Chapter
28
The
Last Adventures of Koroviev and Behemoth
So,
Woland and his team leave the flat as they have to go back to their world.
A
little later Woland, Azazello and Hella go somewhere else, and Koroviev and
Behemoth enter a shop, Torgsin, on the Smolensky Market, where they accept only
foreign currency.
Bulgakov
uses this episode to show how the foreigners are given undue importance and how
the native Russians sometimes present themselves as foreigners to take
advantage of many things which are hitherto not accessible to them. This
is how the episode is depicted:
“…they
first of all looked around, and then, in a ringing voice heard decidedly in
every corner, Koroviev announced:
'A
wonderful store! A very, very fine store!'
The
public turned away from the counters and for some reason looked at the speaker
in amazement, though he had all grounds for praising the store.
…..
…
Koroviev and Behemoth made straight for the junction of the grocery and
confectionery departments. Here there was plenty of room…
A
short, perfectly square man with blue shaven jowls, horn-rimmed glasses, a
brand-new hat, not crumpled and with no sweat stains on the band, in a lilac
coat and orange kid gloves, stood by the counter grunting something
peremptorily. A sales clerk in a clean white smock and a blue hat was waiting
on the lilac client.
With
the sharpest of knives, much like the knife stolen by Matthew Levi, he was
removing from a weeping, plump pink salmon its snake-like, silvery skin. `This
department is splendid, too,' Koroviev solemnly acknowledged, 'and the
foreigner is a likeable fellow,' he benevolently pointed his finger at the
lilac back.
'No,
Fagott, no,' Behemoth replied pensively, `you're mistaken, my friend: the lilac
gendeman's
face lacks something, in my opinion.'
The
lilac back twitched, but probably by chance, for the foreigner was surely
unable to understand what Koroviev and his companion were saying in Russian.
'Is
good?' the lilac purchaser asked sternly.
Top-notch!'
replied the sales clerk, cockily slipping the edge of the knife under the skin.
'Good
I like, bad I don't,' the foreigner said sternly.
'Right
you are!' the sales clerk rapturously replied.
Here
our acquaintances walked away from the foreigner and his salmon to the end of
the confectionery counter.
'It's
hot today,' Koroviev addressed a young, red-cheeked salesgirl and received no
reply to his words. 'How much are the mandarins?' Koroviev then inquired of
her.
'Fifteen
kopecks a pound,' replied the salesgirl.
'Everything's
so pricey,' Koroviev observed with a sigh, 'hm ... hm ...' He thought a little
longer and then invited his companion: 'Eat up, Behemoth.'
The
fat fellow put his primus under his arm, laid hold of the top mandarin on the
pyramid, straight away gobbled it up skin and all, and began on a second.
The
salesgirl was overcome with mortal terror.
'You're
out of your mind!' she shouted, losing her colour. 'Give me the receipt! The
receipt!' and she dropped the confectionery tongs.
'My
darling, my dearest, my beauty,' Koroviev rasped, leaning over the counter and
winking at the salesgirl, 'we're out of currency today ... what can we do? But
I swear to you, by next time, and no later than Monday, we'll pay it all in
pure cash! We're from nearby, on Sadovaya, where they're having the fire ...'
Behemoth,
after swallowing a third mandarin, put his paw into a clever construction of chocolate
bars, pulled out the bottom one, which of course made the whole thing collapse,
and swallowed it together with its gold wrapper.
The
sales clerks behind the fish counter stood as if petrified, their knives in
their hands, the lilac foreigner swung around to the robbers, and here it turned
out that Behemoth was mistaken: there was nothing lacking in the lilac one's
face, but, on the contrary, rather some superfluity of hanging jowls and
furtive eyes.
Turning
completely yellow, the salesgirl anxiously cried for the whole store to hear:
'Palosich!
Palosich!'
The
public from the fabric department came thronging at this cry, while Behemoth,
stepping away from the confectionery temptations, thrust his paw into a barrel labeled
'Choice Kerch Herring', pulled out a couple of herring, and swallowed them,
spitting out the tails.
