Authors: Ilya Ilf
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Dramas & Plays, #Regional & Cultural, #Russian, #Drama & Plays
"That's right," said Ostap, "and now on the neck. Twice.
That's it. Can't be helped. Sometimes the eggs have to teach a lesson
to a chicken who gets out of hand. Once more, that's it. Don't be shy. Don't
hit him any more on the head, it's his weakest point."
If the Stargorod conspirators had seen the master-mind and father of
Russian democracy at that crucial moment, it can be taken for certain that
the secret alliance of the Sword and Ploughshare would have ended its
existence.
"That's enough, I think," said Nicky, hiding his hand in his pocket.
"Just once more," implored Ostap.
"To hell with him. He'll know next time."
Nicky went away. Ostap went upstairs to Ivanopulo's and looked down.
Ippolit Matveyevich stood sideways to the house, leaning against the iron
railing of the embassy.
"Citizen Michelson," he called. "Konrad Karlovich. Come inside. I
permit you."
Ippolit Matveyevich entered the room in slightly better spirits.
"Unheard-of impudence," he exclaimed angrily. "I could hardly control
myself."
"Dear, dear," sympathized Ostap. "What has the modern youth come to?
Terrible young people! Chase after other people's wives. Spend other
people's money. Complete decadence. But tell me, does it really hurt when
they hit you on the head? "
"I'll challenge him to a duel!"
"Fine! I can recommend a good friend of mine. He knows the duelling
code by heart and has two brooms quite suitable for a struggle to the death.
You can have Ivanopulo and his neighbour on the right as seconds. He's an
ex-honorary citizen of the city of Kologriv and still even brags about the
title. Or you can have a duel with mincing-machines-it's more elegant. Each
wound is definitely fatal. The wounded adversary is automatically turned
into a meat ball. How do you like the idea, Marshal?"
At that moment there was a whistle from the street and Ostap went down
to receive the* reports from his young agents.
The waifs had coped splendidly with their mission. Four chairs had gone
to the Columbus Theatre. The waif explained in detail how the chairs were
transported in a wheelbarrow, unloaded and carted into the building through
the stage-door. Ostap already knew the location of the theatre.
Another young pathfinder said that two chairs had been taken away in a
taxi. The boy did not seem to be very bright. He knew the street where the
chairs had been taken and even remembered the number of the apartment was
17, but could not remember the number of the house.
152
"I ran too quick," said the waif. "It flew out me head."
"You won't get any money," declared the boss.
"But, mister! I'll show you the place."
"All right, stay here. We'll go there together."
The citizen with the bleat turned out to live on Sadovaya Spasskaya.
Ostap jotted down the exact address in a notebook.
The eighth chair had been taken to the House of the Peoples. The boy
who had followed this chair proved to have initiative. Overcoming barriers
in the form of the commandant's office and numerous messengers, he had found
his way into the building and discovered the chair had been bought by the
editor of the Lathe newspaper.
Two boys had not yet come back. They arrived almost simultaneously,
panting and tired.
"Barrack Street in the Clear Lakes district."
"Number?"
"Nine. And the apartment is nine. There were Tatars living in the yard
next door. I carried the chair the last part of the way. We went on foot."
The final messenger brought sad tidings. At first everything had been
all right, but then everything had gone all wrong. The purchaser had taken
his chair into the goods yard of October Station and it had not been
possible to slip in after him, as there were armed guards from the Ministry
of Transport standing at the gates.
"He left by train, most likely," said the waif, concluding his report.
This greatly disconcerted Ostap. Rewarding the waifs royally, one
rouble each (except for the herald from Varsonofefsky Street, who had
forgotten the number and was told to come back the next day), the technical
adviser went back inside and, ignoring the many questions put to him by the
disgraced chairman of the board, began to scheme.
"Nothing's lost yet. We have the addresses and there are many old and
reliable tricks for getting the chairs: simple friendship; a love affair;
friendship plus housebreaking; barter; and money. The last is the most
reliable. But we haven't much money."
Ostap glanced ironically at Ippolit Matveyevich. The smooth operator
had regained his usual clarity of thought and mental balance. It would, of
course, be possible to get the money. Their reserve included the picture
"Chamberlain Answers the Bolsheviks", the tea-strainer, and full opportunity
for continuing a career of polygamy.
The only trouble was the tenth chair. There was a trail to follow, but
only a diffuse and vague one.
