Short Fiction Ivan Bunin (world best books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Ivan Bunin
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âSo-and-so,â I says, âlet me go; I canât bear to live on account of that old woman; I will lay hands on myself.â
And in the meanwhile, I already had my eye on a house on Glukhaya Ulitza.1 Well, hearing me speak like that, the mistress didnât even try to hold me any longer. True, when she was saying goodbye to me, she wanted me to come and live with them again, awful hard; or just to come on some holidays, or on birthdays:
âYou must,â she says, âalways come to put things in order, to get everything ready. Itâs only when youâre around,â she says, âthat I feel easy. I have grown used to you, like you was one of the family.â
She saw me off with all honoursâ âwhich meant that she no longer held any grudge against me; she baked a great big white loaf, putting in a whole saltcellar full of sugar. I thank her in all sorts of ways, but, of course, she wasnât anything much in my lifeâ âso I thinks one thing, and I says another. I promised her all she wanted and more, scraping and bowing low before herâ âand went my ways. And at once, with the Lordâs blessing, I got busy. I bought the house I had in mind, and opened a dram shop. The trade started off awful goodâ âin the evening, when Iâd come to counting what Iâd taken in during the day, there would be thirty, or forty, or sometimes all of forty-five roubles in the tillâ âand so I got the idea of opening up a store as well, so as, you understand, to get them coming and going. My husbandâs sister had long since married a watchman in the Red Cross; he was calling me gossip all the time, and was friendly with meâ âso I went to him, got a trifling loan for all sorts of fixtures, permits, and started in doing business. And right then Vanniya had finished his apprenticeship. I took counsel with folks that knew a thing or two as to where I could place him, now.
âWhy,â says they, âwhere else would you place him, when thereâs no end of work in your own house?â
And they were right, at that. So I put Vanniya into the store, and stay in the dram shop myself. And then we were off! And, of course, I had even forgot to think of all this past nonsenseâ âalthough, to tell the honest truth, the poor cripple had just taken to his bed, at the time I was going away. Never a word out of him to anybody, but just lies down, just like he were dead, forgetting his accordion even. Suddenly, lo, and behold ye, Polkanikha comes into my yardâ âthis same wet-nurse. (The little boys had nicknamed her Polkanikha.)2 She comes, and she says:
âA certain man has told me to give you his regards; says you should come and pay him a visit, without fail.â
I went all hot and cold from vexation and shame! âWhat a darling, to be sure!â thinks I to myself. âWhat an idea he has gotten into his head! What a mate he has found for himself!â I couldnât hold in and I says:
âI got no use for his regards; he ought to keep in mind the state heâs in, and you, you old devil, ought to be ashamed to try and be a go-between. Do you hear me, or donât you?â
She just stopped short. She stands, all stooping, her swollen eyes glowing at me from under her brows, and just shaking her cabbage head; sheâd grown daft, either from the heat or from vodka.
âOh, you heartless creature!â says she. âHe was even crying about you,â she says. âAll last evening he lay with his face to the wall, and sobbing out loud.â
âWell,â says I, âam I to start weeping bucketfuls? And wasnât he ashamed, the redhead, to be bawling before folks? Why, what a baby! Or was he weaned from the breast, or something?â
And so I put the old woman out as empty-handed as she had come, and didnât go myself. And right soon after that he took and really did strangle himself. Right then, of course, I felt great regret because I hadnât gone; but at that time I had other things to think about, besides him. I had one disgrace coming on top of another, right in my own house.
I had rented out two rooms in the house; one was taken by the policeman on our postâ âa fine, serious-minded, respectable man, Chaikin by name; a young lady prostitute came into the other. Flaxen-fair she was, kind of young, and not at all bad to look atâ ârather good-looking. She was called Phenia. Kholin the contractor used to come to see herâ âhe was keeping her; well, I relied on that, and let her take the room. But right here some disagreement took place between them, and so he left her. What was to be done? She had nothing to pay with, but I couldnât chase her outâ âshe had run up a debt of eight roubles.
âMiss,â says I, âyou must earn off anybody; I donât keep no open house
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