train stopped at all the
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