rname will you take?' 'I'll use my real name.' 'You're real name? What is it?' 'Sharikov.* Shvonder the house committee chairman was standing in his leather tunic in front of the professor's desk. Doctor Bormen-thal was seated in an armchair. The doctor's glowing face (he had just come in from the cold) wore an expression whose perplexity was only equalled by that of Philip Philipovich. 'Write it?' he asked impatiently. 'Yes,' said Shvonder, 'it's not very difficult. Write a certificate, professor. You know the sort of thing - 'This is to certify that the bearer is really Poligraph Poligraphovich Sharikov . . . h'm, born in, h'm . . . this flat.' Bormenthal wriggled uneasily in his armchair. Philip Philipovich tugged at his moustache. 'God dammit, I've never heard anything so ridiculous in my life. He wasn't born at all, he simply . . . well, he sort of..' 'That's your problem,' said Shvonder with quiet malice. 'It's up to you to decide whether he was born or not ... It was your experiment, professor, and you brought citizen Sharikov into the world.' 'It's all quite simple,' barked Sharikov from the glass-fronted cabinet, where he was admiring the reflection of his tie. 'Kindly keep out of this conversation,' growled Philip Philipovich. 'It's not at all simple.' 'Why shouldn't I join in?' spluttered Sharikov in an offended voice, and Shvonder instantly supported him. 'I'm sorry, professor, but citizen Sharikov is absolutely correct. He has a right to take part in a discussion about his affairs, especially as it's about his identity documents. An identity document is the most important thing in the world.' At that moment a deafening ring from the telephone cut into the conversation. Philip Philipovich said into the receiver: 'Yes . . .', then reddened and shouted: 'Will you please not distract me with trivialities. What's it to do with you?' And he hurled the receiver back on to the hook. Delight spread over Shvonder's face. Purpling, Philip Philipovich roared: 'Right, let's get this finished.' He tore a sheet of paper from a notepad and scribbled a few words, then read it aloud in a voice of exasperation: ' "I hereby certify . . ." God, what am I supposed to certify? . . . let's see . . . "That the bearer is a man created during a laboratory experiment by means of an operation on the brain and that he requires identity papers" . . .'I object in principle to his having these idiotic documents, but still . . . Signed: "Professor Preobrazhensky!" ' 'Really, professor,' said Shvonder in an offended voice. 'What do you mean by calling these documents idiotic? I can't allow an undocumented tenant to go on living in this house, especially one who hasn't been registered with the police for military service. Supposing war suddenly breaks out with the imperialist aggressors?' 'I'm not going to fight!' yapped Sharikov. Shvonder was dumbfounded, but quickly recovered himself and said politely to Sharikov: 'I'm afraid you seem to be completely lacking in political consciousness, citizen Sharikov. You must register for military service at once.' 'I'll register, but I'm dammed if I'm going to fight,' answered Sharikov nonchalantly, straightening his tie. Now it was Shvonder's turn to be embarrassed. Preobraz-hensky exchanged a look of grim complicity with Bormenthal, who nodded meaningly. 'I was badly wounded during the operation,' whined Sharikov. 'Look - they cut me right open.' He pointed to his head. The scar of a fresh surgical wound bisected his forehead. 'Are you an anarchist-individualist?' asked Shvonder, raising his eyebrows. 'I ought to be exempt on medical grounds,' said Sharikov. 'Well, there's no hurry about it,' said the disconcerted Shvonder. 'Meanwhile we'll send the professor's certificate to the police and they'll issue your papers.' 'Er, look here . . .' Philip Philipovich suddenly interrupted him, obviously struck by an idea. 'I suppose you don't liave a room to spare in the house, do you? I'd be prepared to buy it.' Yellowish sparks flashed in Shvonder's brown eyes. 'No, professor, I very much regret to say that we don't have a room. And aren't likely to, either.' Philip Philipovich clenched his teeth and said nothing. Again the telephone rang as though to order. Without a word Philip Philipovich flicked the receiver off the rest so that it hung down, spinning slightly, on its blue cord. Everybody jumped. 