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Authors: Ilya Ilf

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hope, will take advantage of Elena Stanislavovna's hospitality and spend the
night here. It will be a good thing for the conspiracy if we separate for a
time, anyway, as a blind. I'm off."
Ippolit Matveyevich was winking broadly, but Ostap pretended he had not
noticed and went out into the street. Having gone a block, he remembered the
five hundred honestly earned roubles in his pocket.
"Cabby! " he cried. "Take me to the Phoenix."
The cabby leisurely drove Ostap to a closed restaurant.
"What's this! Shut?"
"On account of May Day."
"Damn them! All the money in the world and nowhere to have a good time.
All right, then, take me to Plekhanov Street. Do you know it?"
"What was the street called before? " asked the cabby.
"I don't know."
"How can I get there? I don't know it, either."
Ostap nevertheless ordered him to drive on and find it.
For an hour and a half they cruised around the dark and empty town,
asking watchmen and militiamen the way. One militiaman racked his brains and
at length informed them that Plekhanov Street was none other than the former
Governor Street.
"Governor Street! I've been taking people to Governor Street for
twenty-five years."
"Then drive there!"
They arrived at Governor Street, but it turned out to be Karl Marx and
not Plekhanov Street.
The frustrated Ostap renewed his search for the lost street, but was
not able to find it. Dawn cast a pale light on the face of the moneyed
martyr who had been prevented from disporting himself.
"Take me to the Sorbonne Hotel!" he shouted. "A fine driver you are!
You don't even know Plekhanov! "
Widow Gritsatsuyev's palace glittered. At the head of the banquet table
sat the King of Clubs-the son of a Turkish citizen. He was elegant and
drunk. All the guests were talking loudly.
The young bride was no longer young. She was at least thirty-five.
Nature had endowed her generously. She had everything: breasts like
watermelons, a bulging nose, brightly coloured cheeks and a powerful neck.
She adored her new husband and was afraid of him. She did not therefore call
him by his first name, or by his patronymic, which she had not managed to
find out, anyway, but by his surname-Comrade Bender.
Ippolit Matveyevich was sitting on his cherished chair. All through the
wedding feast he bounced up and down, trying to feel something hard. From
time to time he did. Whenever this happened, the people present pleased him,
and he began shouting "Kiss the bride" furiously.
Ostap kept making speeches and proposing toasts. They drank to public
education and the irrigation of Uzbekistan. Later on the guests began to
depart. Ippolit Matveyevich lingered in the hall and whispered to Bender:
"Don't waste time, they're there."
"You're a moneygrubber," replied the drunken Ostap. "Wait for me at the
hotel. Don't go anywhere. I may come at any moment. Settle the hotel bill
and have everything ready. Adieu, Field Marshal! Wish me good night!"
Ippolit Matveyevich did so and went back to the Sorbonne to worry.
Ostap turned up at five in the morning carrying the chair. Vorobyaninov
was speechless. Ostap put down the chair in the middle of the room and sat
on it.
"How did you manage it? " Vorobyaninov finally got out.
"Very simple. Family style. The widow was asleep and dreaming. It was a
pity to wake her. 'Don't wake her at dawn!' Too bad! I had to leave a note.
'Going to Novokhopersk to make a report. Won't be back to dinner. Your own
Bunny.' And I took the chair from the dining-room. There aren't any trams
running at this time of the morning, so I rested on the chair on the way."
Ippolit Matveyevich flung himself towards the chair with a burbling
sound.
"Go easy," said Ostap, "we must avoid making a noise." He took a pair
of pliers out of his pocket, and work soon began to hum. "Did you lock the
door?" he asked.
Pushing aside the impatient Vorobyaninov, he neatly laid open the
chair, trying not to damage the flowered chintz.
"This kind of cloth isn't to be had any more; it should be preserved.
There's a dearth of consumer goods and nothing can be done about it."
Ippolit Matveyevich was driven to a state of extreme irritation.
"There," said Ostap quietly. He raised the covering and groped among
the springs with both his hands. The veins stood out like a "V" on his
forehead.
