Authors: Ilya Ilf
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Dramas & Plays, #Regional & Cultural, #Russian, #Drama & Plays
was another sign:
AND PRIMUS STOVE REPAIRS
under which there hung a heavy padlock. The yard-keeper kicked the
padlock and said with loathing:
"Ugh, that stinker!"
He stood by the workshop for another two or three minutes working up
the most venomous feelings, then wrenched off the sign with a crash, took it
to the well in the middle of the yard, and standing on it with both feet,
began creating an unholy row.
"You have thieves in no. 7!" howled the yard-keeper. "Riffraff of all
kinds! That seven-sired viper! Secondary education indeed! I don't give a
damn for his secondary education! Damn stinkard!"
During this, the seven-sired viper with secondary education was sitting
behind the dustbin and feeling depressed. Window-frames flew open with a
bang, and amused tenants poked out their heads.
People strolled into the yard from outside in curiosity. At the sight
of an audience, the yard-keeper became even more heated.
"Fitter-mechanic!" he cried. "Damn aristocrat!"
The yard-keeper's parliamentary expressions were richly interspersed
with swear words, to which he gave preference. The members of the fair sex
crowding around the windows were very annoyed at the yard-keeper, but stayed
where they were.
"I'll push his face in!" he raged. "Education indeed!"
While the scene was at its height, a militiaman appeared and quietly
began hauling the fellow off to the police station. He was assisted by Some
young toughs from Fastpack. The yard-keeper put his arms around the
militiaman's neck and burst into tears. The danger was over.
A weary Victor Mikhailovich jumped out from behind the dustbin. There
was a stir among the audience.
"Bum!" cried Polesov in the wake of the procession. "I'll show you! You
louse!"
But the yard-keeper was weeping bitterly and could not hear. He was
carried to the police station, and the sign "Metal Workshop and Primus Stove
Repairs" was also taken along as factual evidence. Victor Mikhailovich
bristled with fury for some time.
"Sons of bitches!" he said, turning to the spectators. "Conceited
bums!"
"That's enough, Victor Mikhailovich," called Elena Stanislavovna from
the window. "Come in here a moment."
She placed a dish of stewed fruit in front of Polesov and, pacing up
and down the room, began asking him questions.
"But I tell you it was him-without his moustache, but definitely him,"
said Polesov, shouting as usual. "I know him well. It was the spitting image
of Vorobyaninov."
"Not so loud, for heaven's sake! Why do you think he's here?"
An ironic smile appeared on Polesov's face.
"Well, what do you think? "
He chuckled with even greater irony.
"At any rate, not to sign a treaty with the Bolsheviks."
"Do you think he's in danger? "
The reserves of irony amassed by Polesov over the ten years since the
revolution were inexhaustible. A series of smiles of varying force and
scepticism lit up his face.
"Who isn't in danger in Soviet Russia, especially a man in
Vorobyaninov's position. Moustaches, Elena Stanislavovna, are not shaved off
for nothing."
"Has he been sent from abroad?" asked Elena Stanislavovna, almost
choking.
"Definitely," replied the brilliant mechanic.
"What is his purpose here?"
"Don't be childish!"
"I must see him all the same."
"Do you know what you're risking? "
"I don't care. After ten years of separation I cannot do otherwise than
see Ippolit Matveyevich."
And it actually seemed to her that fate had parted them while they were
still in love with one another.
"I beg you to find him. Find out where he is. You go everywhere; it
won't be difficult for you. Tell him I want to see him. Do you hear?"
The parrot in the red underpants, which had been dozing on its perch,
was startled by the noisy conversation; it turned upside down and froze in
that position.
"Elena Stanislavovna," said the mechanic, half-rising and pressing his
hands to his chest, "I will contact him."
"Would you like some more stewed fruit?" asked the fortune-teller,
deeply touched.
Victor Mikhailovich consumed the stewed fruit irritably, gave Elena
Stanislavovna a lecture on the faulty construction of the parrot's cage, and
then left with instructions to keep everything strictly secret.
The next day the partners saw that it was no longer convenient to live
in the caretaker's room. Tikhon kept muttering away to himself and had
become completely stupid, having seen his master first with a black
moustache, then with a green one, and finally with no moustache at all.
There was nothing to sleep on. The room stank of rotting manure, brought in
on Tikhon's new felt boots. His old ones stood in the corner and did not
help to purify the air, either.