"Well, anyway," Ostap decided aloud, "we can easily bet on those odds.
I'll stake nine to one. The hearing is continued. Do you hear? Hey you,
member of the jury? "
William Shakespeare's vocabulary has been estimated by the experts at
twelve thousand words. The vocabulary of a Negro from the Mumbo Jumbo tribe
amounts to three hundred words.
Ellochka Shukin managed easily and fluently on thirty.
Here are the words, phrases and interjections which she fastidiously
picked from the great, rich and expressive Russian language:
1. You're being vulgar.
2. Ho-ho (expresses irony, surprise, delight, loathing, joy, contempt
and satisfaction, according to the circumstances).
3. Great!
4. Dismal (applied to everything-for example: "dismal Pete has
arrived", "dismal weather", or a "dismal cat").
5. Gloom.
6. Ghastly (for example: when meeting a close female acquaintance, "a
ghastly meeting").
7. Kid (applied to all male acquaintances, regardless of age or social
position).
8. Don't tell me how to live!
9. Like a babe ("I whacked him like a babe" when playing cards, or "I
brought him down like a babe," evidently when talking to a legal tenant).
10.Ter-r-rific!
11. Fat and good-looking (used to describe both animate and inanimate
objects).
12. Let's go by horse-cab (said to her husband).
13. Let's go by taxi (said to male acquaintances).
14. You're all white at the back! (joke).
15. Just imagine!
16. Ula (added to a name to denote affection-for example: Mishula,
Zinula).
17. Oho! (irony, surprise, delight, loathing, joy, contempt and
satisfaction).
The extraordinary small number of words remaining were used as
connecting links between Ellochka and department-store assistants.
If you looked at the photographs of Ellochka Shukin which her husband,
engineer Ernest Pavlovich Shukin, had hanging over his bed (one profile and
the other full-face), you would easily see her pleasantly high and curved
forehead, big liquid eyes, the cutest little nose in the whole of the
province of Moscow, and a chin with a small beauty spot.
Men found Ellochka's height nattering. She was petite, and even the
puniest little men looked hefty he-men beside her.
She had no particular distinguishing features; she did not need them.
She was pretty.
The two hundred roubles which her husband earned each month at the
Electrolustre works was an insult to Ellochka. It was of no help at all in
the tremendous battle which she had been waging for the past four years,
from the moment she acquired the social status of housewife and Shukin's
spouse. The battle was waged at full pressure. It absorbed all her
resources. Ernest Pavlovich took home work to do in the evening, refused to
have servants, lit the primus himself, put out the refuse, and even cooked
meat balls.
But it was all useless. A dangerous enemy was ruining the household
more and more every year. Four years earlier Ellochka had noticed she had a
rival across the ocean. The misfortune had come upon Ellochka one happy
evening while she was trying on a very pretty crepe de Chine blouse. It made
her look almost a goddess.
"Ho-ho!" she exclaimed, summing up by that cannibal cry the amazingly
complex emotions which had overcome her.
More simply, the emotions could have been expressed by the following:
men will become excited when they see me like this. They will tremble. They
will follow me to the edge of the world, hiccupping with love. But I shall
be cold. Are you really worthy of me? I am still the prettiest girl of all.
No one in the world has such an elegant blouse as this.
But there were only thirty words, so Ellochka selected the most
expressive one-"Ho-ho!"
It was at this hour of greatness that Fimka Sobak came to see her. She
brought with her the icy breath of January and a French fashion magazine.
Ellochka got no further than the first page. A glossy photograph showed the
daughter of the American billionaire, Vanderbilt, in an evening dress. It
showed furs and plumes, silks and pearls, an unusually simple cut and a
stunning hair-do. That settled everything. "Oho!" said Ellochka to herself.
That meant "she or me". The next morning found Ellochka at the
hairdresser's, where she relinquished her beautiful black plait and had her
hair dyed red. Then she was able to climb another step up the ladder leading
her to the glittering paradise frequented by billionaires' daughters, who
were no match for housewife Shukin. A dog skin made to look like muskrat was
bought with a loan and added the finishing touch to the evening dress.
Mister Shukin, who had long cherished the dream of buying a new
drawing-board, became rather depressed.
The dog-trimmed dress was the first well-aimed blow at Miss Vanderbilt.
