ten kilometres out of town. He is still a peasant and yet already a worker. He embodies in one person both the victorious classes. And here in front of me stands this Vanechka Mamba, and such a store of vital energy bursts from every fold in his leather jacket, radiates from his lustrous eyes, from his firm, strong teeth, close-set as the bullet pouches down the front of a Circassian coat, that it seems he could quite easily drink a beer mug full of petrol and smoke a cigarette afterwards without doing himself any harm at all. "Hullo there," he says, and grips my hand. The real rugged handshake of a man of great will power. "Hullo," I say, "if it isn't Vanechka! Where have you been all this time?" "I hear you want to sell a bike. I want to buy it." I don't know what gave him the idea I wanted to sell my bicycle. I never suspected he knew of its existence. But Vanechka Mamba is one of those people who know more about you than you know about yourself. Still, why not sell it? I thought. It's a very good chance. "Yes, it's up for sale," I said. "How much?" "Have a look at it first." "I've had a look," he said, and grinned. "I noticed the shed was open." The bike had cost about eight hundred in old money. I dropped a hundred for wear and tear. "Seven hundred." "No go." "How much then?" "Three hundred." Now we're going to strike a bargain, I thought. One of us will move up and the other will move down. At some point our interests must coincide. "All right," I said, "six hundred." "You're talking through your hat," he said. "Three hundred roubles don't grow on trees." "But a bicycle does, of course?" "Who rides a bicycle nowadays? Only the village postman." "Why are you buying it then?" "I have a long way to go to work. I just want it temporarily, till I buy a car." "Going to buy a car and you haggle over the price of a bicycle." "That's one reason why I'll be able to buy the car." What was the use of arguing? That was Vanechka Mamba all over, quite a well-known character in our town, particularly among drivers. "How much will you give me for it then?" I asked. "What I said. You won't take it to market, will you?" "No, I won't." "And no second-hand shop would accept it either." "All right, then," I said, "you can have it for four hundred, since you seem to know all about it." "All right," said Vanechka, "I'll take it for three fifty, to make it fair all round. After all, we're related." "To hell with you," I said. "Take it for three fifty. But how did you know I was selling my bicycle?" "I saw the way you were riding it. That one won't be riding for long, I said to myself. Either he'll smash himself up or he'll sell it." Vanechka cast a thrifty eye round the room and gave another smile with those bullet teeth of his. "Got anything else to sell?" "No," I said. "You've done well enough as it is." We went out on to the porch. I stood on the steps and he went down into the yard and wheeled the bicycle out of the shed. "Where's the pump?" "Some kids pinched it." "And you had the nerve to bargain!" Vanechka got on the bicycle and rode round the yard, lecturing me. "You'd better have a lock put on that shed. I'll bring you a good padlock." "Never mind the lock," I said. "You give me the money." "Next Sunday I'll sell my pears and bring it over." And he rode straight out of the yard without even getting off the bicycle. I didn't like the look of that. But what could you do? After all he was my relative, though a very distant one. I've said it before and I'll say it again: one close friend is better than a dozen distant relatives. But this is not widely understood, particularly in our part of the world. I met him in the street a week later. "Well, have you sold your pears?" "Yes, but you know how it is. The harvest was so good this year it would have been better to keep them for feeding the pigs." "Didn't you make anything on them?" "About enough to dress my womenfolk. You know yourself I've got five daughters. And my wife's pregnant again. They're ruining me, the bitches." "Why torture your wife like this?" I said. "Give it a rest." "I need a boy," he said. "As for the money, I won't let you down. The grapes will be ripe soon, then the persimmon, and after that the tangerines. I'll make ends meet somehow." "Well, get on with it," I said. And so we parted. You have to be considerate with people who owe you money. You have to pamper them. Sometimes you even have to spread a rumour about how honest and reliable they are. The grape season came and went, then the persimmon and after that the tangerines, but Vanechka still did not appear. Quite by chance I heard that his wife had again given birth to a girl and I decided to remind him of my existence by means of a congratulatory letter. You know the sort of thing. Congratulations on your new