'The old man's getting rattled,' thought Bormenthal. With a glint in his eyes Shvonder bowed and went out. Sharikov disappeared after him, his boots creaking. The professor and Bormenthal were left alone. After a short silence, Philip Philipovich shook his head gently and said: 'On my word of honour, this is becoming an absolute nightmare. Don't you see? I swear, doctor, that I've suffered more these last fourteen days than in the past fourteen years! I tell you, he's a scoundrel . . .' From a distance came the faint tinkle of breaking glass, followed by a stifled woman's scream, then silence. An evil spirit dashed down the corridor, turned into the consulting-room where it produced another crash and immediately turned back. Doors slammed and Darya Petrovna's low cry was heard from the kitchen. There was a howl from Sharikov. 'Oh, God, what now!' cried Philip Philipovich, rushing for the door. 'A cat,' guessed Bormenthal and leaped after him. They ran down the corridor into the hall, burst in, then turned into the passage leading to the bathroom and the kitchen. Zina came dashing out of the kitchen and ran full tilt into Philip Philipovich. 'How many times have I told you not to let cats into the flat,' shouted Philip Philipovich in fury. 'Where is he? Ivan Amoldovich, for God's sake go and calm the patients in the waiting-room!' 'He's in the bathroom, the devil,' cried Zina, panting. Philip Philipovich hurled himself at the bathroom door, but it would not give way. 'Open up this minute!' The only answer from the locked bathroom was the sound of something leaping up at the walls, smashing glasses, and Sharikov's voice roaring through the door: 'I'll kill you . . .' Water could be heard gurgling through the pipes and pouring into the bathtub. Philip Philipovich leaned against the door and tried to break it open. Darya Petrovna, clothes torn and face distorted with anger, appeared in the kitchen doorway. Then the glass transom window, high up in the wall between the bathroom and the kitchen, shattered with a multiple crack. Two large fragments crashed into the kitchen followed by a tabby cat of gigantic proportions with a face like a policeman and a blue bow round its neck. It fell on to the middle of the table, right into a long platter, which it broke in half. From there it fell to the floor, turned round on three legs as it waved the fourth in the air as though executing a dance-step, and instantly streaked out through the back door, which was slightly ajar.The door opened wider and the cat was replaced by the face of an old woman in a headscarf, followed by her polka-dotted skirt. The old woman wiped her mouth with her index and second fingers, stared round the kitchen with protruding eyes that burned with curiosity and she said: 'Oh, my lord!' Pale, Philip Philipovich crossed the kitchen and asked threateningly: 'What do you want?' 'I wanted to have a look at the talking dog,' replied the old woman ingratiatingly and crossed herself. Philip Philipovich went even paler, strode up to her and hissed: 'Get out of my kitchen this instant!' The old woman tottered back toward the door and said plaintively: 'You needn't be so sharp, professor.' 'Get out, I say!' repeated Philip Philipovich and his eyes went as round as the owl's. He personally slammed the door behind the old woman. 'Darya Petrovna, I've asked you before . . .' 'But Philip Philipovich,' replied Darya Petrovna in desperation, clenching her hands, 'what can I do? People keep coming in all day long, however often I throw them out.' A dull, threatening roar of water was still coming from the bathroom, although Sharikov was now silent. Doctor Bormenthal came in. 'Please, Ivan Amoldovich ... er... how many patients are there in the waiting-room?' 'Eleven,' replied Bormenthal. 'Send them all away, please. I can't see any patients today.' With a bony finger Philip Philipovich knocked on the bathroom door and shouted: 'Come out at once! Why have you locked yourself in?' 'Oh . . . oh . . .!' replied Sharikov in tones of misery. 'What on earth ... I can't hear you - turn off the water.' 'Ow-wow! . . .' 'Turn off the water! What has he done? I don't understand . . .' cried Philip Philipovich, working himself into a frenzy. Zina and Darya Petrovna opened the kitchen door and peeped out. Once again Philip Philipovich thundered on the bathroom door with his fist. 'There he is!' screamed Darya Petrovna from the kitchen. Philip Philipovich rushed in. The distorted features of Poligraph Poligraphovich appeared through the broken transom and leaned out into the kitchen .His eyes were tear-stained and there was a long scratch down his nose, red with fresh blood. 'Have you gone out of your mind?' asked Philip Philipovich. 'Why don't you come out of there?' Terrified and miserable, Sharikov stared around and replied: 'I've shut myself in.' 'Unlock the door, then. Haven't you ever seen a lock before?' 'The blasted thing won't open!' replied Poligraph, terrified. 'Oh, my God, he's shut the safety-catch too!' screamed Zina, wringing her hands. 'There's a sort of button on the lock,' shouted Philip Philipovich, trying to out-roar the water. 