The snooty American girl was then dealt three more in succession. Ellochka
bought a chinchilla tippet (Russian rabbit caught in Tula Province) from
Fimka Sobak, a private furrier, acquired a hat made of dove-grey Argentine
felt, and converted her husband's new jacket into a stylish tunic. The
billionaire's daughter was shaken, but the affectionate Daddy Vanderbilt
evidently came to the rescue.
The latest number of the magazine contained a portrait of the cursed
rival in four different styles: (1) in black-brown fox; (2) with a diamond
star on her forehead; (3) in a flying suit (high boots, a very thin green
coat and gauntlets, the tops of which were encrusted with medium-size
emeralds); and (4) in a ball gown (cascades of jewellery and a little silk).
Ellochka mustered her forces. Daddy Shukin obtained a loan from the
mutual-assistance fund, but they would only give him thirty roubles. This
desperate new effort radically undermined the household economy, but the
battle had to be waged on all fronts. Not long before some snapshots of the
Miss in her new castle in Florida had been received. Ellochka, too, had to
acquire new furniture. She bought two upholstered chairs at an auction.
(Successful buy! Wouldn't have missed it for the world.) Without asking her
husband, Ellochka took the money from the dinner fund. There were ten days
and four roubles left to the fifteenth.
Ellochka transported the chairs down Varsonofefsky Street in style. Her
husband was not at home, but arrived soon after, carrying a brief-case.
"The dismal husband has arrived," said Ellochka clearly and distinctly.
All her words were pronounced distinctly and popped out as smartly as
peas from a pod.
"Hello, Ellochka, what's all this? Where did the chairs come from?"
"Ho-ho!"
"No, really?"
"Ter-r-rific!"
"Yes, they're nice chairs."
"Great!"
"A present from someone?"
"Oho!"
"What? Do you mean you bought them? Where did the money come from? The
housekeeping money? But I've told you a thousand times . . ."
"Ernestula, you're being vulgar!"
"How could you do a thing like that? We won't have anything to eat!"
"Just imagine!"
"But it's outrageous! You're living beyond your means."
"You're kidding."
"No, no. You're living beyond your means."
"Don't tell me how to live!"
"No, let's have a serious talk. I get two hundred roubles. . ."
"Gloom!"
"I don't take bribes, don't steal money, and don't know how to
counterfeit it. . . ."
"Ghastly!"
Ernest Pavlovich dried up.
"The point is this," he said after a while; "we can't go on this way."
"Ho-ho!" said Ellochka, sitting down on the new chair.
"We will have to get a divorce."
"Just imagine!"
"We're not compatible. I. . ."
"You're a fat and good-looking kid."
"How many times have I told you not to call me a kid."
"You're kidding!"
"And where did you get that idiotic jargon from?"
"Don't tell me how to live!"
"Oh, hell!" cried the engineer.
"You're being vulgar, Ernestula!"
"Let's get divorced peaceably."
"Oho!"
"You won't prove anything to me. This argument. . ."
"I'll whack you like a babe."
"No, this is absolutely intolerable. Your arguments cannot prevent me
from taking the step forced upon me. I'm going to get the removal van."
"You're kidding!"
"We'll divide up the furniture equally."
"Ghastly!"
"You'll get a hundred roubles a month. Even a hundred and twenty. The
room will be yours. Live how you like, I can't go on this way."
"Great!" said Ellochka with contempt.
"I'll move in with Ivan Alexeyvich."
"Oho!"
"He's gone to the country and left me his apartment for the summer. I
have the key. . . . Only there's no furniture."
"Ter-r-rific!"
Five minutes later Ernest Pavlovich came back with the caretaker.
"I'll leave the wardrobe. You need it more. But I'll have the desk, if
you don't mind. And take this chair, caretaker. I'll take one of the chairs.
I think I have the right to, don't I?"
Ernest Pavlovich gathered his things into a large bundle, wrapped his
boots up in paper, and turned towards the door.
"You're all white at the back," said Ellochka in a phonographic voice.
"Good-bye, Ella."
He hoped that this time at least his wife would refrain from her usual
metallic vocables. Ellochka also felt the seriousness of the occasion. She
strained herself, searching for suitable words for the parting. They soon
came to mind.
"Going by taxi? Ter-r-rific!"
The engineer hurtled downstairs like an avalanche.
Ellochka spent the evening with Fimka Sobak. They discussed a
singularly important event which threatened to upset world economy.