"Well?" Ippolit Matveyevich kept repeating in various keys. "Well?
Well?"
"Well and well," said Ostap irritably. "One chance in eleven . . ." He
thoroughly examined the inside of the chair and concluded: "And this chance
isn't ours."
He stood up straight and dusted his knees. Ippolit Matveyevich flung
himself on the chair. The jewels were not there. Vorobyaninov's hands
dropped, but Ostap was in good spirits as before.
"Our chances have now increased."
He began walking up and down the room.
"It doesn't matter. The chair cost the widow twice as much as it did
us."
He took out of his side pocket a gold brooch set with coloured stones,
a hollow bracelet of imitation gold, half-a-dozen gold teaspoons, and a
tea-strainer.
In his grief Ippolit Matveyevich did not even realize that he had
become an accomplice in common or garden theft.
"A shabby trick," said Ostap, "but you must agree I couldn't leave my
beloved without something to remember her by. However, we haven't any time
to lose. This is only the beginning. The end will be in Moscow. And a
furniture museum is not like a widow-it'll be a bit more difficult."
The partners stuffed the pieces of the chair under the bed and, having
counted their money (together with the contributions for the children's
benefit, they had five hundred and thirty-five roubles), drove to the
station to catch the Moscow train.
They had to drive right across the town.
On Co-operative Street they caught sight of Polesov running along the
pavement like a startled antelope. He was being pursued by the yard-keeper
from No. 5 Pereleshinsky Street. Turning the corner, the concessionaires
just had time to see the yard-keeper catch him up and begin bashing him.
Polesov was shouting "Help!" and "Bum!"
Until the train departed they sat in the gentlemen's to avoid meeting
the beloved.
The train whisked the friends towards the noisy capital. They pressed
against the window. The cars were speeding over Gusishe.
Suddenly Ostap let out a roar and seized Vorobyaninov by the biceps.
"Look, look!" he cried. "Quick! It's Alchen, that son of a bitch!"
Ippolit Matveyevich looked downward. At the bottom of the embankment a
tough-looking young man with a moustache was pulling a wheelbarrow loaded
with a light-brown harmonium and five window frames. A shamefaced citizen in
a mouse-grey shirt was pushing the barrow from behind.
The sun forced its way through the dark clouds, and on the churches the
crosses glittered.
"Pashka! Going to market?"
Pasha Emilevich raised his head but only saw the buffers of the last
coach; he began working even harder with his legs.
"Did you see that?" asked Ostap delightedly. "Terrific! That's the way
to work! "
Ostap slapped the mournful Vorobyaninov on the back.
"Don't worry, dad! Never say die! The hearing is continued. Tomorrow
evening we'll be in Moscow."
PART II
IN MOSCOW
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
A SEA OF CHAIRS
Statistics know everything.
It has been calculated with precision how much ploughland there is in
the USSR, with subdivision into black earth, loam and loess. All citizens of
both sexes have been recorded in those neat, thick registers-so familiar to
Ippolit Matveyevich Vorobyaninov-the registry office ledgers. It is known
how much of a certain food is consumed yearly by the average citizen in the
Republic. It is known how much vodka is imbibed as an average by this
average citizen, with a rough indication of the titbits consumed with it. It
is known how many hunters, ballerinas, revolving lathes, dogs of all breeds,
bicycles, monuments, girls, lighthouses and sewing machines there are in the
country.
How much life, full of fervour, emotion and thought, there is in those
statistical tables!
Who is this rosy-cheeked individual sitting at a table with a napkin
tucked into his collar and putting away the steaming victuals with such
relish? He is surrounded with herds of miniature bulls. Fattened pigs have
congregated in one corner of the statistical table. Countless numbers of
sturgeon, burbot and chekhon fish splash about in a special statistical
pool. There are hens sitting on the individual's head, hands and shoulders.
Tame geese, ducks and turkeys fly through cirrus clouds. Two rabbits are
hiding under the table. Pyramids and Towers of Babel made of bread rise
above the horizon. A small fortress of jam is washed by a river of milk. A
pickle the size of the leaning tower of Pisa appears on the horizon.