'Press it downwards . . . press it down! Downwards!' Sharikov vanished, to reappear over the transom a minute later. 'I can't see a thing!' he barked in terror. 'Well, turn the light on then! He's gone crazy!' 'That damned cat smashed the bulb,' replied Sharikov, 'and when I tried to catch the bastard by the leg I turned on the tap and now I can't find it.' Appalled, all three wrung their hands in horror. Five minutes later Bormenthal, Zina and Darya Petrovna were sitting in a row on a damp carpet that had been rolled up against the foot of the bathroom door, pressing it hard with their bottoms. Fyodor the porter was climbing up a ladder into the transom window, with the lighted candle from Darya Petrovna's ikon in his hand. His posterior, clad in broad grey checks, hovered in the air, then vanished through the opening. 'Ooh! . . . ow!' came Sharikov's strangled shriek above the roar of water. Fyodor's voice was heard: 'There's nothing for it, Philip Philipovich, we'll have to open the door and let the water out. We can mop it up from the kitchen.' 'Open it then!' shouted Philip Philipovich angrily. The three got up from the carpet and pushed the bathroom door open. Immediately a tidal wave gushed out into the passage, where it divided into three streams - one straight into the lavatory opposite, one to the right into the kitchen and one to the left into the hall. Splashing and prancing, Zina shut the door into the hall. Fyodor emerged, up to his ankles in water, and for some reason grinning. He was soaking wet and looked as if he were wearing oilskins. 'The water-pressure was so strong, I only just managed to turn it off,' he explained. 'Where is he?' asked Philip Philipovich, cursing as he lifted one wet foot. 'He's afraid to come out,' said Fyodor, giggling stupidly. 'Will you beat me. Dad' came Sharikov's tearful voice from the bathroom. 'You idiot!' was Philip Philipovich's terse reply. Zina and Darya Petrovna, with bare legs and skirts tucked up to their knees, and Sharikov and the porter barefoot with rolled-up trousers were hard at work mopping up the kitchen floor with wet cloths, squeezing them out into dirty buckets and into the sink. The abandoned stove roared away. The water swirled out of the back door, down the well of the back staircase and into the cellar. On tiptoe, Bormenthal was standing in a deep puddle on the parquet floor of the hall and talking through the crack of the front door, opened only as far as the chain would allow. 'No consulting hours today, I'm afraid, the professor's not well. Please keep away from the door, we have a burst pipe. 'But when can the professor see me?' a voice came through the door. 'It wouldn't take a minute . . .' 'I'm sorry.' Bormenthal rocked back from his toes to his heels. 'The professor's in bed and a pipe has burst. Come tomorrow. Zina dear, quickly mop up the hall or it will start running down the front staircase.' 'There's too much - the cloths won't do it.' 'Never mind,' said Fyodor. 'We'll scoop it up with jugs.' While the doorbell rang ceaselessly, Bormenthal stood up to his ankles in water. 'When is the operation?' said an insistent voice as it tried to force its way through the crack of the door. 'A pipe's burst . . .' 'But I've come in galoshes . . .' Bluish silhouettes appeared outside the door. 'I'm sorry, it's impossible, please come tomorrow.' 'But I have an appointment.' 'Tomorrow. There's been a disaster in the water supply.' Fyodor splashed about in the lake, scooping it up with a jug, but the battle-scared Sharikov had thought up a new method. He rolled up an enormous cloth, lay on his stomach in the water and pushed it backwards from the hall towards the lavatory. 'What d'you think you're doing, you fool, slopping it all round the flat?' fumed Darya Petrovna. 'Pour it into the sink.' 'How can I?' replied Sharikov, scooping up the murky water with his hands. 'If I don't push it back into the flat it'll run out of the front door.' A bench was pushed creaking out of the corridor, with Philip Philipovich riding unsteadily on it in his blue striped socks. 'Stop answering the door, Ivan Amoldovich. Go into the bedroom, you can borrow a pair of my slippers.' 'Don't bother, Philip Philipovich, I'm all right.' 'You're wearing nothing but a pair of galoshes.' 'I don't mind. My feet are wet anyway.' 'Oh, my God!' Philip Philipovich was exhausted and depressed. 'Destructive animal!' Sharikov suddenly burst out as he squatted on the floor, clutching a soup tureen. Bormenthal slammed the door, unable to contain himself any longer and burst into laughter. Philip Philipovich blew out his nostrils and his spectacles glittered. 'What are you talking about?' he asked Sharikov from the eminence of his bench. 