Yama Aleksandr Kuprin (smart ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Aleksandr Kuprin
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And, having become animated, forgetting that he was being dragged into a trap, he began speaking exaltedly:
âJust imagine what Shepsherovich did last year! He carried to Argentine thirty women from Kovno, Vilno, Zhitomir. Each one of them he sold at a thousand roublesâ âa total, madamâ âcount itâ âof thirty thousand! Do you think Shepsherovich calmed down with this? For this money, in order to repay his expenses on the steamer, he bought several negresses and stuck them about in Moscow, Petersburg, Kiev, Odessa, and Kharkov. But, you know, madam, this isnât a man, but an eagle. Thereâs a man who can do business!â
Barsukova caressingly laid her hand on his knee. She had been waiting for this moment and said to him amicably:
âAnd so I propose to you, Mr.â âhowever, I donât know how you are called nowâ ââ âŠâ
âHorizon, letâs sayâ ââ âŠâ
âSo I propose to you, Mr. Horizonâ âcould you find some innocent girls among yours? Thereâs an enormous demand for them now. Iâm playing an open hand with you. We wonât stop at money. Now itâs in fashion. Notice, Horizon, your lady clients will be returned to you in exactly the same state in which they were. This, you understand, is a little depravity, which I can in no way make outâ ââ âŠâ
Horizon cast down his eyes, rubbed his head, and said:
âYou see, Iâve a wifeâ ââ ⊠Youâve almost guessed it.â
âSo. But why almost?â
âIâm ashamed to confess, that sheâ âhow shall I say itâ ââ ⊠she is my brideâ ââ âŠâ
Barsukova gaily burst into laughter.
âYou know, Horizon, I couldnât at all expect that youâre such a nasty villain! Letâs have your wife, itâs all the same. But is it possible that youâve really refrained?â
âA thousand?â asked Horizon seriously.
âAh! What trifles; a thousand letâs say. But tell me, will I be able to manage her?â
âNonsense!â said Horizon self-assuredly. âLetâs again suppose that youâre my aunt, and I leave my wife with you. Just imagine, Madame Barsukova, that this woman is in love with me like a cat. And if youâll tell her, that for my good she must do so-and-so and thus and thusâ âthen there wonât be no arguments!â
Apparently, there was nothing more for them to talk over. Madame Barsukova brought out a promissory note, whereon she with difficulty wrote her name, her fatherâs name, and her last name. The promissory note, of course, was fantastic; but there is a tie, a welding, an honour among thieves. In such deals people do not deceive. Death threatens otherwise. It is all the same, whether in prison, or on the street, or in a brothel.
Right after that, just like an apparition out of a trapdoor, appeared the friend of her heart, the master of the cabaret, a young little Pole, with moustaches twirled high. They drank some wine, talked a bit about the fair, about the exposition, complained a little about bad business. After that Horizon telephoned to his room in the hotel, and called out his wife. He introduced her to his aunt and his auntâs second cousin, and said that mysterious political reasons were calling him out of town. He tenderly kissed Sarah, shed a tear, and rode away.
VWith the arrival of Horizon (however, God knows how he was called: Gogolevich, Gidalevich, Okunev, Rosmitalsky), in a word, with the arrival of this man everything changed on Yamskaya Street. Enormous shufflings commenced. From Treppelâs girls were transferred to Anna Markovnaâs, from Anna Markovnaâs into a rouble establishment, and from the rouble establishment into a half-rouble one. There were no promotions: only demotions. At each change of place Horizon earned from five to a hundred roubles. Verily, he was possessed of an energy equal, approximately, to the waterfall of Imatra! Sitting in the daytime at Anna Markovnaâs, he was saying, squinting from the smoke of the cigarette, and swinging one leg crossed over the other:
âThe question isâ ââ ⊠What do you need this same Sonka for? Itâs no place for her in a decent establishment. If weâll float her down the stream, then youâll make a hundred roubles for yourself, I twenty-five for myself. Tell me frankly, she isnât in demand, is she, now?â
âAh, Mr. Shatzky! You can always talk a person over! But just imagine, Iâm sorry for her. Such a nice girlâ ââ âŠâ
Horizon pondered for a moment. He was seeking an appropriate citation and suddenly let out:
âââGive the falling a shove!â16 And Iâm convinced, Madame Shaibes, that thereâs no demand of any sort for her.â
Isaiah Savvich, a little, sickly, touchy old man, but in moments of need very determined, supported Horizon:
âAnd thatâs very simple. There is really no demand of any sort for her. Think it over for yourself, Annechka; her outfit costs fifty roubles, Mr. Shatzky will receive twenty-five roubles, fifty roubles will be left for you and me. And, glory be to God, we have done with her! At least, she wonât be compromising our establishment.â
In such a way Sonka the Rudder, avoiding a rouble establishment, was transferred into a half-rouble one, where all kinds of riffraff made sport of the girls at their own sweet will, whole nights through. There tremendous health and great nervous force were requisite. Sonka once began shivering from terror, in the night, when Thekla, a mountain of a woman of some two hundred pounds, jumped out into the yard to fulfill a need of nature, and cried out to the housekeeper who was passing by her:
âHousekeeper, dear! Listenâ âthe thirty-sixth guest!â ââ ⊠Donât forget!â
Fortunately, Sonka was not disturbed much; even in this establishment she was too homely. No one paid any attention to her splendid eyes, and they took her only in those instances when there was no other at hand. The pharmacist sought her out and came every evening to her. But cowardice, or a special Hebrew fastidiousness, or, perhaps, even physical aversion, would not permit him to take the girl and carry her away with him from the house. He would sit whole nights through near her, and, as of yore, patiently waited until she would return from
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