"I declare the old boys' reunion over," said Ostap. "We must move to a
hotel."
Ippolit Matveyevich trembled. "I can't."
"Why not?"
"I shall have to register."
"Aren't your papers in order?"
"My papers are in order, but my name is well known in the town. Rumours
will spread."
The concessionaires reflected for, a while in silence.
"How do you like the name Michelson?" suddenly asked the splendid
Ostap.
"Which Michelson? The Senator?"
"No. The member of the shop assistants' trade union."
"I don't get you."
"That's because you lack technical experience. Don't be naive!"
Bender took a union card out of his green jacket and handed it to
Ippolit Matveyevich.
"Konrad Karlovich Michelson, aged forty-eight, non-party member,
bachelor; union member since 1921 and a person of excellent character; a
good friend of mine and seems to be a friend of children. . . . But you
needn't be friendly to children. The militia doesn't require that of you."
Ippolit Matveyevich turned red. "But is it right? "
"Compared with our" concession, this misdeed, though it does come under
the penal code, is as innocent as a children's game."
Vorobyaninov nevertheless balked at the idea.
"You're an idealist, Konrad Karlovich. You're lucky, otherwise you
might have to become a Papa Christosopulo or Zlovunov."
There followed immediate consent, and without saying goodbye to Tikhon,
the concessionaires went out into the street.
They stopped at the Sorbonne Furnished Rooms. Ostap threw the whole of
the small hotel staff into confusion. First he looked at the seven-rouble
rooms, but disliked the furnishings. The cleanliness of the five-rouble
rooms pleased him more, but the carpets were shabby and there was an
objectionable smell. In the three-rouble rooms everything was satisfactory
except for the pictures.
"I can't live in a room with landscapes," said Ostap.
They had to take a room for one rouble, eighty. It had no landscapes,
no carpets, and the furniture was very conservative -two beds and a night
table.
"Stone-age style," observed Ostap with approval. "I hope there aren't
any prehistoric monsters in the mattresses."
"Depends on the season," replied the cunning room-cleaner. "If there's
a provincial convention of some kind, then of course there aren't any,
because we have many visitors and we clean the place thoroughly before they
arrive. But at other times you may find some. They come across from the
Livadia Rooms next door."
That day the concessionaires visited the Stargorod communal services,
where they obtained the information they required. It turned out that the
housing division had been disbanded in 1921 and that its voluminous records
had been merged with those of the communal services.
The smooth operator got down to business. By evening the partners had
found out the address of the head of the records department, Bartholomew
Korobeinikov, a former clerk in the Tsarist town administration and now an
office-employment official.
Ostap attired himself in his worsted waistcoat, dusted his jacket
against the back of a chair, demanded a rouble, twenty kopeks from Ippolit
Matveyevich, and set off to visit the record-keeper. Ippolit Matveyevich
remained at the Sorbonne Hotel and paced up and down the narrow gap between
the two beds in agitation. The fate of the whole enterprise was in the
balance that cold, green evening. If they could get hold of copies of the
orders for the distribution of the furniture requisitioned from
Vorobyaninov's house, half the battle had been won. There would still be
tremendous difficulties facing them, but at least they would be on the right
track.
"If only we can get the orders," whispered Ippolit Matveyevich to
himself, lying on the bed, "if only we can get them."
The springs of the battered mattress nipped him like fleas, but he did
not feel them. He still only had a vague idea of what would follow once the
orders had been obtained, but felt sure everything would then go swimmingly.
Engrossed in his rosy dream, Ippolit Matveyevich tossed about on the
bed. The springs bleated underneath him.
Ostap had to go right across town. Korobeinikov lived in Gusishe, on
the outskirts.
It was an area populated largely by railway workers. From time to time
a snuffling locomotive would back its way along the walled-off embankment,
above the houses. For a second the roof-tops were lit by the blaze from the
firebox. Now and then empty goods trains went by, and from time to time
detonators could be heard exploding. Amid the huts and temporary wooden
barracks stretched the long brick walls of still damp blocks of flats.
Ostap passed an island of lights-the railway workers' club- checked the
address from a piece of paper, and halted in front of the record-keeper's
house. He rang a bell marked "Please Ring" in embossed letters.
After prolonged questioning as to "Who do you want?" and "What is it
about?" the door was opened, and he found himself in a dark,
cupboard-cluttered hallway. Someone breathed on him in the darkness, but did
not speak.