daughter. Come and see me some time. I'm still living in the same place. We'll sit together over a bottle of wine and have a chat. The reply came a week later. What terrible handwriting you have, it said. My eldest daughter could hardly make it out. Thanks for the congratulations. My wife has given me another daughter. I'm properly mixed up now with the names. Now they have gone and installed electricity in our village. That means another thing to be paid for. But I have not forgotten my debt. Don't worry, Vanechka Mamba will get out of it somehow. And at the end of the letter he wanted to know whether I had bought a padlock yet for the shed. If I hadn't he would bring me one. Well, I thought, that's goodbye to my money. I did not see him again till the following summer. By that time I had almost forgotten the debt. I happened to be walking round the market one day when someone called out to me. I looked round and there was Vanechka Mamba, standing behind a mountain of watermelons. He had one great chunk in his mouth and was crunching it with his gleaming teeth. "Mamba water-melons!" he was shouting. "Come and get 'em before I eat the lot myself!" A woman asked me what kind of water-melon this was--the Mamba. "Don't you know Mamba water-melons?" Vanechka exclaimed with a laugh and, spearing a succulent slice with his knife, pushed it under the woman's nose. "I don't want to try it. I was just asking," the woman protested, turning away in embarrassment. "I don't want you to buy it. All I'm asking is for you to taste a Mamba water-melon!" Vanechka almost sobbed. In the end the woman had a taste and, once having had a taste, felt she had better buy one. Every water-melon had a letter "M" carved on it, like a trade mark. "What are these tagged atoms?" I said. "An old chap and me, we brought these water-melons in from the village together. So I marked mine to make sure they didn't get mixed up." He burst out laughing and, before I could remind him of his debt, pushed into my hands a weighty water-melon. I tried to refuse, but he admonished me sternly: "We're relatives, aren't we? They're straight from our allotment. Home grown! Not from a shop!" I had to take it. It's rather awkward to remind someone of a debt when you are holding a water-melon he has just given you, so I let it pass. To hell with it, I thought, at least I've got a water-melon in exchange for a bicycle. Later I heard that he had swindled that old man properly. While they were riding to town perched on their water melons in the back of the lorry, the old chap had dozed off and Vanechka with his pirate's knife had marked about twenty of the old man's melons with his own initial. So that's what a Mamba water-melon is! Six months later I happened to call at a filling station with a friend of mine. My friend wanted some petrol for his car. And there was Vanechka busy hosing down a large Volga car, his face creased in an expression of sullen solicitude. "Hullo, Vanechka," I said. "What are you now--a car washer?" "Ah, hullo there," he said. He turned off his hose and came over to me. "Do you mean to say you haven't heard?" "What should I have heard?" "I've bought a Volga. This is my Volga." "Good for you," I said. "You're a man of your word." "And he calls himself a relative," Vanechka complained to my friend. "When he bought a bicycle I got to know about it at once. And yet when I buy a Volga he doesn't know a thing. It isn't fair, is it?" "You'd better not mention that bicycle," I said. "Why not?" he said. "I'll pay you for it, though it was a rotten old bike, with its pump missing too. But just at the moment I've started building a house and I'm up to my neck in debt. As soon as I've finished building I'll pay up all round." "I suppose you use it to carry fruit?" I said. "I should say I do. And it's ruining me! The traffic inspectors are crazy these days. Either they won't take a bribe at all or else they want so much it's not worth the journey." When we had driven away, my friend said, "That Vanechka of yours is working a fiddle on petrol. He'll get caught." "Let him," I said, although I was sure he would not be caught. Some time later I met a mutual acquaintance. "Have you heard? Vanechka Mamba's been taken to hospital in a very bad state." "What happened?" I said. "Did the filling station blow up?" "No," he said. "He fell into a lime pit. You knew he was building a house, didn't you?" "Never mind," I said. "Vanechka will get out of it somehow." "No, he won't. He's a goner." Vanechka was in hospital for about a month. I was going to visit him but felt awkward about it somehow. He might think I had come for my money. Then I heard he was up and about again. He had wriggled out of yet another tight corner. I had been quite sure he would. He had far too many dealings to