Platoons of wines, spirits and liqueurs march behind ramparts of salt and
pepper. Tottering along in the rear in a miserable bunch come the soft
drinks: the non-combatant soda waters, lemonades and wire-encased syphons.
Who is this rosy-cheeked individual-a gourmand and a tosspot-with a
sweet tooth? Gargantua, King of the Dipsodes? Silaf Voss? The legendary
soldier, Jacob Redshirt? Lucullus?
It is not Lucullus. It is Ivan Ivanovich Sidorov or Sidor Sidorovich
Ivanov-an average citizen who consumes all the victuals described in the
statistical table as an average throughout his life. He is a normal consumer
of calories and vitamins, a quiet forty-year-old bachelor, who works in a
haberdashery and knitwear shop.
You can never hide from statistics. They have exact information not
only on the number of dentists, sausage shops, syringes, caretakers, film
directors, prostitutes, thatched roofs, widows, cab-drivers and bells; they
even know how many statisticians there are in the country.
But there is one thing that they do not know.
They do not know how many chairs there are in the USSR.
There are many chairs.
The census calculated the population of the Union Republics at a
hundred and forty-three million people. If we leave aside ninety million
peasants who prefer benches, boards and earthen seats, and in the east of
the country, shabby carpets and rugs, we still have fifty million people for
whom chairs are objects of prime necessity in their everyday lives. If we
take into account possible errors in calculation and the habit of certain
citizens in the Soviet Union of sitting on the fence, and then halve the
figure just in case, we find that there cannot be less than twenty-six and a
half million chairs in the country. To make the figure truer we will take
off another six and a half million. The twenty million left is the minimum
possible number.
Amid this sea of chairs made of walnut, oak, ash, rosewood, mahogany
and Karelian birch, amid chairs made of fir and pine-wood, the heroes of
this novel are to find one Hambs walnut chair with curved legs, containing
Madame Petukhov's treasure inside its chintz-upholstered belly.
The concessionaires lay on the upper berths still asleep as the train
cautiously crossed the Oka river and, increasing its speed, began nearing
Moscow.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
THE BROTHER BERTHOLD SCHWARTZ HOSTEL
Leaning against one another, Ippolit Matveyevich and Ostap stood at the
open window of the unupholstered railway carriage and gazed at the cows
slowly descending the embankment, the pine needles and the plank platforms
of the country stations.
The traveller's stories had all been told. Tuesday's copy of the,
Stargorod Truth had been read right through, including the advertisements,
and was now covered in grease spots. The chickens, eggs and olives had all
been consumed.
All that remained was the most wearisome lap of the journey -the last
hour before Moscow.
Merry little country houses came bounding up to the embankment from
areas of sparse woodland and clumps of trees. Some of them were wooden
palaces with verandahs of shining glass and newly painted iron roofs. Some
were simple log cabins with tiny square windows, real box-traps for
holiday-makers.
While the passengers scanned the horizon with the air of experts and
told each other about the history of Moscow, muddling up what they vaguely
remembered about the battle of Kalka, Ippolit Matveyevich was trying to
picture the furniture museum. He imagined a tremendously long corridor lined
with chairs. He saw himself walking rapidly along between them.
"We still don't know what the museum will be like . . . how things will
turn out," he was saying nervously.
"It's time you had some shock treatment, Marshal. Stop having premature
hysterics! If you can't help suffering, at least suffer in silence."
The train bounced over the switches and the signals opened their mouths
as they watched it. The railway tracks multiplied constantly and proclaimed
the approach of a huge junction. Grass disappeared from the sides and was
replaced by cinder; goods trains whistled and signalmen hooted. The din
suddenly increased as the train dived in between two lines of empty goods
trucks and, clicking like a turnstile, began counting them off.
The tracks kept dividing.
The train leapt out of the corridor of trucks and the sun came out.
Down below, by the very ground, point signals like hatchets moved rapidly
backward and forward. There came a shriek from a turntable where depot
workers were herding a locomotive into its stall.
The train's joints creaked as the brakes were suddenly applied.
