<h3> VII </h3>
<p>|<i>An Unsuccessful Début</i></p>
<p>One fine evening the master came into the room with the dirty wall-paper,
and, rubbing his hands, said:</p>
<p>“Well. . . .”</p>
<p>He meant to say something more, but went away without saying it. Auntie,
who during her lessons had thoroughly studied his face and intonations,
divined that he was agitated, anxious and, she fancied, angry. Soon
afterwards he came back and said:</p>
<p>“To-day I shall take with me Auntie and F’yodor Timofeyitch. To-day,
Auntie, you will take the place of poor Ivan Ivanitch in the ‘Egyptian
Pyramid.’ Goodness knows how it will be! Nothing is ready, nothing has
been thoroughly studied, there have been few rehearsals! We shall be
disgraced, we shall come to grief!”</p>
<p>Then he went out again, and a minute later, came back in his fur-coat and
top hat. Going up to the cat he took him by the fore-paws and put him
inside the front of his coat, while Fyodor Timofeyitch appeared completely
unconcerned, and did not even trouble to open his eyes. To him it was
apparently a matter of absolute indifference whether he remained lying
down, or were lifted up by his paws, whether he rested on his mattress or
under his master’s fur-coat.</p>
<p>“Come along, Auntie,” said her master.</p>
<p>Wagging her tail, and understanding nothing, Auntie followed him. A minute
later she was sitting in a sledge by her master’s feet and heard him,
shrinking with cold and anxiety, mutter to himself:</p>
<p>“We shall be disgraced! We shall come to grief!”</p>
<p>The sledge stopped at a big strange-looking house, like a soup-ladle
turned upside down. The long entrance to this house, with its three glass
doors, was lighted up with a dozen brilliant lamps. The doors opened with
a resounding noise and, like jaws, swallowed up the people who were moving
to and fro at the entrance. There were a great many people, horses, too,
often ran up to the entrance, but no dogs were to be seen.</p>
<p>The master took Auntie in his arms and thrust her in his coat, where
Fyodor Timofeyirch already was. It was dark and stuffy there, but warm.
For an instant two green sparks flashed at her; it was the cat, who opened
his eyes on being disturbed by his neighbour’s cold rough paws. Auntie
licked his ear, and, trying to settle herself as comfortably as possible,
moved uneasily, crushed him under her cold paws, and casually poked her
head out from under the coat, but at once growled angrily, and tucked it
in again. It seemed to her that she had seen a huge, badly lighted room,
full of monsters; from behind screens and gratings, which stretched on
both sides of the room, horrible faces looked out: faces of horses with
horns, with long ears, and one fat, huge countenance with a tail instead
of a nose, and two long gnawed bones sticking out of his mouth.</p>
<p>The cat mewed huskily under Auntie’s paws, but at that moment the coat was
flung open, the master said, “Hop!” and Fyodor Timofeyitch and Auntie
jumped to the floor. They were now in a little room with grey plank walls;
there was no other furniture in it but a little table with a looking-glass
on it, a stool, and some rags hung about the corners, and instead of a
lamp or candles, there was a bright fan-shaped light attached to a little
pipe fixed in the wall. Fyodor Timofeyitch licked his coat which had been
ruffled by Auntie, went under the stool, and lay down. Their master, still
agitated and rubbing his hands, began undressing. . . . He undressed as he
usually did at home when he was preparing to get under the rug, that is,
took off everything but his underlinen, then he sat down on the stool,
and, looking in the looking-glass, began playing the most surprising
tricks with himself. . . . First of all he put on his head a wig, with a
parting and with two tufts of hair standing up like horns, then he smeared
his face thickly with something white, and over the white colour painted
his eyebrows, his moustaches, and red on his cheeks. His antics did not
end with that. After smearing his face and neck, he began putting himself
into an extraordinary and incongruous costume, such as Auntie had never
seen before, either in houses or in the street. Imagine very full
trousers, made of chintz covered with big flowers, such as is used in
working-class houses for curtains and covering furniture, trousers which
buttoned up just under his armpits. One trouser leg was made of brown
chintz, the other of bright yellow. Almost lost in these, he then put on a
short chintz jacket, with a big scalloped collar, and a gold star on the
back, stockings of different colours, and green slippers.</p>
<p>Everything seemed going round before Auntie’s eyes and in her soul. The
white-faced, sack-like figure smelt like her master, its voice, too, was
the familiar master’s voice, but there were moments when Auntie was
tortured by doubts, and then she was ready to run away from the
parti-coloured figure and to bark. The new place, the fan-shaped light,
the smell, the transformation that had taken place in her master—all
this aroused in her a vague dread and a foreboding that she would
certainly meet with some horror such as the big face with the tail instead
of a nose. And then, somewhere through the wall, some hateful band was
playing, and from time to time she heard an incomprehensible roar. Only
one thing reassured her—that was the imperturbability of Fyodor
Timofeyitch. He dozed with the utmost tranquillity under the stool, and
did not open his eyes even when it was moved.</p>
<p>A man in a dress coat and a white waistcoat peeped into the little room
and said:</p>
<p>“Miss Arabella has just gone on. After her—you.”</p>
<p>Their master made no answer. He drew a small box from under the table, sat
down, and waited. From his lips and his hands it could be seen that he was