occupy him in this world, and some of them were the kind you couldn't delegate to anyone else. No one else could have coped. A year passed. One day I received an invitation to the country. Vanechka had a double occasion to celebrate--his house-warming and the birth of a son. I've seen enough of these celebrations. There are usually two or three hundred guests and they don't sit down to table till about midnight. What with all the preparations and waiting for the bosses to arrive. But the main thing is the presents. They have a village spokesman standing in the middle of the yard and a girl sitting at a table beside him, licking her pencil and writing down in an exercise book exactly who brings what. Some of the presents are in cash, but most of them are in kind. "A vase, lovely as the moon," bawls the spokesman, holding it high above his head and displaying it to all the guests. "As pure and clear as the conscience of our dear guest," he adds inventively. "A Russian eiderdown," he shouts, displaying the eiderdown with a flourish. "Big enough to cover a regiment," he comments brazenly, though the eiderdown is of quite ordinary size. The people from the River Bzyb are outstanding in this respect. They can't open their mouths without exaggerating. While the master of ceremonies holds forth, the guest stands in front of him, his head bowed in comical modesty. Actually he is keeping an eye on the girl, to make sure she writes down his first and second names correctly. He then joins the onlookers and the master of ceremonies starts singing the praises of the next gift. "A tablecloth fit for royalty," shouts this glib-tongued individual and whirls the tablecloth into the air, as some rustic demon might whirl his cloak. In a word, it has to be seen to be believed. Of course, if you come without a present you won't be turned away, but a certain climate of opinion is created. I didn't go. But I did send him a letter of congratulation, not hinting at anything. One day I was standing in the station square of one of our smaller towns and wondering how best to get home. Should I take the train or try hitch-hiking? I heard someone call my name, and there was Vanechka, poking his head out of his Volga. "How did you get here?" "Business. What about you?" "Been on a trip to Sochi. Get in and I'll give you a lift." I got in beside him and we started off. The air in the car was heavy with the persistent subtropical scent of illegally transported fruit. I had not seen Vanechka since his spell in hospital. He had scarcely changed at all, except that his face had lost a little of its colour, as though someone had dried it out with blotting paper. But he was still as cheerful as ever, with those gleaming teeth of his. "I got your letter," he said. "We had a grand binge. Pity you didn't come." "How did you manage to fall into that lime pit?" "Oh, that? I'd rather not think about it. Nearly took off for the other world then. You can consider I've been there already. Still, it was thanks to that pit I got me a son. "How so?" "I reckon I didn't have enough lime in my body for a boy." "You had plenty of lime all right." "No, I mean it. Maybe I've made a scientific discovery. Write an article about it in one of your magazines and we'll go halves on the money. But they wouldn't print your stuff." "Why not?" I asked guardedly. "Your handwriting's no good. They wouldn't be able to read it." "Why don't you stop ribbing me and tell me how you're getting on." "Well, how shall I put it," he drawled, and with one hand flicked on the dashboard radio, picked up some jazz, tuned in and left it playing softly. "There's no proper order anywhere," he declared suddenly. "That's what's wrong." "What makes you so worried about order all of a sudden?" "I've just been taking some tangerines to Sochi. Four inspectors in two hundred kilometres! Do you call that order? And don't interrupt," he added, though I had no intention of interrupting. "Three of them accept and the fourth refuses. Call that order? Can't they come to some agreement between them! Either they accept or they don't, all of them. I can't tell him I've settled up with the other three, can I? That's dishonest, isn't it?" "Of course, it is," I said, and I thought to myself what a funny thing this honesty is. Everyone cuts it down to suit his own needs, but the amazing thing is that no one can do without it. "Now look here, Vanechka," I said. "You've got a car, you've got a house, you've got a son. Now give up this racket. What more do you want?" "Hives," he said. "I want some hives." "What kind of hives?" "Bee-hives. My orchard's being sucked dry by other people's bees. I'd rather have some of my own. I want to give it a try." "Try it by all means. You seem to have tried everything." "Do you know of a good