Everything squealed and set Ippolit Matveyevich's teeth on edge. The train
came to a halt by an asphalt platform.
It was Moscow. It was Ryazan Station, the freshest and newest of all
the Moscow termini.
None of the eight other Moscow stations had such vast, high-ceilinged
halls as the Ryazan. The entire Yaroslavl station with all its
pseudo-Russian heraldic ornamentation could easily have fitted into the
large buffet-restaurant of the Ryazan.
The concessionaires pushed their way through to the exit and found
themselves on Kalanchev Square. On their right towered the heraldic birds of
Yaroslavl Station. Directly in front of them was October Station, painted in
two colours dully reflecting the light. The clock showed five past ten. The
clock on top of the Yaroslavl said exactly ten o'clock. Looking up at the
Ryazan Station clock, with its zodiac dial, the travellers noted that it was
five to ten.
"Very convenient for dates," said Ostap. "You always have ten minutes'
grace."
The coachman made a kissing sound with his lips and they passed under
the bridge. A majestic panorama of the capital unfolded before them.
"Where are we going, by the way?" Ippolit Matveyevich asked.
"To visit nice people," Ostap replied. "There are masses of them in
Moscow and they're all my friends."
"And we're staying with them?"
"It's a hostel. If we can't stay with one, we can always go to
another."
On Hunter's Row there was confusion. Unlicensed hawkers were running
about in disorder like geese, with their trays on their heads. A militiaman
trotted along lazily after them. Some waifs were sitting beside an asphalt
vat, breathing in the pleasant smell of boiling tar.
They came out on Arbat Square, passed along Prechistenka Boulevard,
and, turning right, stopped in a small street called Sivtsev Vrazhek.
"What building is that?" Ippolit Matveyevich asked.
Ostap looked at the pink house with a projecting attic and answered:
"The Brother Berthold Schwartz Hostel for chemistry students."
"Was he really a monk? "
"No, no I'm only joking. It's the Semashko hostel."
As befits the normal run of student hostels in Moscow, this building
had long been lived in by people whose connections with chemistry were
somewhat remote. The students had gone their ways; some of them had
completed their studies and gone off to take up jobs, and some had been
expelled for failing their exams. It was the latter group which, growing in
number from year to year, had formed something between a housing
co-operative and a feudal settlement in the little pink house. In vain had
ranks of freshmen sought to invade the hostel; the ex-chemists were highly
resourceful and repulsed all assaults. Finally the house was given up as a
bad job and disappeared from the housing programmes of the Moscow real
estate administration. It was as though it had never existed. It did exist,
however, and there were people living in it.
The concessionaires went upstairs to the second floor and turned into a
corridor cloaked in complete darkness.
"Light and airy!" said Ostap.
Suddenly someone wheezed in the darkness, just by Ippolit Matveyevich's
elbow.
"Don't be alarmed," Ostap observed. "That wasn't in the corridor, but
behind the wall. Plyboard, as you know from physics, is an excellent
conductor of sound. Careful! Hold on to me! There should be a cabinet here
somewhere."
The cry uttered at that moment by Ippolit Matveyevich as he hit his
chest against a sharp steel corner showed that there was indeed a cabinet
there somewhere.
"Did you hurt yourself?" Ostap inquired. "That's nothing. That's
physical pain. I'd hate to think how much mental suffering has gone on here.
There used to be a skeleton in here belonging to a student called Ivanopulo.
He bought it at the market, but was afraid to keep it in his room. So
visitors first bumped into the cabinet and then the skeleton fell on top of
them. Pregnant women were always very annoyed."
The partners wound their way up a spiral staircase to the large attic,
which was divided by plyboard partitions into long slices five feet wide.
The rooms were like pencil boxes, the only difference being that besides
pens and pencils they contained people and primus stoves as well.
"Are you there, Nicky?" Ostap asked quietly, stopping at a central
door.
The response was an immediate stirring and chattering in all five
pencil boxes.
"Yes," came the answer from behind the door.
"That fool's guests have arrived too early again!" whispered a woman's
voice in the last box on the left.
"Let a fellow sleep, can't you!" growled box no. 2.