'Palosich!'
the desperate cry came again from behind the confectionery counter, and from behind
the fish counter a sales clerk with a goatee barked:
'What's
this you're up to, vermin?'
Pavel
Yosifovich was already hastening to the scene of the action. He was an imposing
man in a clean white smock, like a surgeon, with a pencil sticking out of the
pocket. Pavel Yosifovich was obviously an experienced man. Seeing the tail of
the third herring in Behemoth's mouth, he instantly assessed the situation,
understood decidedly everything, and, without getting into any arguments with
the insolent louts, waved his arm into the distance, commanding:
'Whistle!'
The
doorman flew from the mirrored door out to the corner of the Smolensky market-place
and dissolved in a sinister whistling. The public began to surround the
blackguards, and then Koroviev stepped into the affair.
'Citizens!'
he called out in a high, vibrating voice, 'what's going on here? Eh? Allow me
to ask you that! The poor man' - Koroviev let some tremor into his voice and
pointed to Behemoth, who immediately concocted a woeful physiognomy - 'the poor
man spends all day reparating primuses. He got hungry ... and where's he going
to get currency?'
To
this Pavel Yosifovich, usually restrained and calm, shouted sternly:
'You
just stop that!' and waved into the distance, impatiently now. Then the trills
by the door resounded more merrily. But Koroviev, unabashed by Pavel
Yosifovich's pronouncement, went on:
'Where?
- I ask you this entire question! He's languishing with hunger and thirst, he's
hot. So the hapless fellow took and sampled a mandarin. And the total worth of
that mandarin is three kopecks. And here they go whistling like spring
nightingales in the woods, bothering the police, tearing them away from their
business. But he's allowed, eh?' and here Koroviev pointed to the lilac fat
man, which caused the strongest alarm to appear on his face. `Who is he? Eh?
Where did
he
come from? And why? Couldn't we do without him? Did we invite him, or what? Of
course,' the ex-choirmaster bawled at the top of his lungs, twisting his mouth
sarcastically, 'just look at him, in his smart lilac suit, all swollen with
salmon, all stuffed with currency - and us, what about the likes of us?! ...
I'm bitter! Bitter, bitter!' Koroviev wailed, like the best man at an
old-fashioned wedding.
This
whole stupid, tacdess, and probably politically harmful speech made Pavel
Yosifovich shake with wrath, but, strange as it may seem, one could see by the eyes
of the crowding public mat it provoked sympathy in a great many people. And
when Behemom, putting a torn, dirty sleeve to his eyes, exclaimed tragically:
`Thank
you, my faithful friend, you stood up for the sufferer!' - a miracle occurred.
A most decent, quiet little old man, poorly but cleanly dressed, a little old
man buying three macaroons in the confectionery department, was suddenly
transformed. His eyes flashed with bellicose fire, he turned purple, hurled the
little bag of macaroons on the floor, and shouted 'True!' in a child's high voice.
Then he snatched up a tray, dirowing from it the remains of the chocolate
Eiffel Tower demolished by Behemoth, brandished it, tore the foreigner's hat
off with his left hand, and with his right swung and struck the foreigner flat
on his bald head with the tray. There was a roll as of the noise one hears when
sheets of metal are thrown down from a truck. The fat man, turning white, fell
backwards and sat in the barrel of Kerch herring, spouting a fountain of brine
from it. Straight away a second miracle occurred. The lilac one, having
fallen into the barrel, shouted in pure Russian, with no trace of any accent:
'Murder!
Police! The bandits are murdering me!' evidently having mastered, owing to the shock,
this language hitherto unknown to him.”
In the
meanwhile Behemoth starts pouring oil from his stove which instantly starts
burning, and in no time the whole shop reduces to ashes. Koroviev and Behemoth
start floating along the ceiling of the shop and then disappear in the form of
bubbles.
Whatever
Bulgakov is critical about in the society is thus destroyed in fire.