bee-keeper?" "No, I don't." We were silent for a while. But Vanechka is not the man to keep quiet, unless there's some hush money going. "What's this campaign they've started about houses?" "Why? Are they getting at you?" "You know what a lot of envy there is about. People keep complaining. How did he get this house, this car.... The chairman has had me up on the mat already." "Well?" "When a commission or a delegation comes round, I told him, you bring them to my place, don't you? Here's a well-to-do peasant, you say. And now you want to sell me down the river?" "What did he say to that?" "He said he had his own responsibilities to face...." We never finished our conversation. Something quite unexpected happened. We had been travelling fast but, despite the bends in our mountain roads, I felt I had nothing to worry about. Vanechka had done five years as a driver in the army and he had excellent road sense. We were just entering the town but he did not reduce speed. Suddenly a woman ran out of a bus queue opposite the station and bolted like a mad sheep across the road. Too late, I thought and even as the thought crossed my mind I heard the scream of brakes, the hiss of abraded rubber, the shouts of the crowd. The car hit the woman, knocked her to one side and stopped. Some people ran up to the woman, picked her up and helped her off the road. Her face was pale and wooden. But all of a sudden she began to shake her fists and angrily push her helpers away. A lad ran up to the car, glanced inside and bawled, "What are you waiting for, Vanechka? Step on it!" Vanechka backed the car, drove round the station square, swung out on to the main road and put on such a turn of speed that the oncoming headlights flashed past us like meteors. We kept up this dizzy speed for about ten minutes and I was expecting at any moment that we should depart for a spot that Vanechka might perhaps wriggle out of but not I. "Are you crazy," I shouted. "Slow down!" I glanced round. A traffic inspector was chasing us on his motor-cycle. Vanechka swung into a side street and we went bouncing along a cobbled road. The motor-cycle disappeared for a moment only to reappear a few seconds later at the end of the block. Vanechka turned into a dark little alley, drove along it and jammed on his brakes so suddenly that I bumped my head on the door I had been clinging to. Two steps from the car yawned a freshly dug hole with a concrete pipe lying beside it. Vanechka tried to back out but went into a skid. The roar of the motor-cycle swelled menacingly in our ears, like fate itself. A few seconds later the inspector pulled up beside us. He switched off his engine and came over with the springy tread of a lion-tamer. "Why were you exceeding the speed limit? Why didn't you stop at once?" "I didn't hear your signal, old man." It transpired that the inspector knew nothing of what had happened at the station. Nevertheless he was bent on getting something down in his notebook and kept asking Vanechka questions. Vanechka got out of the car. It was the first time I had seen him in such an abject state. He begged and pleaded, he swore by all his ancestors, he named mutual acquaintances. He argued that he and the inspector were really both part of the same system. Then I noticed him nodding significantly in my direction, obviously exaggerating the importance of my person. He made it look almost as though he were driving me on special instructions from the local government. I noticed myself assuming a rather dignified air. In the end Vanechka talked the inspector round. He escorted him to his motor-cycle just as the local folk escort a man to his horse. I believe he would have held his stirrup if there had been one on the motor-cycle. "Why, that fellow's just a beggar!" Vanechka declared unexpectedly, as soon as the traffic inspector had ridder away. It must have been a new inspector, one he had not yet got to know. He climbed into the car and lit a cigarette. I decided that I had had enough adventures for one day and got out. "Thanks," I said. "I haven't far to go now." "Please yourself," he said and started the engine. "But what I told you about order was right." "What kind of order?" I asked, baffled. "They dug up this street, didn't they? Did they put up a sign? Did they show where the diversion was? Do you call that order?" I spread my arms helplessly. I could not leave before he had driven clear, so I waited. Vanechka put the car into reverse and, while it backed slowly, with skidding tyres along the street, I watched his resolute face with its harsh conquistador fold in the cheek clearly illuminated by the state electricity of a street lamp. Yes, that was Vanechka--grasping, insolent, always boisterously cheerful. He was no fool, of course, but I would never advise