There was a delighted hissing from the third box.
"It's the militia to see Nicky about that window he smashed yesterday."
No one spoke in the fifth pencil box; instead came the hum of a primus
and the sound of kissing.
Ostap pushed open the door with his foot. The whole of the plyboard
erection gave a shake and the concessionaires entered Nicky's cell.
The scene that met Ostap's eye was horrible, despite all its outward
innocence. The only furniture in the room was a red-striped mattress resting
on four bricks. But it was not that which disturbed Ostap, who had long been
aware of the state of Nicky's furniture; nor was he surprised to see Nicky
himself, sitting on the legged mattress. It was the heavenly creature
sitting beside him who made Ostap's face cloud over immediately. Such girls
never make good business associates. Their eyes are too blue and the lines
of their necks too clean for that sort of thing. They make mistresses or,
what is worse, wives-beloved wives. And, indeed, Nicky addressed this
creature as Liza and made funny faces at her.
Ippolit Matveyevich took off his beaver cap, and Ostap led Nicky out
into the corridor, where they conversed in whispers for some time.
"A splendid morning, madam," said Ippolit Matveyevich.
The blue-eyed madam laughed and, without any apparent bearing on
Ippolit Matveyevich's remark, began telling him what fools the people in the
next box were.
"They light the primus on purpose so that they won't be heard kissing.
But think how silly that is. We can all hear. The point is they don't hear
anything themselves because of the primus. Look, I'll show you."
And Nicky's wife, who had mastered all the secrets of the primus stove,
said loudly: "The Zveryevs are fools!"
From behind the wall came the infernal hissing of the primus stove and
the sound of kisses.
"You see! They can't hear anything. The Zveryevs are fools, asses and
cranks! You see!"
"Yes," said Ippolit Matveyevich.
"We don't have a primus, though. Why? Because we eat at the vegetarian
canteen, although I'm against a vegetarian diet. But when Nicky and I were
married, he was longing for us to eat together in the vegetarian canteen, so
that's why we go there. I'm actually very fond of meat, but all you get
there is rissoles made of noodles. Only please don't say anything to Nicky."
At this point Nicky and Ostap returned.
"Well, then, since we definitely can't stay with you, we'll go and see
Pantelei."
"That's right, fellows," cried Nicky, "go and see Ivanopulo. He's a
good sport."
"Come and visit us," said Nicky's wife. "My husband and I will always
be glad to see you."
"There they go inviting people again!" said an indignant voice in the
last pencil box. "As though they didn't have enough visitors!"
"Mind your own business, you fools, asses and cranks!" said Nicky's
wife without raising her voice.
"Do you hear that, Ivan Andreyevich?" said an agitated voice in the
last box. "They insult your wife and you say nothing."
Invisible commentators from the other boxes added their voices to the
fray and the verbal cross-fire increased. The partners went downstairs to
Ivanopulo.
The student was not at home. Ippolit Matveyevich lit a match and saw
that a note was pinned to the door. It read: "Will not be back before nine.
Pantelei".
"That's no harm," said Ostap. "I know where the key is." He groped
underneath the cabinet, produced a key, and unlocked the door.
Ivanopulo's room was exactly of the same size as Nicky's, but, being a
corner room, had one wall made of brick; the student was very proud of it.
Ippolit Matveyevich noted with dismay that he did not even have a mattress.
"This will do nicely," said Ostap. "Quite a decent size for Moscow. If
we all three lie on the floor, there will even be some room to spare. I
wonder what that son of a bitch, Pantelei, did with the mattress."
The window looked out on to a narrow street. A militiaman was walking
up and down outside the little house opposite, built in the style of a
Gothic tower, which housed the embassy of a minor power. Behind the iron
gates some people could be seen playing tennis. The white ball flew backward
and forward accompanied by short exclamations.
"Out!" said Ostap. "And the standard of play is not good. However,
let's have a rest."
The concessionaires spread newspapers on the floor and Ippolit
Matveyevich brought out the cushion which he carried with him.
Ostap dropped down on to the papers and dozed off. Vorobyaninov was
already asleep.
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