'I was talking about the cat. Filthy swine,' answered Sharikov, his eyes swivelling guiltily. 'Look here, Sharikov,' retorted Philip Philipovich, taking a deep breath. 'I swear I have never seen a more impudent creature than you.' Bormenthal giggled. 'You,' went on Philip Philipovich, 'are nothing but a lout. How dare you say that? You caused the whole thing and you have the gall . . . No, really! It's too much!' 'Tell me, Sharikov,' said Bormenthal, 'how much longer are you going to chase cats? You ought to be ashamed of yourself. It's disgraceful! You're a savage!' 'Me - a savage?' snarled Sharikov. 'I'm no savage. I won't stand for that cat in this flat. It only comes here to find what it can pinch. It stole Darya's mincemeat. I wanted to teach it a lesson.' 'You should teach yourself a lesson!' replied Philip Philipovich. 'Just take a look at your face in the mirror.' 'Nearly scratched my eyes out,' said Sharikov gloomily, wiping a dirty hand across his eyes. By the time that the water-blackened parquet had dried out a little, all the mirrors were covered in a veil of condensed vapour and the doorbell had stopped ringing. Philip Philipovich in red morocco slippers was standing in the hall. 'There you are, Fyodor. Thank you.' 'Thank you very much, sir.' 'Mind you change your clothes straight away. No, wait -have a glass of Darya Petrovna's vodka before you go.' 'Thank you, sir,' Fyodor squirmed awkwardly, then said: 'There is one more thing, Philip Philipovich. I'm sorry, I hardly like to mention it, but it's the matter of the window-pane in No 7. Citizen Sharikov threw some stones at it, you see . . .' 'Did he throw them at a cat?' asked Philip Philipovich, frowning like a thundercloud. 'Well, no, he was throwing them at the owner of the flat. He's threatening to sue.' 'Oh, lord!' 'Sharikov tried to kiss their cook and they threw him out. They had a bit of a fight, it seems.' 'For God's sake, do you have to tell me all these disasters at once? How much?' 'One rouble and 50 kopecks.' Philip Philipovich took out three shining 50-kopeck pieces and handed them to Fyodor. 'And on top of it all you have to pay 1 rouble and 50 kopecks because of that damned cat,' grumbled a voice from the doorway. 'It was all the cat's fault . . .' Philip Philipovich turned round, bit his lip and gripped Sharikov. Without a word he pushed him into the waiting-room and locked the door. Sharik immediately started to hammer on the door with his fists. 'Shut up!' shouted Philip Philipovich in a voice that was nearly deranged. 'This is the limit,' said Fyodor meaningfully. 'I've never seen such impudence in my life.' Bormenthal seemed to materialise out of the floor. 'Please, Philip Philipovich, don't upset yourself.' The doctor thrust open the door into the waiting-room. He could be heard saying: 'Where d'you think you are? In some dive?' 'That's it,' said Fyodor approvingly. 'Serve him right . . .a punch on the ear's what he needs . . .' 'No, not that, Fyodor,' growled Philip Philipovich sadly. 'I think you've just about had all you can take, Philip Philipovich.' Six 'No, no, no!' insisted Bormenthal. 'You must tuck in vour napkin.' 'Why the hell should I,' grumbled Sharikov. 'Thank you, doctor,' said Philip Philipovich gratefully. 'I simply haven't the energy to reprimand him any longer.' 'I shan't allow you to start eating until you put on your napkin. Zina, take the mayonnaise away from Sharikov.' 'Hey, don't do that,' said Sharikov plaintively. 'I'll put it on straight away.' Pushing away the dish from Zina with his left hand and stuffing a napkin down his collar with the right hand, he looked exactly like a customer in a barber's shop. 'And eat with your fork, please,' added Bormenthal. Sighing long and heavily Sharikov chased slices of sturgeon around in a thick sauce. 'Can't I have some vodka?' he asked. 'Will you kindly keep quiet?' said Bormenthal. 'You've been at the vodka too often lately.' 'Do you grudge me it?' asked Sharikov, glowering sullenly across the table. 'Stop talking such damn nonsense . . .' Philip Philipovich broke in harshly, but Bormenthal interrupted him. 'Don't worry, Philip Philipovich, leave it to me. You, Sharikov are talking nonsense and the most disturbing thing of all is that you talk it with such complete confidence. Of course I don't grudge you the vodka, especially as it's not mine but belongs to Philip Philipovich. It's simply that it's harmful. That's for a start; secondly you behave badly enough without vodka.' Bormenthal pointed to where the sideboard had been broken and glued together. 'Zina, dear, give me a little more fish please,' said the professor. Meanwhile Sharikov had stretched out his hand towards the decanter and, with a sideways glance at Bormenthal, poured himself out a glassful. 