anyone to take their water-melons to market with him. After being in the car it was particularly pleasant to walk. I have a horror of road accidents, especially when pedestrians are involved. Thank goodness no blood was shed. The woman must have been frightened rather than hurt. One day many years ago I was walking through Moscow feeling in rather low spirits. I was just graduating from the institute and the faculty would not accept my diploma thesis. There was something about it they didn't like. It had frightened them somehow. Actually it was rather a silly piece of work, but the heads of the faculty, and I myself for that matter, were slow to realise this. Later on, when I had to defend it, its foolishness was safely exposed and I got a good mark for it. But that day in the street I was depressed. It was cold and slippery and there was wet ice on the pavements. Suddenly I noticed a lorry backing out of a narrow passage between two buildings. There were two little boys on the pavement, one about eight, the other nearer four. At the sight of the approaching lorry the elder boy abandoned the little one and ran to safety. I shouted at the top of my voice. The little fellow heard nothing. He was watching the pigeons and had lapsed into that state of profound meditation that is known only to philosophers and children. He was so small that the end of the lorry had already passed unhindered over his head. I managed to run up and drag him away in time. Luckily the lorry had been moving very slowly, the driver being particularly careful because of the ice. The little boy never realised what had happened. He was warmly wrapped up and only his fresh little face was visible under a fur hat with earflaps. Neither mothers nor drivers are proof against all eventualities, and this is where the pedestrians come in. And even they derive some benefit from such incidents. At that moment I made up my mind once and for all that the meaning of life did not lie in diploma work, nor even in the opinion of the faculty, but in something else. Perhaps, in being a decent kind of pedestrian? At bottom, all these cars, aeroplanes, locomotives are really nothing but the children's perambulators that we pedestrians either pull or push. After sitting for so long in someone else's car it was a pleasant relief to be walking on firm ground. The earth is always ours, no matter who or what makes it spin. The main thing is the sense of freedom and peace it gives us. You are not being moved by some external force, you are moving yourself. And what's more, you cannot run anybody over. Of course, someone may run you over, but then you could also be hit on the head by a falling brick. The main thing is not to throw bricks about. I walked home congratulating myself on never having bought a car, and on having sold my bicycle. I think our best thoughts occur to us when we are moving at a speed of not more than five kilometres per hour. -------- One day in summer One hot summer day I was sitting near the pier eating ice-cream sprinkled with broken nuts. That's the kind of ice-cream they sell here. First they put firm little dollops in a metal dish, then sprinkle nuts on top. I suppose I could have refused the nuts (peanuts, to be exact), but no one else did, so I didn't either. The girl at the ice-cream counter in her crisp white overall, looking cool and therefore pleasant, was working silently, in a smooth, steady rhythm. No one wanted to break this established rhythm. It was too hot and we were all too lazy. The flowering oleanders cast light shadows on the tables of the open-air cafe. A salutary breeze from the sea drifted through their straggling branches carrying a sweetish smell of decay from the tired pink flowers. Through the oleanders I could see the pier and the sea. Now and then anglers' boats would pass slowly, each with its home-made trawl consisting of a basket on an iron hoop. It was Saturday and they were catching shrimps in preparation for the morrow's fishing. Sometimes a boat would heave to and the men in the stern would haul in the basket with its heavy load of sand and silt and bend over it searching for the shrimps and slopping handfuls of silt over the side. Having emptied the basket, they would rinse it out, then throw it over the stern again and row as far away from it as possible so as not to frighten the shrimps with their boat. They were keeping very close to the shore because in this kind of weather shrimps come right up to the water's edge. On the upper deck of the pier holiday-makers were queueing for the launch. From the water came the sound of boys' voices vying with each other in asking, or rather, demanding that the people in the queue should throw them coins. Responding reluctantly to these urgings, someone would occasionally toss a coin