"Is Citizen Korobeinikov here?" asked Ostap.
The person who had been breathing took Ostap by the arm and led him
into a dining-room lit by a hanging kerosene lamp. Ostap saw in front of him
a prissy little old man with an unusually flexible spine. There was no doubt
that this was Citizen Korobeinikov himself. Without waiting for an
invitation, Ostap moved up a chair and sat down.
The old man looked fearlessly at the high-handed stranger and remained
silent. Ostap amiably began the conversation.
"I've come on business. You work at the communal-services records
office, don't you? "
The old man's back started moving and arched affirmatively.
"And you worked before that in the housing division?"
"I have worked everywhere," he answered gaily.
"Even in the Tsarist town administration?"
Here Ostap smiled graciously. The old man's back contorted for some
time and finally ended up in a position implying that his employment in the
Tsarist town administration was something long passed and that it was not
possible to remember everything for sure.'
"And may I ask what I can do for you?" said the host, regarding his
visitor with interest.
"You may," answered the visitor. "I am Vorobyaninov's son."
"Whose? The marshal's?"
"Yes." . "Is he still alive?"
"He's dead, Citizen Korobeinikov. He's gone to his rest."
"Yes," said the old man without any particular grief, "a sad event. But
I didn't think he had any children."
"He didn't," said Ostap amiably in confirmation.
"What do you mean?"
"I'm from a morganatic marriage."
"Not by any chance Elena Stanislavovna's son? "
"Right!"
"How is she?"
"Mum's been in her grave some time."
"I see. I see. How sad."
And the old man gazed at Ostap with tears of sympathy in his eyes,
although that very day he had seen Elena Stanislavovna at the meat stalls in
the market.
"We all pass away," he said, "but please tell me on what business
you're here, my dear . . . I don't know your name."
"Voldemar," promptly replied Ostap.
"Vladimir Ippolitovich, very good."
The old man sat down at the table covered with patterned oilcloth and
peered into Ostap's eyes.
In carefully chosen words, Ostap expressed his grief at the loss of his
parents. He much regretted that he had invaded the privacy of the respected
record-keeper so late at night and disturbed him by the visit, but hoped
that the respected record-keeper would forgive him when he knew what had
brought him.
"I would like to have some of my dad's furniture," concluded Ostap with
inexpressible filial love, "as a keepsake. Can you tell me who was given the
furniture from dad's house?"
"That's difficult," said the old man after a moment's thought. "Only a
well-to-do person could manage that. What's your profession, may I ask? "
"I have my own refrigeration plant in Samara, run on artel lines."
The old man looked dubiously at young Vorobyaninov's green suit, but
made no comment.
"A smart young man," he thought.
"A typical old bastard," decided Ostap, who had by then completed his
observation of Korobeinikov.
"So there you are," said Ostap.
"So there you are," said the record-keeper. "It's difficult, but
possible."
"And it involves expense," suggested the refrigeration-plant owner
helpfully.
"A small sum . . ."
" 'Is nearer one's heart', as Maupassant used to say. The information
will be paid for."
"All right then, seventy roubles."
"Why so much? Are oats expensive nowadays?"
The old man quivered slightly, wriggling his spine.
"Joke if you will. . ."
"I accept, dad. Cash on delivery. When shall I come?"
"Have you the money on you? "
Ostap eagerly slapped his pocket.
"Then now, if you like," said Korobeinikov triumphantly.
He lit a candle and led Ostap into the next room. Besides a bed,
obviously slept in by the owner of the house himself, the room contained a
desk piled with account books and a wide office cupboard with open shelves.
The printed letters A, B, C down to the rearguard letter Z were glued to the
edges of the shelves. Bundles of orders bound with new string lay on the
shelves.
"Oho!" exclaimed the delighted Ostap. "A full set of records at home."
"A complete set," said the record-keeper modestly. "Just in case, you
know. The communal services don't need them and they might be useful to me
in my old age. We're living on top of a volcano, you know. Anything can
happen. Then people will rush off to find their furniture, and where will it
be? It will be here. This is where it will be. In the cupboard. And who will
have preserved it? Who will have looked after it? Korobeinikov! So the
gentlemen will say thank you to the old man and help him in his old age. And
I don't need very much; ten roubles an order will do me. Otherwise, they
might as well look for the wind in the field. They won't find the furniture
without me."