"It seems they will be worn long and wide," said Fimka, sinking her
head into her shoulders like a hen.
"Gloom!"
Ellochka looked admiringly at Fimka Sobak. Mile Sobak was reputed to be
a cultured girl and her vocabulary contained about a hundred and eighty
words. One of the words was one that Ellochka would not even have dreamed
of. It was the meaningful word "homosexuality".
Fimka Sobak was undoubtedly a cultured girl.
Their animated conversation lasted well into the night.
At ten the next morning the smooth operator arrived at Varsonofefsky
Street. In front of him ran the waif from the day before. He pointed out the
house.
"You're not telling stories?"
"Of course not, mister. In there, through the front door."
Bender gave the boy an honestly earned rouble.
"That's not enough," said the boy, like a taxi-driver.
"The ears of a dead donkey. Get them from Pushkin. On your way,
defective one!"
Ostap knocked at the door without the least idea what excuse he would
use for his visit. In conversations with young ladies he preferred
inspiration.
"Oho?" asked a voice behind the door.
"On business," replied Ostap.
The door opened and Ostap went into a room that could only have been
furnished by someone with the imagination of a woodpecker. The walls were
covered with picture postcards of film stars, dolls and Tambov tapestries.
Against this dazzling background it was difficult to make out the little
occupant of the room. She was wearing a gown made from one of Ernest
Pavlovich's shirts, trimmed with some mysterious fur.
Ostap knew at once how he should behave in such high society. He closed
his eyes and took a step backwards. "A beautiful fur!" he exclaimed.
"You're kidding," said Ellochka tenderly. "It's Mexican jerboa."
"It can't be. They made a mistake. You were given a much better fur.
It's Shanghai leopard. Yes, leopard. I recognize it by the shade. You see
how it reflects the sun. Just like emerald!"
Ellochka had dyed the Mexican jerboa with green water-colour herself,
so the morning visitor's praise was particularly pleasing.
Without giving her time to recover, the smooth operator poured out
everything he had ever heard about furs. After that they discussed silk, and
Ostap promised to make his charming hostess a present of several thousand
silkworms which he claimed the Chairman of the Central Executive Committee
of Uzbekistan had brought him.
"You're the right kind of kid," observed Ellochka as a result of the
first few minutes of friendship.
"You're surprised, of course, by this early visit from a stranger."
"Ho-ho!"
"But I've come on a delicate matter."
"You're kidding."
"You were at the auction yesterday and made a remarkable impression on
me."
"You're being vulgar!"
"Heavens! To be vulgar to such a charming woman would be inhuman."
"Ghastly!" .
The conversation continued along these lines, now and then producing
splendid results.
But all the time Ostap's compliments became briefer and more watery. He
had noticed that the second chair was not there. It was up to him to find a
clue. Interspersing his questions with flowery Eastern flattery, he found
out all about the events of the day before in Ellochka's life.
"Something new," he thought, "the chairs are crawling all over the
place, like cockroaches."
"Sell me the chair, dear lady," said Ostap unexpectedly. "I like it
very much. Only with your female intuition could you have chosen such an
artistic object. Sell it to me, young lady, and I'll give you seven
roubles."
"You're being vulgar, kid," said Ellochka slyly.
"Ho-ho!" said Ostap, trying to make her understand. I must approach her
differently, he decided. Let's suggest an exchange.
"You know that in Europe now and in the best homes in Philadelphia
they've reintroduced the ancient custom of pouring tea through a strainer?
It's remarkably effective and elegant."
Ellochka pricked up her ears.
"A diplomat I know has just arrived back from Vienna and brought me one
as a present. It's an amusing thing."
"It must be great," said Ellochka with interest.
"Oho! Ho-ho! Let's make an exchange. You give me the chair and I'll
give you the tea-strainer. Would you like that? "
The sun rolled about in the strainer like an egg. Spots of light danced
on the ceiling. A dark corner of the room was suddenly lit up. The strainer
made the same overwhelming impression on Ellochka as an old tin can makes on
a Mumbo Jumbo cannibal. In such circumstances the cannibal shouts at the top
of his voice. Ellochka, however, merely uttered a quiet "Ho-ho."
Without giving her time to recover, Ostap put the strainer down on the
table, took the chair, and having found out the address of the charming
lady's husband, courteously bowed his way out.