The Complete Works of Isaac Babel Reprint Edition by Isaac Babel, Nathalie Babel, Peter Constantine (117 page)

BOOK: The Complete Works of Isaac Babel Reprint Edition by Isaac Babel, Nathalie Babel, Peter Constantine
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The gangster slips the notes into his pocket and leaves. At the door he bumps into Tartakovsky, and makes way for him to pass into the barracks. Tartakovsky is wearing a battered soldiers cap. His face bears the traces of an astonishing disguise—he has shaven off his mustache, but has left his beard intact in the fashion of a Dutch skipper.

Tartakovsky tiptoes along the wall. He is holding a velvet pouch with something in it. The old man has dyed his hair and is dressed in the spirit of the times: he is wearing a torn coat, his shoes are tattered, and only his belly is as majestic as before. Two reputable Jews are tiptoeing behind him. One is wearing a cyclists cap, an overcoat, and leggings, the other a slightly smaller cap and a cape fastened with a military ornamental clasp.

The captain of the N. “Revolutionary” Regiment

The inner courtyard of the Red Army barracks. On one of the doors to the barracks hangs the sign: “Infantry Regiment Honoring the Glorious French Revolution.” (And written in chalk next to it: “The

German one too.”) Benya, wearing an outlandish uniform, is riding a horse. Froim Grach is standing in the middle of the yard cracking a coachmans whip. Benya is riding at full gallop in neat circles around the yard, as if he were in a riding ring.

A low door. Three fat bellies squeeze through the narrow opening.

The galloping continues. Tartakovsky and his quivering companions enter the yard. They bow to Benya, the Captain of the N. “Revolutionary” Regiment, who is riding tirelessly in circles. He spurs his horse, brandishes his whip, and gallops toward the cringing fat men. Tartakovsky holds out the velvet pouch to Benya.

There is a flowery, embroidered inscription on the velvet pouch:

“FROM THE REVOLUTIONARY ARTISANS OF ODESSA.”

Benya pulls a Torah scroll out of the velvet pouch, its parchment wound around carved, lacquered sticks. He hands the Torah to Froim Grach. Tartakovsky steps closer, caresses the horses muzzle with a trembling hand, and launches into his speech:

“WE, THE REVOLUTIONARY ARTISANS, BEG YOU ..

Benyas impassive face. His arms, folded majestically, are leaning on the pommel of his saddle. Froim is unwinding the scroll in the background.

Tartakovsky continues:

“. . . BEG YOU TO DEFEND REVOLUTIONARY ODESSA

WITHIN REVOLUTIONARY ODESSA ITSELF AND ...”

Froim is unwinding the Torah, pulling out one Czarist hundred-ruble bill after another.

Benya watches Froim from the corner of his eye. Tartakovsky continues:

“... WITHIN REVOLUTIONARY ODESSA ITSELF, AND NOT TO

SET OFF FOR ANOTHER ... ANOTHER FRONT.”
1

The thunder of gates flung open. A column of smoke comes pouring into the yard and interrupts the artisans speech. Three fire brigade horses enveloped in smoke trot into the yard. They are towing Sobkovs car, which caught fire on the way to the barracks. A Red Army fighter wearing felt slippers on his bare feet is sitting on one of the horses. Sobkov and Kochetkov jump off the other two horses and hurry toward the barracks. The driver walks over to the smoking engine, glares at it, lifts his bleary eyes to the sky, and spits intently time and again into the magneto.

Sobkov and Kochetkov hurry through the same door through which the three bellies of the revolutionary artisans had squeezed with such difficulty.

Tartakovsky s voice has dropped to a whisper. He pats the horse s muzzle with increasing cheerfulness and affection, while the other delegates caress its flanks. Benya bends down closer to them. Froim is rolling up the parchment in his corner.

The card game inside the barracks is continuing with unremitting passion. A young man with bandaged legs, his face rough and his mustache close-cropped, is lathering one of his cheeks by the opposite wall not far from Lyovka, who is still flinging slices of meat through the air. Next to the young man, a short plump woman in fashionable knee-length boots is lying asleep on a couch with her back to the audience. Sobkov and Kochetkov come bursting into the barracks. Sobkov jumps onto a platform beneath a pair of crossed flags:

“COMRADES!”

The newly hatched “comrades” gather lazily around Military Commissar Sobkov. Lyovka wipes his knife on his apron and walks over to the platform. The other men in the barracks also come forward, among them the young man with the lathered cheek, the Chinese man, and Kolka Pakovsky, still stripped to the waist. Only the Persian and Papa Krik stay where they are, continuing their card game, still exchanging their new watches and new banknotes.