The
next target of Koroviev and Behemoth is Griboedov House. We have read about it
in chapter No. 5. Griboedov House was the centre of literary and cultural
activities of Moscow. Here the writers were ‘grown’. Bulgakov ridicules those ‘Literary
Studios’ where writers were ‘made’.
Let’s
see what happens here:
“…exactly
one minute after the happening in Smolensky market-place, Behemoth and Koroviev
both turned up on the sidewalk of the boulevard just by the house of
Griboedov's
aunt. Koroviev stood by the fence and spoke:
'Hah!
This is the writers' house! You know, Behemoth, I've heard many good and
flattering things about this house. Pay attention to this house, my friend.
It's pleasant to think how under this roof no end of talents are being
sheltered and nurtured.'
'Like
pineapples in a greenhouse,' said Behemoth and, the better to admire the
cream-coloured building with columns, he climbed the concrete footing of the
cast-iron fence.
`Perfectly
correct,' Koroviev agreed with his inseparable companion, 'and a sweet awe
creeps into one's heart at the thought that in this house there is now ripening
the future author of a Don Quixote or a Faust, or, devil take me, a Dead Souls.
Eh?'
'Frightful
to think of,' agreed Behemoth.
'Yes,'
Koroviev went on, 'one can expect astonishing things from the hotbeds of this
house, which has united under its roof several thousand zealots resolved to
devote their lives to the service of Melpomene, Polyhymnia and Thalia. You can
imagine the noise that will arise when one of them, for starters, offers the
reading public The Inspector General or, if worse comes to worst, Evgeny
Onegin.'
'Quite
easily,' Behemoth again agreed.
'Yes,'
Koroviev went on, anxiously raising his finger, 'but! ... But, I say, and I
repeat this but ... Only if these tender hothouse plants are not attacked by
some microorganism that gnaws at their roots so that they rot! And it does
happen with pineapples! Oh, my, does it!'
'Incidentally,'
inquired Behemoth, putting his round head through an opening in the fence, 'what
are they doing on the veranda?'
'Having
dinner,' explained Koroviev, 'and to that I will add, my dear, that the
restaurant here is inexpensive and not bad at all. And, by the way, like any
tourist before continuing his trip, I feel a desire to have a bite and drink a
big, ice-cold mug of beer.'
'Me,
too,' replied Behemoth, and the two blackguards marched down the asphalt path
under the lindens straight to the veranda of the unsuspecting restaurant.
A pale
and bored citizeness in white socks and a white beret with a nib sat on a
Viennese chair at the corner entrance to the veranda, where amid the greenery
of the trellis an opening for the entrance had been made. In front of her on a
simple kitchen table lay a fat book of the ledger variety, in which the
citizeness, for unknown reasons, wrote down all those who entered the restaurant.
It was precisely this citizeness who stopped Koroviev and Behemoth.
'Your
identification cards?' She was gazing in amazement at Koroviev's pince-nez, and
also at Behemoth's primus and Behemoth's torn elbow.
`A
thousand pardons, but what identification cards?' asked Koroviev in surprise.
'You're
writers?' the cidzeness asked in her turn.
'Unquestionably,'
Koroviev answered with dignity.
"Your
identification cards?' the citizeness repeated.
'My
sweetie ...' Koroviev began tenderly.
'I'm
no sweetie,' interrupted the citizeness.
'More's
the pity,' Koroviev said disappointedly and went on; 'Well, so, if you don't
want to be a sweetie, which would be quite pleasant, you don't have to be. So,
then, to convince yourself that Dostoevsky was a writer, do you have to ask for
his identification card? Just take any five pages from any one of his novels
and you'll be convinced, without any identification card, that you're dealing
with a writer. And I don't think he even had any identification card! What do
you think? ' Koroviev turned to Behemoth.
'I'll
bet he didn't,' replied Behemoth, setting the primus down on the table beside
the ledger and wiping the sweat from his sooty forehead with his hand.
'You're
not Dostoevsky,' said the citizeness, who was getting muddled by Koroviev.
'Well,
who knows, who knows,' he replied.