'You should offer it to the others first,' said Bormenthal. 'Like this - first to Philip Philipovich, then to me, then yourself.' A faint, sarcastic grin nickered across Sharikov's mouth and he poured out glasses of vodka all round. 'You act just as if you were on parade here,' he said. 'Put your napkin here, your tie there, "please", "thank you", "excuse me" -why can't you behave naturally? Honestly, you stuffed shirts act as if it was still the days oftsarism.' 'What do you mean by "behave naturally"?' Sharikov did not answer Philip Philipovich's question, but raised his glass and said: 'Here's how . . .' 'And you too,' echoed Bormenthal with a tinge of irony. Sharikov tossed the glassful down his throat, blinked, lifted a piece of bread to his nose, sniffed it, then swallowed it as his eyes filled with tears. 'Phase,' Philip Philipovich suddenly blurted out, as if preoccupied. Bormenthal gave him an astonished look. 'I'm sorry? . . .' 'It's a phase,' repeated Philip Philipovich and nodded bitterly. 'There's nothing we can do about it. Klim.' Deeply interested, Bormenthal glanced sharply into Philip Philipovich's eyes: 'Do you suppose so, Philip Philipovich?' 'I don't suppose; I'm convinced.' 'Can it be that . . .' began Bormenthal, then stopped after a glance at Sharikov, who was frowning suspiciously. 'Spdter . . .' said Philip Philipovich softly. 'Gut,' replied his assistant. Zina brought in the turkey. Bormenthal poured out some red wine for Philip Philipovich, then offered some to Sharikov. 'Not for me, I prefer vodka.' His face had grown puffy, sweat was breaking out on his forehead and he was distinctly merrier. Philip Philipovich also cheered up slightly after drinking some wine. His eyes grew clearer and he looked rather more approvingly at Sharikov, whose black head above his white napkin now shone like a fly in a pool of cream. Bormenthal however, when fortified, seemed to want activity. 'Well now, what are you and I going to do this evening?' he asked Sharikov. Sharikov winked and replied: 'Let's go to the circus. I like that best.' 'Why go to the circus every day?' remarked Philip Philipovich in a good-humoured voice. 'It sounds so boring to me. If I were you I'd go to the theatre.' 'I won't go to the theatre,' answered Sharikov nonchalantly and made the sign of the cross over his mouth. 'Hiccuping at table takes other people's appetites away,' said Bormenthal automatically. 'If you don't mind my mentioning it... Incidentally, why don't you like the theatre?' Sharikov held his empty glass up to his eye and looked through it as though it were an opera glass. After some thought he pouted and said: 'Hell, it's just rot . . . talk, talk. Pure counter-revolution.' Philip Philipovich leaned against his high, carved gothic chairback and laughed so hard that he displayed what looked like two rows of gold fence-posts. Bormenthal merely shook his head. 'You should do some reading,' he suggested, 'and then, perhaps . . .' 'But I read a lot . . .' answered Sharikov, quickly and surreptitiously pouring himself half a glass of vodka. 'Zina!' cried Philip Philipovich anxiously. 'Clear away the vodka, my dear. We don't need it any more . . . What have you been reading?' He suddenly had a mental picture of a desert island, palm trees, and a man dressed in goatskins. 'I'll bet he says Robinson Crusoe . . .'he thought. 'That guy . . . what's his name . . . Engels' correspondence with . . . hell, what d'you call him ... oh - Kautsky.' Bormenthal's forkful of turkey meat stopped in mid-air and Philip Philipovich choked on his wine. Sharikov seized this moment to gulp down his vodka. Philip Philipovich put his elbows on the table, stared at Sharikov and asked: 'What comment can you make on what you've read?' Sharikov shrugged. 'I don't agree.' 'With whom - Engels or Kautsky?' 'With neither of 'em,' replied Sharikov. 'That is most remarkable. Anybody who says that . . . Well, what would you suggest instead?' 'Suggest? I dunno . . . They just write and write all that rot ... all about some congress and some Germans . . . makes my head reel. Take everything away from the bosses, then divide it up . . .' 'Just as I thought!' exclaimed Philip Philipovich, slapping the tablecloth with his palm. 'Just as I thought.' 'And how is this to be done?' asked Bormenthal with interest. 'How to do it?' Sharikov, grown loquacious with wine, explained garrulously: 'Easy. Fr'instance - here's one guy with seven rooms and forty pairs of trousers and there's another guy who has to eat out of dustbins.' 'I suppose that remark about the seven rooms is a hint about me?' asked Philip Philipovich with a haughty raise of the eyebrows. Sharikov hunched his shoulders and said no more. 