“COMRADES!”

the military commissar repeats. The “comrades” stare at him with dull eyes. A view from behind: all the men, as if by silent command, scratch one bare foot against the other. Sobkov says:

“THE WORKERS’ GOVERNMENT IS PREPARED TO FORGIVE

YOUR PAST CRIMES, AND DEMANDS THAT YOU COMMIT

YOURSELVES TO HONESTLY SERVE THE PROLETARIAT!”

The young man with the lathered cheek is standing in front of Sobkov in profile, his face sullen, his thumbs twiddling. Lyovka Bik is polishing his knife to a shine. The military commissar continues:

“THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE HAS PUT ITS TRUST IN YOU

AND HAS DECIDED TO TURN YOUR REGIMENT INTO A PROVISIONS ACQUISITION DETACHMENT.”

Sobkov stops in order to gauge the effect of his sudden announcement on the gangsters. The gangsters applaud. The applause is lively, they like the announcement and clap with mounting fervor. The military commissar, fired up, slides his hand into his pocket for his handkerchief, but his hand slides deeper and deeper without impediment. Someone has sliced off his pocket.

The expertly sliced-off pocket.

Military Commissar Sobkov stands riveted to the spot, his mouth hanging open. The gangsters return to their places. The young man with the bandaged legs, the rough face, and the close-cropped mustache lathers his other cheek. His lady friend stirs, wakes up, and turns her creased face and tousled curls toward the military commissar. Sobkov, shaken, looks first at the gangsters and then at the yawning woman, who swings her fat legs in their fashionable boots off the couch.

The young man whom Papa Krik had sent off with the banknotes comes running through the barracks bringing back the amended bills. He gives them to Papa Krik.

Sobkov comes back to his senses and pulls out his revolver. Kolka Pakovsky, sprawled out in his armchair, looks at him, turning his head in profile, and then looks away again. The Chinese man is still working on his shoulder, adding color to the mouses tail, which is coiling around Kolkas nipple like a snake. Kochetkov grabs hold of Sobkovs hand.

Sobkovs fingers, in Kochetkovs grip, weaken and drop the revolver.

Part Six

Tempted by the prospect of doing some “provision acquisition” Benya Kriks regiment decides to set outfrom Odessa

A deserted Odessa street. The stores lining it are boarded up with planks, bolts, and locks. A picture of the King of Greece is nailed to the door of a ramshackle little store, and under the picture hangs the sign: “Here trades Meir Grinberg, foreign subject.
,,
A solitary dog lies in the middle of the street next to some cut telegraph wires. They lie before the dog like banners before a victorious commander in chief. A fat, lame man is limping quickly along the street. He is stepping heavily on one leg, which is curved like a wheel. His back can be seen receding down the length of the deserted street in the red dust of the sun.

Benya Krik comes riding around the corner on a thoroughbred horse. A multitude of ribbons is plaited into its mane. Next to him ride Sobkov on a sleepy Siberian pony, and one-eyed Grach in riding breeches. The rest of Grachs outfit—his canvas cloak, his well-polished boots, and his whip—have remained unchanged. Kochetkov is marching behind them. His flopping soles tear their doleful jaws wide open. Behind the horsemen ride musicians perched on mules. These mules are from the time when Odessa was occupied by the Nationalists. The mules are twirling their long ears. They have no saddles or stirrups— they are covered with simple carpets. The musician from Dvoira Kriks wedding is marching in front of the band, raising to the skies his shining tuba, which, as previously mentioned, resembles a boa constrictor more than a musical instrument.

The receding back of the lame man shot from a distant perspective in the fiery dust of the sunset. He arrives at a plumbing store, the only store that has not been boarded up, and turns his red, sweating, good-natured face toward the viewer.

Benya Kriks horde of men is marching behind the band. The former gangsters are wearing helmets and machine gun belts, and their pants are rolled up. Some are barefoot, others are wearing shoes that are torn and tattered, but made of patent leather. An unruly, shrieking throng of mothers, brides, wives, and prams is tangling up the lines.

Kolka Pakovsky s mother, a little old woman carrying his rifle and backpack for him, is hobbling behind him, struggling to keep up. Lyovka Bik is pushing a baby carriage carrying his one-year-old son. Next to him is his wife, a lively Moldavanka woman wrapped in a red shawl. Lyovka Bik and his family leave the marching horde. He gazes sadly at the long line of boarded-up stores.