`Dostoevsky's
dead,' said the citizeness, but somehow not very confidently.
'I
protest!' Behemoth exclaimed hotly. 'Dostoevsky is immortal!'
'Your
identification cards, citizens,' said the citizeness.
'Good
gracious, this is getting to be ridiculous!' Koroviev would not give in. 'A
writer is defined not by any identity card, but by what he writes. How do you
know what plots are swarming in my head? Or in this head?' and he pointed at
Behemoth's head, from which the latter at once removed the cap, as if to let
the citizeness examine it better.
'Step
aside, citizens,' she said, nervously now.
Koroviev
and Behemoth stepped aside and let pass some writer in a grey suit with a
tie-less, summer white shirt, the collar of which lay wide open on the lapels
of his jacket, and with a newspaper under his arm. The writer nodded affably to
the citizeness, in passing put some nourish in the proffered ledger, and
proceeded to the veranda.
'Alas,
not to us, not to us,' Koroviev began sadly, 'but to him will go that ice-cold
mug of beer, which you and I, poor wanderers, so dreamed of together. Our
position is woeful and difficult, and I don't know what to do.'
Behemoth
only spread his arms bitterly and put his cap on his round head, covered with
thick hair very much resembling a cat's fur.
And at
that moment a low but peremptory voice sounded over the head of the citizeness:
'Let
them pass, Sofya Pavlovna.'
The
citizeness with the ledger was amazed. Amidst the greenery, of the trellis
appeared the white tailcoated chest and wedge-shaped beard of the freebooter.
He was looking affably at the two dubious ragamuffins and, moreover, even
making inviting gestures to them. Archibald Archibaldovich's authority was
something seriously felt in the restaurant under his management, and
Sofya Pavlovna obediently asked Koroviev:
'What
is your name?'
'Panaev,'"
he answered courteously. The citizeness wrote this name down and raised a questioning
glance to Behemoth.
'Skabichevsky,'
the latter squeaked, for some reason pointing to his primus. Sofya
Pavlovna
wrote this down, too, and pushed the book towards the visitors for them to
sign. Koroviev wrote 'Skabichevsky' next to the name 'Panaev', and Behemoth
wrote `Panaev' next to 'Skabichevsky'.
Archibald
Archibaldovich, to the utter amazement of Sofya Pavlovna, smiled seductively,
and led the guests to the best table, at the opposite end of the veranda, where
the deepest shade lay, a table next to which the sun played merrily through one
of the gaps in the trellis greenery, while
Sofya
Pavlovna, blinking with amazement, studied for a long time the strange entry
made in the book by the unexpected visitors.
Archibald
Archibaldovich surprised the waiters no less than he had Sofya Pavlovna. He personally
drew a chair back from the table, inviting Koroviev to sit down, winked to one,
whispered something to the other, and the two waiters began bustling around the
new guests, one of whom set his primus down on the floor next to his scuffed
shoe.
The
old yellow-stained tablecloth immediately disappeared from the table, another
shot up into the air, crackling with starch, white as a Bedouin's burnous, and
Archibald Archibaldovich was already whispering softly but very significantly,
bending right to Koroviev's ear:
What
may I treat you to? I have a special little balyk here ... bagged at the
architects'
congress...'
'Oh
... just give us a bite of something ... eh? ...' Koroviev mumbled
good-naturedly, sprawling on the chair.
`I
understand ...' Archibald Archibaldovich replied meaningfully, closing his
eyes.
`I
might recommend a little fillet of hazel-grouse,' Archibald Archibaldovich
murmured musically. The guest in the cracked pince-nez fully approved the
commander of the brig's suggestions and gazed at him benevolently through the
useless bit of glass.
The
fiction writer Petrakov-Sukhovey, dining at the next table with his wife, who
was finishing a pork chop, noticed with the keenness of observation proper to
all writers the wooing of Archibald Archibaldovich, and was quite, quite
surprised. And his wife, a very respectable lady, even simply became jealous of
Koroviev over the pirate, and even rapped with her teaspoon, as if to say: why are
we kept waiting? ... It's time the ice cream was served. What's the matter? ...