into the water. Judging by the faces that peered over the rail, this occupation afforded no one any great amusement. One of the lads stayed at some distance from the pier and kept demanding throws into the deep water. Sometimes a sparkling coin would fly in his direction. It was harder for him to catch it out there, of course, but on the other hand he had no rivals to contend with and could work in peace. Some of the lads were diving straight off the pier. The sound of their bodies splashing into the water and of their young voices was refreshing. When a launch arrived and took on its passengers, the lads who had been lucky enough to retrieve a few coins ran up the steps and bought ice-cream. Wet and shivering, they would devour their portions with a noisy clattering of spoons, then run back to the pier. "Is this seat free?" I heard a man's voice above my head. Beside me stood a man holding a dish of ice-cream and a folded newspaper. "Yes," I said. He nodded, drew back a chair and sat down. I had been so taken up with the sea that I had failed to notice his approach. His accent and a slight drawl told me that he was a German. He was in his mid-fifties, sunburnt, with a vigourous crop of short fair hair, a slightly asymmetrical face and bright, clear eyes. The newspaper was one of our Black Sea publications. He scanned it for a while, laid it aside with a little smirk and set about his ice-cream. The smirk emphasised the lopsidedness of his face and I wondered if the habit of smirking in this fashion had perhaps pulled the lower part of his otherwise regular features to one side. Curious to know what it was he had laughed at, I tried to peep into his newspaper. "Want to read it?" he asked promptly, noticing my not very skillful attempt, and held it out to me. "No," I said and, sensing in his tone a desire for communication, added, "You speak very good Russian." "Yes, I do," he assented, and his bright eyes flashed even brighter. "And I'm proud of it. Still, I've been studying the language since I was a boy." "Have you really?" I said. "Yes," he repeated vigourously, and added with an unexpected touch of slyness, "Can you guess why?" "I don't know," I said, trying not to look quite so sociable if that was what my face had expressed in the first place. "To be able to read Dostoyevsky in the original?" "Exactly," he nodded, and pushed aside the empty ice-cream dish. All this time he had been hard at work on its contents without for a moment letting me out of range of his intensely bright eyes. To perform both these tasks at once he had been forced to lower at me most of the time. "How do you find it here?" I asked. "Good," he nodded again. "I came with my wife and daughter, though it's very expensive here." "Where are they?" I asked. "I'm waiting for them to come back from the beach," he said, and looked at his watch. "I decided to go for a walk in town by myself today." "Look here," I said suddenly, trying not to appear too enthusiastic. "Suppose we drink a bottle of champagne together?" "I'm with you," he said good-naturedly, and spread his arms. I rose and went to the bar. All blue plastic and glass, with dazzling streamlined curves, the bar looked more like a flying machine than part of a catering establishment. Surrounded by this synthetic splendour sat the bar-tender eating hominy and cheese in an attitude of bucolic bliss. His wife was standing over him and at his knee, with one hand rummaging thoughtfully in a large drawerful of sweets, was a child. "Champagne and a kilo of apples," I said, having inspected the counter. The one and only waitress was standing next to me, her back against the bar, eating ice-cream. The barman wiped his hands with a rag and, clicking his tongue, reached into the ice-barrel. The waitress did not stir. "He's a foreigner," I said with a nod in the direction of my table. The barman responded with a comprehending motion of his head and I sensed his hand going deeper among the tinkling icicles in the barrel. The waitress went on calmly eating her ice-cream. "Tell the kids to keep quiet," I heard the barman's voice behind me. The young coin-divers had taken over a free table next to ours. Their elbows were beating a tattoo on the table. One of them kept shaking his head to get the water out of his ear, and this sent the others into fits of irrestrainable laughter. Their wet, sunburnt skin was speckled with goose pimples. They all looked the picture of health, and it was pleasant to watch them. The waitress brought a dish of apples and a bottle of champagne. Having put the dish on the table, she started taking the foil off the bottle. The lads at the next table froze in expectation of the pop, but then I noticed that the waitress had forgotten the glasses and stopped her. Not in the least offended