The “artillery” arrives—tachankas with machine guns mounted on them. Behind the “artillery” rolls a cart on which some kind of booth has been mounted. Written in large letters is: “Political Education Unit of the N. Infantry Regiment Honoring the Glorious French Revolution.” Inside the booth a sailor, his puffed-up chest covered in ribbons, is playing a ramshackle little piano. Two midgets, a man and a woman dressed in elegant evening wear, are holding out to the bystanders little buckets with “For Decorating our Barracks” written on them.

Inside the only store that has not been boarded up. The merchandise for sale: porcelain toilet bowls, drain pipes, toilet seats. A lanky young fellow with greenish freckles and a thin neck is sprinkling the floor with a brass kettle, making elaborate water designs of numbers and human forms. The German store owner, the lame man, wipes his broad, helpless face with a towel. The quick walk has exhausted him. Profuse sweat seethes on his fiery, hanging cheeks—the sweat of a good-natured fat man. Having wiped his face, he slides the towel into his open shirt. At that moment the door opens and Lyovka Bik, accompanied by his family, comes bursting into the store.

The kettle shakes in the young fellows hand. The elegant loops are interrupted, and water pours at random onto the floor.

A row of sparkling toilet bowls. Lyovkas inquisitive face bending over them. He sees that there is nothing to take, hesitates, walks away, returns, and, so as not to leave empty-handed, takes one of the toilet bowls that is lavishly decorated with pink flowers. He tosses it into his sons baby carriage and leaves. The German stands rooted to the spot, the towel inside the opening of his shirt.

At the corner of Deribasovskaya and Ekaterininskaya Streets, Cafe Fankoni is boarded up and there are no flower girls to be seen. A barefoot girl draped in a sack, the same girl who delivered Benyas notes, is huddling against Wagner s display window. The first regimental row— Benya, Froim, and Sobkov—is riding past her. Trembling, she quickly

pulls a rose wrapped in newspaper out from under her blouse. Darting between the horses, she runs up to Benya and hands him the rose.

The port. The wharves of the so-called Watermelon Harbor are lined with boats. The sunset is gilding the dirty sails, the water filled with rinds, and the heaps of watermelons, the myriad of watermelons. Little boats are piled to the brim with them.

The unloading of watermelons. The owner of the boat, a Greek, throws a watermelon to a stevedore on the dock, who throws it to another stevedore, who then throws it to another, all the way to the railroad car. The distance between one stevedore and another is two to three paces.

The watermelons, thrown from one hand to another.

Some of Benyas men are watching the unloading of the watermelons with stony faces. A barely visible ripple runs through their ranks. Suddenly, with astonishing speed, they push the stevedores into the water and form their own line from the vessel to the railroad car. A momentary pause and the unloading of the watermelons continues with its former smoothness.

The watermelons, thrown from one hand to another.

The stevedores, veteran dockworkers, are thrashing about in the water. The Greek owners of the vessels hoist their sails and prepare to escape. Evening. The lights in the port are lit.

Benya Kriks regiment is boarding railroad boxcars. The future “provision acquisition detachment” has filled a boxcar with piles of empty sacks.

Kochetkov is standing guard at the door of a passenger car, the first car after the locomotive. Benya and Froim climb in. Kochetkov locks the door behind them. Froim hears the rasping of the key in the lock, turns, and peers through the window at Kochetkovs simple, highcheekboned face. Froim knocks on the window:

“HEY, KOCHETKOV! WHAT IF I NEED TO GO FOR A YOU-

KNOW-WHAT?”

Kochetkov stands at attention with his rifle.

“THERE’S NO TIME FOR YOU-KNOW-WHATS IN THE WAR!”

Froim eyes Kochetkov and disappears into the depths of the railroad car.

The boats, hurriedly hoisting their sails, pull out to sea. The drenched stevedores crawl onto the shore. Evening.

Gas lamps have been lit on the platform. Lyovka Bik is dragging a pile of empty sacks to the train. Sobkov comes up to him and asks:

“WHY SO MANY SACKS, LYOVKA?”

Lyovka, bent beneath the weight of his load, looks at the slow-witted military commissar.

“YOU NEED SACKS IF YOU’RE GOING TO FIGHT THE SMUGGLERS AND THEIR SACKS!”

he answers, and hurries on. Old Manka, the matriarch of the Slobodka bandits, bustles after him carrying a basket.

Benya is standing by a compartment window. Manka, gasping for breath, comes rushing up to him. She takes a quart of liquor and a mandolin out of her basket and gives them to him.

The locomotive whistles.

Benya Kriks men are pushing the railroad car loaded with watermelons along the track. They couple it to the train.

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