agitated, and Auntie could hear how his breathing came in gasps.</p>
<p>“Monsieur George, come on!” someone shouted behind the door. Their master
got up and crossed himself three times, then took the cat from under the
stool and put him in the box.</p>
<p>“Come, Auntie,” he said softly.</p>
<p>Auntie, who could make nothing out of it, went up to his hands, he kissed
her on the head, and put her beside Fyodor Timofeyitch. Then followed
darkness. . . . Auntie trampled on the cat, scratched at the walls of the
box, and was so frightened that she could not utter a sound, while the box
swayed and quivered, as though it were on the waves. . . .</p>
<p>“Here we are again!” her master shouted aloud: “here we are again!”</p>
<p>Auntie felt that after that shout the box struck against something hard
and left off swaying. There was a loud deep roar, someone was being
slapped, and that someone, probably the monster with the tail instead of a
nose, roared and laughed so loud that the locks of the box trembled. In
response to the roar, there came a shrill, squeaky laugh from her master,
such as he never laughed at home.</p>
<p>“Ha!” he shouted, trying to shout above the roar. “Honoured friends! I
have only just come from the station! My granny’s kicked the bucket and
left me a fortune! There is something very heavy in the box, it must be
gold, ha! ha! I bet there’s a million here! We’ll open it and look. . . .”</p>
<p>The lock of the box clicked. The bright light dazzled Auntie’s eyes, she
jumped out of the box, and, deafened by the roar, ran quickly round her
master, and broke into a shrill bark.</p>
<p>“Ha!” exclaimed her master. “Uncle Fyodor Timofeyitch! Beloved Aunt, dear
relations! The devil take you!”</p>
<p>He fell on his stomach on the sand, seized the cat and Auntie, and fell to
embracing them. While he held Auntie tight in his arms, she glanced round
into the world into which fate had brought her and, impressed by its
immensity, was for a minute dumbfounded with amazement and delight, then
jumped out of her master’s arms, and to express the intensity of her
emotions, whirled round and round on one spot like a top. This new world
was big and full of bright light; wherever she looked, on all sides, from
floor to ceiling there were faces, faces, faces, and nothing else.</p>
<p>“Auntie, I beg you to sit down!” shouted her master. Remembering what that
meant, Auntie jumped on to a chair, and sat down. She looked at her
master. His eyes looked at her gravely and kindly as always, but his face,
especially his mouth and teeth, were made grotesque by a broad immovable
grin. He laughed, skipped about, twitched his shoulders, and made a show
of being very merry in the presence of the thousands of faces. Auntie
believed in his merriment, all at once felt all over her that those
thousands of faces were looking at her, lifted up her fox-like head, and
howled joyously.</p>
<p>“You sit there, Auntie,” her master said to her, “while Uncle and I will
dance the Kamarinsky.”</p>
<p>Fyodor Timofeyitch stood looking about him indifferently, waiting to be
made to do something silly. He danced listlessly, carelessly, sullenly,
and one could see from his movements, his tail and his ears, that he had a
profound contempt for the crowd, the bright light, his master and himself.
When he had performed his allotted task, he gave a yawn and sat down.</p>
<p>“Now, Auntie!” said her master, “we’ll have first a song, and then a
dance, shall we?”</p>
<p>He took a pipe out of his pocket, and began playing. Auntie, who could not
endure music, began moving uneasily in her chair and howled. A roar of
applause rose from all sides. Her master bowed, and when all was still
again, went on playing. . . . Just as he took one very high note, someone
high up among the audience uttered a loud exclamation:</p>
<p>“Auntie!” cried a child’s voice, “why it’s Kashtanka!”</p>
<p>“Kashtanka it is!” declared a cracked drunken tenor. “Kashtanka! Strike me
dead, Fedyushka, it is Kashtanka. Kashtanka! here!”</p>
<p>Someone in the gallery gave a whistle, and two voices, one a boy’s and one
a man’s, called loudly: “Kashtanka! Kashtanka!”</p>
<p>Auntie started, and looked where the shouting came from. Two faces, one
hairy, drunken and grinning, the other chubby, rosy-cheeked and
frightened-looking, dazed her eyes as the bright light had dazed them
before. . . . She remembered, fell off the chair, struggled on the sand,
then jumped up, and with a delighted yap dashed towards those faces. There
was a deafening roar, interspersed with whistles and a shrill childish
shout: “Kashtanka! Kashtanka!”</p>
<p>Auntie leaped over the barrier, then across someone’s shoulders. She found
herself in a box: to get into the next tier she had to leap over a high
wall. Auntie jumped, but did not jump high enough, and slipped back down
the wall. Then she was passed from hand to hand, licked hands and faces,
kept mounting higher and higher, and at last got into the gallery. . . .</p>
<p>——<br/></p>
<p>Half an hour afterwards, Kashtanka was in the street, following the people
who smelt of glue and varnish. Luka Alexandritch staggered and
instinctively, taught by experience, tried to keep as far from the gutter
as possible.</p>
<p>“In sin my mother bore me,” he muttered. “And you, Kashtanka, are a thing
of little understanding. Beside a man, you are like a joiner beside a
cabinetmaker.”</p>
<p>Fedyushka walked beside him, wearing his father’s cap. Kashtanka looked at
their backs, and it seemed to her that she had been following them for
ages, and was glad that there had not been a break for a minute in her
life.</p>
<p>She remembered the little room with dirty wall-paper, the gander, Fyodor
Timofeyitch, the delicious dinners, the lessons, the circus, but all that
seemed to her now like a long, tangled, oppressive dream.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />