Two friends one a fat man
and the other a thin man met at the Nikolaevsky
station. The fat man had just dined in the station
and his greasy lips shone like ripe cherries.
He smelt of sherry and fleur d’orange.
The thin man had just slipped out of the train and
was laden with portmanteaus, bundles, and bandboxes.
He smelt of ham and coffee grounds. A thin woman
with a long chin, his wife, and a tall schoolboy with
one eye screwed up came into view behind his back.
“Porfiry,” cried the fat
man on seeing the thin man. “Is it you?
My dear fellow! How many summers, how many winters!”
“Holy saints!” cried the
thin man in amazement. “Misha! The
friend of my childhood! Where have you dropped
from?”
The friends kissed each other three
times, and gazed at each other with eyes full of tears.
Both were agreeably astounded.
“My dear boy!” began the
thin man after the kissing. “This is unexpected!
This is a surprise! Come have a good look at me!
Just as handsome as I used to be! Just as great
a darling and a dandy! Good gracious me!
Well, and how are you? Made your fortune?
Married? I am married as you see. . . .
This is my wife Luise, her maiden name was Vantsenbach
. . . of the Lutheran persuasion. . . . And this
is my son Nafanail, a schoolboy in the third class.
This is the friend of my childhood, Nafanya.
We were boys at school together!”
Nafanail thought a little and took off his cap.
“We were boys at school together,”
the thin man went on. “Do you remember
how they used to tease you? You were nicknamed
Herostratus because you burned a hole in a schoolbook
with a cigarette, and I was nicknamed Ephialtes because
I was fond of telling tales. Ho ho!
. . . we were children! . . . Don’t be shy,
Nafanya. Go nearer to him. And this is my
wife, her maiden name was Vantsenbach, of the Lutheran
persuasion. . . .”
Nafanail thought a little and took
refuge behind his father’s back.
“Well, how are you doing my
friend?” the fat man asked, looking enthusiastically
at his friend. “Are you in the service?
What grade have you reached?”
“I am, dear boy! I have
been a collegiate assessor for the last two years
and I have the Stanislav. The salary is poor,
but that’s no great matter! The wife gives
music lessons, and I go in for carving wooden cigarette
cases in a private way. Capital cigarette cases!
I sell them for a rouble each. If any one takes
ten or more I make a reduction of course. We
get along somehow. I served as a clerk, you know,
and now I have been transferred here as a head clerk
in the same department. I am going to serve here.
And what about you? I bet you are a civil councillor
by now? Eh?”
“No dear boy, go higher than
that,” said the fat man. “I have risen
to privy councillor already . . . I have two stars.”
The thin man turned pale and rigid
all at once, but soon his face twisted in all directions
in the broadest smile; it seemed as though sparks
were flashing from his face and eyes. He squirmed,
he doubled together, crumpled up. . . . His portmanteaus,
bundles and cardboard boxes seemed to shrink and crumple
up too. . . . His wife’s long chin grew
longer still; Nafanail drew himself up to attention
and fastened all the buttons of his uniform.
“Your Excellency, I . . . delighted!
The friend, one may say, of childhood and to have
turned into such a great man! He he!”
“Come, come!” the fat
man frowned. “What’s this tone for?
You and I were friends as boys, and there is no need
of this official obsequiousness!”
“Merciful heavens, your Excellency!
What are you saying. . . ?” sniggered the thin
man, wriggling more than ever. “Your Excellency’s
gracious attention is like refreshing manna. . . .
This, your Excellency, is my son Nafanail, . . . my
wife Luise, a Lutheran in a certain sense.”
The fat man was about to make some
protest, but the face of the thin man wore an expression
of such reverence, sugariness, and mawkish respectfulness
that the privy councillor was sickened. He turned
away from the thin man, giving him his hand at parting.
The thin man pressed three fingers,
bowed his whole body and sniggered like a Chinaman:
“He he he!” His wife
smiled. Nafanail scraped with his foot and dropped
his cap. All three were agreeably overwhelmed.