by my interference, nor in any way embarrassed by her own mistake, she went for the glasses. She appeared to have a very keen sense of her own independence, and also to take a secretly ironic view of her customers. It was particularly noticeable as she walked away swinging her broad hips, but not too much, just for her own pleasure, not for anyone else's benefit. A minute later she reappeared with two tall narrow glasses. She removed the cork skillfully, letting out the air little by little, so that the boys, who had again frozen in expectation of a big bang, were once again disappointed. We drank to having made each other's acquaintance. "Magnificent stuff," said the German, and replaced his empty glass firmly on the table. Tiny beads of perspiration had broken out on his forehead. The champagne really was good. "Were you living in Germany during the time of the Nazis?" I asked when the conversation turned to Mikhail Romm's film Ordinary Fascism, which he praised highly. Apparently he had seen it at home in West Germany. "Yes," he said. "From start to finish." "Well, it's all over now," I said. "What do you think? Was Hitler a clever or gifted man in his way?" "He was never a clever man," the German shook his head, twisting his lip a little to one side. "But he did possess some sort of hypnotic gift, I believe." "In what sense?" "His speeches roused the mob, worked them up into a kind of politico-sexual psychosis." "What about Mein Kampf?" I said. "What would you call that?" "In form it's a typical stream of consciousness. But in contrast to Joyce, it's a stream of a very foolish consciousness." "Never mind the form," I said. "The thing that interests me is how he set about proving, let us say, the necessity for exterminating the Slavs." "In Mein Kampf that was all wrapped up in very vague phrases. It was only brought out into the open after they had got power. Mein Kampf was written in 1924. On the whole, it's a wretched, semi-literate piece of work," he added contemptuously, and I felt that the subject had begun to bore him. "Is that what you think now or have you always thought so?" I asked. "Always," he replied, rather haughtily it seemed to me, and added suddenly, "and I nearly paid the price for it." He paused as if to recall something or, perhaps, wondering whether to continue. "Are you tired of my questions?" I asked, pouring champagne. "Not a bit," he replied promptly, and having sipped at his glass again, set it down firmly on the table. Apparently he had some doubts about the stability of the glass. "It was just a boys' prank," he said with a smile. "Two of my friends and I got into our university one night and scattered pamphlets around. We quoted a few illiterate passages from Mein Kampf and argued that a man who didn't know the German language properly could not claim to be leader of the German people." "And what happened?" I asked, trying not to appear too curious. "We were saved by the primitive mentality of the police," he said and rose, emptying his glass, at the sound of the launch's siren. "I'll be back in a moment," he said with a nod, and set off briskly towards the pier, moving fast on his muscular legs. I noticed that he was wearing shorts. The boys' table was now occupied by a local pensioner, a smallish chubby old man in a clean tussore tunic. On the table before him stood a bottle of Borzhomi mineral water and a small tumbler, from which he would occasionally take two or three sips, then munch his lips and, fingering a string of prayer beads, go on watching the passers-by with idle curiosity. Everything about him seemed to say: here am I, I've worked hard all my life and now I'm enjoying a well-earned rest. I drink Borzhomi if I want to, I count my beads if I want to, and, if I want to, I can just sit and look at you. And there's nothing to stop you doing a good job of work in life so that afterwards, when your time comes, you too can enjoy a well-earned rest as I am doing now. At first he was alone, then he was joined by a big carelessly made-up woman wearing a necklace of wooden beads, who sat down at his table with a dish of ice-cream. They talked animatedly and all the time the old man's voice seemed to emanate a chilly intellectual superiority, which his companion sought ineffectually to melt, with the result that her own voice began to betray a certain secret resentment and even reproach. But this the old man ignored, persisting obstinately in the tone he had adopted from the start. I listened. "Japan is now considered a great country," the pensioner remarked. "And as a matter of fact they do have some very beautiful women." "But the men are all ugly," his companion retorted joyfully. "In 'forty-five I saw lots of Japanese POWs in Irkutsk and there wasn't a single good-looking man among