Ostap looked at the old man in rapture.
"A marvellous office," he said. "Complete mechanization. You're an
absolute hero of labour!"
The flattered record-keeper began explaining the details of his
pastime. He opened the thick registers.
"It's all here," he said, "the whole of Stargorod. All the furniture.
Who it was taken from and who it was given to. And here's the alphabetical
index-the mirror of life! Whose furniture do you want to know about?
Angelov, first-guild merchant? Certainly. Look under A. A, Ak, Am, Am,
Angelov. The number? Here it is-82742. Now give me the stock book. Page 142.
Where's Angelov? Here he is. Taken from Angelov on December 18, 1918:
Baecker grand piano, one, no. 97012; piano stools, one, soft; bureaux, two;
wardrobes, four (two mahogany); bookcases, one . . . and so on. And who was
it all given to? Let's look at the distribution register. The same number.
Issued to. The bookcase to the town military committee, three wardrobes to
the Skylark boarding school, another wardrobe for the personal use of the
Stargorod province food office. And where did the piano go? The piano went
to the old-age pensioners' home, and it's there to this day."
"I don't think I saw a piano there," thought Ostap, remembering
Alchen's shy little face.
"Or for instance, Murin, head of the town council. So we look under M.
It's all here. The whole town. Pianos, settees, pier glasses, chairs,
divans, pouffes, chandeliers . . . even dinner services."
"Well," said Ostap, "they ought to erect a monument to you. But let's
get to the point. The letter V, for example."
"The letter V it is," responded Korobeinikov willingly. "In one moment.
Vm, Vn. Vorotsky, no. 48238, Vorobyaninov. Ippolit Matveyevich, your father,
God rest his soul, was a man with a big heart. . . A Baecker piano, no.
54809. Chinese vases, marked, four, from Sevres in France; Aubusson carpets,
eight, different sizes; a tapestry, "The Shepherd Boy'; a tapestry, 'The
Shepherd Girl'; Tekke carpets, two; Khorassan carpets, one; stuffed bears
with dish, one; a bedroom suite to seat twelve; a dining-room suite to seat
sixteen; a drawing-room suite to seat twelve, walnut, made by Hambs."
"And who was given it?" asked Ostap impatiently. "We're just coming to
that. The stuffed bear with dish went to the police station No. 2. The
Shepherd Boy tapestry went to the art treasure collection; the Shepherd Girl
tapestry to the water-transport club; the Aubusson, Tekke and Khorassan
carpets to the Ministry of Foreign Trade. The bedroom suite went to the
hunters' trade-union; the dining-room suite to the Stargorod branch of the
chief tea administration. The walnut suite was divided up. The round table
and one chair went to the pensioners' home, a curved-back settee was given
to the housing division (it's still in the hall, and the bastards spilled
grease all over the covering); one chair went to Comrade Gritsatsuyev as an
imperialist war invalid, at his own request, granted by Comrade Burkin, head
of the housing division. Ten chairs went to Moscow to the furniture museum,
in accordance with a circular sent round by the Ministry of Education . . .
Chinese vases, marked .. ."
"Well done!" said Ostap jubilantly. "That's more like it! Now it would
be nice to see the actual orders."
"In a moment. We'll come to the orders in a moment. Letter V, No.
48238."
The old man went up to the cupboard and, standing on tiptoe, took down
the appropriate bundle.
"Here you are. All your father's furniture. Do you want all the
orders?"
"What would I do with all of them? Just something to remind me of my
childhood. The drawing-room suite . . . I remember how I used to play on the
Khorassan carpet in the drawing-room, looking at the Shepherd Boy tapestry .
. . I had a fine time, a wonderful childhood. So let's stick to the
drawing-room suite, dad."
Lovingly the old man began to open up the bundle of green counterfoils
and searched for the orders in question. He took out five of them. One was
for ten chairs, two for one chair each, one for the round table, and one for
tapestry.
"lust see. They're all in order. You know where each item is. All the
counterfoils have the addresses on them and also the receiver's own
signature. So no one can back out if anything happens. Perhaps you'd like
Madame Popov's furniture? It's very good and also made by Hambs."
But Ostap was motivated solely by love for his parents; he grabbed the
orders, stuffed them in the depths of his pocket and declined the furniture
belonging to General Popov's wife.