Oblomov - Ivan Goncharov [10]
‘Of course it’s you, sir. You’re always at home: how can I tidy the place with you here? Go out for a whole day and I’ll get it nice and tidy.’
‘Good Lord! what next? Go out indeed! You’d better go back to your room.’
‘But really, sir,’ Zakhar insisted. ‘Why don’t you go out to-day, and Anisya and me will get everything ship-shape. Though, mind you, sir, we shan’t be able to do everything by ourselves – not the two of us: we should have to get some charwomen to come and wash.…’
‘Good Lord! what an idea – charwomen! Go on, back to your room,’ said Oblomov.
He was sorry he had started the conversation with Zakhar. He kept forgetting that as soon as he touched on that delicate subject he got involved in endless trouble. Oblomov would have liked to have his rooms clean, but he could not help wishing that it would all happen somehow of itself, without any fuss; but the moment Zakhar was asked to dust, scrub, and so on, he always made a fuss. Every time it was mentioned he began proving that it would mean a tremendous lot of trouble, knowing very well that the very thought of it terrified his master.
Zakhar left the room and Oblomov sank into thought. A few minutes later it again struck the half-hour.
‘Good heavens,’ Oblomov said almost in dismay, ‘it’ll soon be eleven o’clock, and I haven’t got up and washed! Zakhar! Zakhar!’
‘Dear, oh dear! What now?’ Zakhar’s voice came from the passage followed by the familiar sound of a jump.
‘Is my water ready?’ Oblomov asked.
‘Been ready for hours,’ Zakhar replied. ‘Why don’t you get up, sir?’
‘Why didn’t you tell me it was ready? I’d have got up long ago. Go now, I’ll follow you presently. I have some work to do. I’ll sit down and write.’
Zakhar went out, but a minute later returned with a greasy notebook covered with writing and scraps of paper.
‘If you’re going to write, sir, you might as well check these accounts – they have to be paid.’
‘What accounts? What has to be paid?’ Oblomov asked, looking displeased.
‘The butcher, the greengrocer, the laundress, and the baker, sir. They are all asking for money.’
‘All they think of is money!’ Oblomov grumbled. ‘And why don’t you give me a few bills at a time? Why do you produce them all at once?’
‘But every time I do, sir, you tell me to go – it’s always tomorrow, to-morrow.’
‘Well, can’t we put it off till to-morrow now?’
‘No, sir. They keep on pestering me, sir. They won’t give us any credit. To-day’s the first of the month.’
‘Oh dear!’ said Oblomov dejectedly. ‘A fresh worry! Well, what are you standing there for? Put them on the table. I’ll get up presently, wash, and have a look at them. So my water is ready, is it?’
‘It’s ready, sir,’ said Zakhar.
‘All right, now – –’ he groaned and was about to raise himself in his bed in order to get up.
‘I forgot to tell you, sir,’ Zakhar began. ‘Just a few hours ago, while you were still asleep, the house agent sent the porter to say that we must move – they want the flat.’
‘Well, what about it? If they want it, we shall of course move. What are you pestering me for? It’s the third time you’ve told me.’
‘They’re pestering me too, sir.’
‘Tell them we’re going to move.’
‘They say, sir, you’ve been promising to move for the last month but you still don’t move. They’re threatening to tell the police.’
‘Let them!’ Oblomov said resolutely. ‘We’ll move as soon as the weather gets warmer – in three weeks or so.’
‘In three weeks, sir? Why, sir, the agent says the workmen are coming in in a fortnight’s time. They’re going to break the whole place down. You’ll have to move to-morrow or the day after – that’s what he says, sir!’
‘Does he? He’s in too much of a hurry! He wants us to move at once, does he? Don’t you dare even to mention the flat to me again. I’ve told you once before and you’re at it again. Take care!’
‘But what am I to do, sir?’ Zakhar asked.
‘What are you to do? So that’s the way you want to wriggle out of your responsibilities?’ replied Oblomov.