them." "Prisoners of war are never good-looking," the pensioner interrupted superciliously, as though revealing some profound psychological truth behind her ethnographical observation and thus disposing of the modest value of the observation itself. "I don't see why..." the woman began, but the old man in tussore silk raised his finger and she fell silent. "However, Japan is at the same time a major source of potential aggression," he said, "because she is tied up with America through banking capital." "If you ask me, they're all a lot of scoundrels in America, except for about ten per cent," the woman responded and, noticing the old man touching his beads, herself began to finger her necklace. "A country of enormous wealth," the pensioner proclaimed thoughtfully, and propped his elbows on the table, two sharp, uncompromising elbows outlined through the wide sleeves of his tussore tunic. "Dupont's daughter," he began, but the thought of the educational level of his audience made him pause. "Do you know who Dupont is?" The woman looked confused. "Oh yes, that one..." "Dupont is a multi-millionaire," the old man declared harshly. "And compared with a multi-millionaire a millionaire is considered a mere beggar." "Good heavens," the woman sighed. "Well," the pensioner continued, "Dupont's daughter came to a reception wearing diamonds worth ten million dollars. Now I suppose you'll ask why no one robbed her?" The old man leaned back, as though offering time and space for the widest conjecture. "Why?" the woman asked, still overawed by the wealth of the multi-millionaires. "Because she was guarded by fifty detectives disguised as distinguished foreign guests, " the pensioner concluded triumphantly, and sipped at his Borzhomi from the small tumbler. "Now they've published Admiral Nelson's private correspondence," the woman remarked. "A man can write all sorts of things to a woman..." "I know," the old man interrupted sternly. "But that's the English." "It's a shame anyhow," said the woman. "Vivian Leigh," the pensioner continued, "tried to save the admiral's honour but she failed." "I know," said the woman, "she's dead, isn't she?" "Yes," the old man affirmed. "She died of tuberculosis because she wasn't allowed to have any sex life. When a person has tuberculosis or cancer," holding the beads in one hand he bent down two fingers on the other, "all sex life is categorically forbidden!" This sounded like some kind of mild warning. The old man glanced sideways at the woman, trying to sense her attitude to the matter. "I know," the woman said, not allowing him to sense anything. "Vissarion Belinsky also died of tuberculosis," the old man recalled suddenly. "Tolstoy is my favourite writer." "It depends which Tolstoy," he corrected her. "There were three of them." "Leo Tolstoy, of course," she replied. "Anna Karenina," he remarked, "is the greatest family novel of all times and all nations." "But why was she so jealous in her love of Vronsky?!" the woman exclaimed, as if she had been sorrowing over this for years. "That's such a terrible thing. Quite unendurable." A crowd of holiday-makers had left the beach and was drifting lazily up the street. The foreign women among them in their short beach robes seemed particularly long-legged. A few years ago they had not been allowed to walk into town in such attire; now apparently is was tolerated. My new acquaintance reappeared. "They seem to be very late," he said without any special regret. I poured out some more champagne. "That's German punctuality for you," I said. "German punctuality is very much exaggerated," he replied. We drank. He took an apple from the dish and bit into it vigourously. "So it was the primitive mentality of the police that saved you?" I reminded him when he had swallowed his bite of apple. "Yes," he nodded, and went on, "the Gestapo turned the whole philosophical faculty upside down but for some reason they left us alone. They decided it must have been the work of students whose line of study would enable them to compare Hegel's style with Hitler's. One day all the students of the philosophical faculty had their lecture notes confiscated, although we had printed our pamphlets in block capitals. Two of the students refused to surrender their notes and were taken straight from the university to the Gestapo." "What did they do to them?" I asked. "Nothing," he replied, allowing his asymmetrical face to break into a sardonic smile. "Released them the next day with profound apologies. These brave fellows had influence in high places. One of them had an uncle who worked in Goebbels' office, or pretty near it. Admittedly, while they were finding this out, they gave him a nice..." He paused and made an eloquent gesture with his fist. "A black-eye," I suggested. "Yes, a black-