'All right, I've nothing against fair shares. How many patients did you turn away yesterday, doctor?' 'Thirty-nine,' was Bormenthal's immediate reply. 'H'm . . . 390 roubles, shared between us three. I won't count Zina and Darya Petrovna. Right, Sharikov - that means your share is 130 roubles. Kindly hand it over.' 'Hey, wait a minute,' said Sharikov, beginning to be scared. 'What's the idea? What d'you mean?' 'I mean the cat and the tap,' Philip Philipovich suddenly roared, dropping his mask of ironic imperturbability. 'Philip Philipovich!' exclaimed Bormenthal anxiously. 'Don't interrupt. The scene you created yesterday was intolerable, and thanks to you I had to turn away all my patients. You were leaping around in the bathroom like a savage, smashing everything and jamming the taps. Who killed Madame Polasukher's cat? Who . . .' 'The day before yesterday, Sharikov, you bit a lady you met on the staircase,' put in Bormenthal. 'You ought to be . . .' roared Philip Philipovich. 'But she slapped me across the mouth,' whined Sharikov 'She can't go doing that to me!' 'She slapped you because you pinched her on the bosom,' shouted Bormenthal, knocking over a glass. 'You stand there and . . .' 'You belong to the lowest possible stage of development,' Philip Philipovich shouted him down. 'You are still in the formative stage. You are intellectually weak, all your actions are purely bestial. Yet you allow yourself in the presence of two university-educated men to offer advice, with quite intolerable familiarity, on a cosmic scale and of quite cosmic stupidity, on the redistribution of wealth . . . and at the same time you eat toothpaste . . .' 'The day before yesterday,' added Bormenthal. 'And now,' thundered Philip Philipovich, 'that you have nearly got your nose scratched off - incidentally, why have you wiped the zinc ointment off it? - you can just shut up and listen to what you're told. You are going to leam to behave and try to become a marginally acceptable member of society. By the way, who was fool enough to lend you that book?' 'There you go again - calling everybody fools,' replied Sharikov nervously, deafened by the attack on him from both sides. 'Let me guess,' exclaimed Philip Philipovich, turning red with fury. 'Well, Shvonder gave it to me ... so what? He's not a fool ... it was so I could get educated.' 'I can see which way your education is going after reading Kautsky,' shouted Philip Philipovich, hoarse and turning faintly yellow. With this he gave the bell a furious jab. 'Today's incident shows it better than anything else. Zina!' 'Zina!' shouted Bormenthal. 'Zina!' cried the terrified Sharikov. Looking pale, Zina ran into the room. 'Zina, there's a book in the waiting-room ... It is in the waiting-room, isn't it?' 'Yes, it is,' said Sharikov obediently. 'Green, the colour of copper sulphate.' 'A green book . . .' 'Bum it if you like,' cried Sharikov in desperation. 'It's only a public library book.' 'It's called Correspondence . . . between, er, Engels and that other man, what's his name . . . Anyway, throw it into the stove!' Zina flew out. 'I'd like to hang that Shvonder, on my word of honour, on the first tree,' said Philip Philipovich, with a furious lunge at a turkey-wing. 'There's a gang of poisonous people in this house - it's just like an abscess. To say nothing of his idiotic newspapers . . .' Sharikov gave the professor a look of malicious sarcasm. Philip Philipovich in his turn shot him a sideways glance and said no more. 'Oh, dear, it looks as if nothing's going to go right,' came Bormenthal's sudden and prophetic thought. Zina brought in a layer cake on a dish and a coffee pot. 'I'm not eating any of that,' Sharikov growled threateningly. 'No one has offered you any. Behave yourself. Please have some, doctor.' Dinner ended in silence. Sharikov pulled a crumpled cigarette out of his pocket and lit it. Having drunk his coffee, Philip Philipovich looked at the clock. He pressed his repeater and it gently struck a quarter past eight. As was his habit Philip Philipovich leaned against his gothic chairback and turned to the newspaper on a side-table. 'Would you like to go to the circus with him tonight, doctor? Only do check the programme in advance and make sure there are no cats in it.' 'I don't know how they let such filthy beasts into the circus at all,' said Sharikov sullenly, shaking his head. 'Well never mind what filthy beasts they let into the circus for the moment,' said Philip Philipovich ambiguously. 'What's on tonight?' 'At Solomon's,' Bormenthal began to read out, 'there's something called the Four. . . . the Four Yooshems and the Human Ball-Bearing.' 'What are Yooshems?' enquired Philip Philipovich suspiciously. 'God knows. First time I've ever come across the word.' 