However,
after sending Mrs Petrakov a seductive smile, Archibald Archibaldovich
dispatched a waiter to her, but did not leave his dear guests himself. Ah, how
intelligent Archibald Archibaldovich was! And his powers of observation were
perhaps no less keen than those of the writers themselves!
Archibald
Archibaldovich knew about the seance at the Variety, and about many other
events of those days; he had heard, but, unlike the others, had not closed his
ears to, the word 'checkered' and the word 'cat'. Archibald Archibaldovich
guessed at once who his visitors were. And, having guessed, naturally did not
start quarrelling with them.
Archibald Archibaldovich was a very shrewd
person.
It
must be said that there was nothing strange or incomprehensible in any of
Archibald Archibaldovich's actions, and that they could seem strange only to a
superficial observer. Archibald Archibaldovich's behaviour was the perfectly
logical result of all that had gone before. A knowledge of the latest events,
and above all Archibald Archibaldovich's phenomenal intuition, told the chief
of the Griboedov restaurant that his two visitors' dinner, while abundant and
sumptuous, would be of extremely short duration. And his intuition, which had
never yet deceived the former freebooter, did not let him down this time
either.
Just
as Koroviev and Behemoth were clinking their second glasses of wonderful, cold,
double-distilled Moskovskaya vodka, the sweaty and excited chronicler Boba
Kandalupsky, famous in Moscow for his astounding omniscience, appeared on the
veranda and at once sat down with the Petrakovs. Placing his bulging briefcase
on the table, Boba immediately put his lips to Petrakov's ear and whispered
some very tempting things into it. Madame Petrakov, burning with curiosity, also
put her ear to Boba's plump, greasy lips. And he, with an occasional furtive
look around, went
on
whispering and whispering, and one could make out separate words, such as:
'I
swear to you! On Sadovaya, on Sadovaya! ...' Boba lowered his voice still more,
'bullets have no effect! ... bullets ... bullets ... benzene ... fire bullets
...'
'It's
the liars that spread these vile rumours,' Madame Petrakov boomed in a
contralto voice, somewhat louder in her indignation than Boba would have liked,
'they're the ones who ought to be explained! Well, never mind, that's how it
will be, they'll be called to order! Such pernicious lies!'
`Why
lies, Antonida Porfirievna!' exclaimed Boba, upset by the disbelief of the
writer's wife, and again began spinning: 'I tell you, bullets have no effect!
... And then the fire ... they went up in the air ... in the air!' Boba went on
hissing, not suspecting that those he was talking about were sitting next to
him, delighting in his yarn.
However,
this delight soon ceased: from an inner passage of the restaurant three men,
their waists drawn in tightly by belts, wearing leggings and holding revolvers
in their hands, strode precipitously on to the veranda. The one in front cried
ringingly and terribly:
'Don't
move!' And at once all three opened fire on the veranda, aiming at the heads of
Koroviev and Behemoth. The two objects of the shooting instantly melted into
air, and a pillar of fire spurted from the primus directly on to the tent roof.
It was as if a gaping maw with black edges appeared in the tent and began
spreading in all directions. The fire leaping through it rose up to the roof of
Griboedov House. Folders full of papers lying on the window-sill of the
editorial office on the second floor suddenly blazed up, followed by the
curtains, and now the fire, howling as if someone were blowing on it, went on
in pillars to the interior of the aunt's house.
A few
seconds later, down the asphalt paths leading to the cast-iron fence on the
boulevard, whence Ivanushka, the first herald of the disaster, understood by no
one, had come on Wednesday evening, various writers, Sofya Pavlovna, Boba,
Petrakov's wife and Petrakov, now went running, leaving their dinners
unfinished.
Having
stepped out through a side entrance beforehand, not fleeing or hurrying
anywhere, like a captain who must be the last to leave his burning brig,
Archibald Archibaldovich stood calmly in his summer coat with silk lining, the
two balyk logs under his arm.
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