'Well in that case you'd better look at Nikita's. We must be absolutely sure about what we're going to see.' 'Nikita's . . . Nikita's . . . h'm . . . elephants and the Ultimate in Human Dexterity.' 'I see. What is your attitude to elephants, my dear Sharikov?' enquired Philip Philipovich mistrustfully. Sharikov was immediately offended. 'Hell - I don't know. Cats are a special case. Elephants are useful animals,' replied Sharikov. 'Excellent. As long as you think they're useful you can go and watch them. Do as Ivan Arnoldovich tells you. And don't get talking to anyone in the bar! I beg you, Ivan Arnoldovich, not to offer Sharikov beer to drink.' Ten minutes later Ivan Arnoldovich and Sharikov, dressed in a peaked cap and a raglan overcoat with turned-up collar, set off for the circus. Silence descended on the flat. Philip Philipovich went into his study. He switched on the lamp under its heavy green shade, which gave the study a great sense of calm, and began to pace the room. The tip of his cigar glowed long and hard with its pale green fire. The professor put his hands into his pockets and deep thoughts racked his balding, learned brow. Now and again he smacked his lips, hummed 'to the banks of the sacred Nile . . .' and muttered something. Finally he put his cigar into the ashtray, went over to the glass cabinet and lit up the entire study with the three powerful lamps in the ceiling. From the third glass shelf Philip Philipovich took out a narrow jar and began, frowning, to examine it by the lamplight. Suspended in a transparent, viscous liquid there swam a little white blob that had been extracted from the depths of Sharik's brain. With a shrug of his shoulders, twisting his lips and murmuring to himself, Philip Philipovich devoured it with his eyes as though the floating white blob might unravel the secret of the curious events which had turned life upside down in that flat on Prechistenka. It could be that this most learned man did succeed in divining the secret. At any rate, having gazed his full at this cerebral appendage he returned the jar to the cabinet, locked it, put the key into his waistcoat pocket and collapsed, head pressed down between his shoulders and hands thrust deep into his jacket pockets, on to the leather-covered couch. He puffed long and hard at another cigar, chewing its end to fragments. Finally, looking like a greying Faust in the green-tinged lamplight, he exclaimed aloud: 'Yes, by God, I will.' There was no one to reply. Every sound in the flat was hushed. By eleven o'clock the traffic in Obukhov Street always died down. The rare footfall of a belated walker echoed in the distance, ringing out somewhere beyond the lowered blinds, then dying away. In Philip Philipovich's study his repeater chimed gently beneath his fingers in his waistcoat pocket . . . Impatiently the professor waited for Doctor Bormenthal and Sharikov to return from the circus. Seven We do not know what Philip Philipovich had decided to do. He did nothing in particular during the subsequent week and perhaps as a result of this things began happening fast. About six days after the affair with the bath-water and the cat, the young person from the house committee who had turned out to be a woman came to Sharikov and handed him some papers. Sharikov put them into his pocket and immediately called Doctor Bormenthal. 'Bormenthal!' 'Kindly address me by my name and patronymic!' retorted Bormenthal, his expression clouding. I should mention that in the past six days the great surgeon had managed to quarrel eight times with his ward Sharikov and the atmosphere in the flat was tense. 'All right, then you can call me by my name and patronymic too!' replied Sharikov with complete justification. 'No!' thundered Philip Philipovich from the doorway. 'I forbid you to utter such an idiotic name in my flat. If you want us to stop calling you Sharikov, Doctor Bormenthal and I will call you "Mister Sharikov".' 'I'm not mister - all the "misters" are in Paris!' barked Sharikov. 'I see Shvonder's been at work on you!' shouted Philip Philipovich. 'Well, I'll fix that rascal. There will only be "misters" in my flat as long as I'm living in it! Otherwise either I or you will get out, and it's more likely to be you. I'm putting a "room wanted" advertisement in the papers today and believe me I intend to find you a room.' 'You don't think I'm such a fool as to leave here, do you?' was Sharikov's crisp retort. 'What?' cried Philip Philipovich. Such a change came over his expression that Bormenthal rushed anxiously to his side and gently took him by the sleeve. 'Don't you be so impertinent, Monsieur Sharikov!' said Bormenthal, raising his voice. Sharikov stepped back and pulled three pieces of paper out of his pocket - one green, one yellow and one white, and said as he tapped them with his fingers: 'There. I'm now a member of this residential association and the tenant in charge of flat No. 5, Preobrazhensky, has got to give me my entitlement of thirty-seven square feet . . .' Sharikov thought for a moment and then added a word which Bormenthal's mind automatically recorded as new - 'please'. Philip Philipovich bit his lip and said rashly: 'I swear I'll shoot that Shvonder one of these days.' It was obvious from the look in Sharikov's eyes that he had taken careful note of the remark. 'Vorsicht, Philip Philipovich . . .' warned Bormenthal. 'Well, what do you expect? The gall of it . . .!' shouted Philip Philipovich in Russian. 'Look here, Sharikov ... Mister Sharikov ... If you commit one more piece of impudence I shall deprive you of your dinner, in fact of all your food. Thirty-seven square feet may be all very well, but there's nothing on that stinking little bit of paper which says that I have to feed you!' Frightened, Sharikov opened his mouth. 'I can't go without food,' he mumbled. 'Where would I eat?' 'Then behave yourself!' cried both doctors in chorus. Sharikov relapsed into meaningful silence and did no harm to anybody that day with the exception of himself - taking advantage of Bormenthal's brief absence he got hold of the doctor's razor and cut his cheek-bone so badly that Philip Philipovich and Doctor Bormenthal had to bandage the cut with much wailing and weeping on Sharikov's part. Next evening two men sat in the green twilight of the professor's study - Philip Philipovich and the faithful, devoted Bormenthal. The house was asleep. Philip Philipovich was wearing his sky-blue dressing gown and red slippers, while Bormenthal was in his shirt and blue braces. On the round table between the doctors, beside a thick album, stood a bottle of brandy, a plate of sliced lemon and a box of cigars. Through the smoke-laden air the two scientists were heatedly discussing the latest event: that evening Sharikov had stolen two 10-rouble notes which had been lying under a paperweight in Philip Philipovich's study, had disappeared from the flat and then returned later completely drunk. But that was not all. With him had come two unknown characters who had created a great deal of noise on the front staircase and expressed a desire to spend the night with Sharikov. The individuals in question were only removed after Fyodor, appearing on the scene with a coat thrown over his underwear, had telephoned the 45th Precinct police station. The individuals vanished instantly as soon as Fyodor had replaced the receiver. After they had gone it was found that a malachite ashtray had mysteriously vanished from a console in the hall, also Philip Philipovich's beaver hat and his walking-stick with a gold band inscribed: 'From the grateful hospital staff to Philip Philipovich in memory of "X"-day with affection and respect/ 'Who were they?' said Philip Philipovich aggressively, clenching his fists. Staggering and clutching the fur-coats, Sharikov muttered something about not knowing who they were, that they were a couple of bastards but good chaps. 'The strangest thing of all was that they were both drunk . . . How did they manage to lay their hands on the stuff?' said Philip Philipovich in astonishment, glancing at the place where his presentation walking-stick had stood until recently. 'They're experts,' explained Fyodor as he returned home to bed with a rouble in his pocket. Sharikov categorically denied having stolen the 20 roubles, mumbling something indistinct about himself not being the only person in the flat. 'Aha, I see - I suppose Doctor Bormenthal stole the money?' enquired Philip Philipovich in a voice that was quiet but terrifying in its intonation. Sharikov staggered, opened his bleary eyes and offered the suggestion: 'Maybe Zina took it . . .* 'What?' screamed Zina, appearing in the doorway like a spectre, clutching an unbuttoned cardigan across her bosom. 'How could he . . .' Philip Philipovich's neck flushed red. 'Calm down, Zina,' he said, stretching out his arm to her, 'don't get upset, we'll fix this.' Zina immediately burst into tears, her mouth fell wide open and her hand dropped from her bosom. 'Zina - aren't you ashamed? Who could imagine you taking it? What a disgraceful exhibition!' said Bormenthal in deep embarrassment. 'You silly girl, Zina, God forgive you . . .' began Philip Philipovich. But at that moment Zina stopped crying and the others froze in horror - Sharikov was feeling unwell. Banging his head against the wall, he was emitting a moan that was pitched somewhere between the vowels 'i' and 'o' - a sort of 'eeuuhh'. His face turned pale and his jaw twitched convulsively. 'Look out - get the swine that