That same morning the director of the theater, a corpulent gentleman by the name of Jacques Rauch, looked about for Natalie Zugoff then began to make his way through the crowd of travelers leaving the platform, toward her abandoned luggage. The porters he summoned picked up the suitcases, monogrammed and extraordinarily heavy — fifteen items, not including hatboxes — lugged them the length of the platform, and crammed them with the utmost difficulty into an automobile sent from the Hotel Angleterre.
“What’s she bringing?” they grumbled. “Rocks?”
“Women! They say she took all this stuff and left Russia to get away from the Bolsheviks,” Rauch said to the chauffeur, who had placed his cap with the band marked “Angleterre” on the dashboard and was squatting and examining the overloaded wheels.
“I just hope the axles hold out,” he murmured.
Natalie Zugoff seemed accustomed to the fact that her bags followed her of their own accord. There had never yet been a lack of volunteers willing to see to them. They’d been looked after by officials of the British legation in Odessa, White Russian officers, sailors of the Black Sea Fleet, and agents of the French immigration authorities. The stationmaster, whom she had cast merely a fleeting glance, had without being asked taken the small valise from her hands and carried it himself to the hotel automobile in hopes that the velvety gaze would rest once again on his vulgar person. Called away by urgent business, in a farewell gesture he leaned down to the hand clad in a net glove; the Chinese lapdog snarled and bared its teeth.
Having handed out tips and sent the porters away, Rauch waited for a word of thanks for his solicitude in taking care of the cases, whose dispatch had been overseen in Paris by another director of a variety theater. Natalie Zugoff thanked him, and glanced with aversion at the immense pile of luggage in the hotel automobile. It drove at a snail’s pace behind the dorozhka that the driver had had to flag down for Rauch and the artiste. The wind brought the distant sound of isolated shots. A petard went off under the horses’ hooves; they took fright and bolted, the lapdog yelping in distress.
“Goddammit!” the cabbie swore, tugging at the reins. “Whoa, whoa!”
Zigzagging through the streets as if they were the tunnels of a labyrinth, arriving from the direction of the port they pulled up outside the Hotel Angleterre, where they were stopped by a police cordon.
“There’s a cannon on the tower,” said Natalie Zugoff.
“It’s been there since time immemorial, ma’am,” she was reassured by a policeman. He clicked his heels, gave back her documents, and saluted.
Even before dinnertime fifteen men in dark blue sweat-soaked uniforms had brought the cannon down from the town hall tower. It was fired in celebration, upon which its wheels dropped off, and its bronze barrel cracked and came to rest outside the town hall, sparing Natalie Zugoff’s delicate ears another report. From the window of her hotel room she saw scraps of newspaper being swept down the street by the wind, while stray mongrels slunk by against the buildings, their tails between their legs. She sent for a train timetable, having made up her mind to break her contract and return as quickly as she could to Paris. In the evening she appeared on stage, the only performance she agreed to give before leaving. Her voice, mournful and restless, soared over the band’s fortissimo like the cry of a bird, the sounds of the saxophones rising up in its wake and gasping. The voice glided high up, trembling with bitter scorn for bourgeois harmony. It misled the musicians into sandpits of dissonance, from which they extracted themselves only with the most precipitous twists and turns, hastily closing ranks to return with fanfares, violin in the lead, onto the straight and narrow. Natalie Zugoff paid no more attention to the band than she had to the pile of luggage that had been following behind her for years. Her insouciance astounded the bank clerks sprawling in the orchestra seats in their impeccable tuxedos and shoes gleaming like mirrors.
“She’s going to bomb,” predicted Alojzy Piechota, the former fireman, peeping through the curtains at the audience, before resuming his rounds. Yet when the chords of the final number died away, the dead silence among the spectators gave way to a hurricane. The bank clerks jumped to their feet as they applauded; legal interns overwhelmed by a touch of boundless freedom abandoned their good manners, leaped onto their seats and shouted at the top of their lungs.
“Voilà,” Rauch said excitedly as he listened from the director’s box. He shook the black boy’s hand, expecting congratulations. “They’re cheering! Can you hear? Today they sound the way they should, more than ever before in this place. Let’s enjoy it — the cork is out of the bottle.”
But the brand-name champagne that had been chilling in an ice bucket for Rauch to celebrate the success made him grimace in disgust. The contents of the bottle were spoiled.
For many weeks the evening shows were sold out. The house was filled to the rafters with single men listening intently to the mournful voice, mesmerized by the shiny black top hat, the ostrich-feather boa, and the pale arm bearing a ladies’ cigarette in a long glass holder, all seen through wreaths of smoke in a bluish light. The chandeliers shook from the applause, and the grammar school boys, whose rules forbade them to enter Rauch’s theater, threw caution to the winds and waved their dark blue caps, leaning perilously out from their seats up in the gods.
During rehearsals Rauch would take his place in the front row of the orchestra seating, legs stretched out in front of him, head drooping on his shoulder and eyes closed. Any slipup, he maintained, first appeared in the form of sound. If you wished to hold all the threads of the show in your hand you ought never to look at the stage, where movement and light beguile one’s attention. He would unfailingly wake when his ear detected an insufficiently clean note, and stamp his foot furiously as a sign there was to be silence.
“Trombone! Was that meant to be a sharp? What, am I supposed to bend over to help it up? A false note is a misstep. Legs up, girls! I want to hear those feathers fluttering. Musicians — once more, from the top! Everyone from the top!”
“The fat fool’s gone mad,” the girls in the corps de ballet would mutter. “Bringing her all the way from Paris. For what.”
On the posters stuck up on advertising columns in front of the theater Natalie Zugoff bled red lipstick and her eyes were scratched out. Every morning, on his own initiative, his wooden leg thumping on the sidewalk, the former fireman Alojzy would stomp around outside the building with a roll of fresh posters and a bucket of glue, as if he were trying to put out a fire. Then before the evening show he would go all the way out onto the street and wait there for the arrival of the dorozhka, so he could hobble at a respectful distance of five paces behind the artiste as she walked to the rear entrance, which led via a narrow staircase to the dressing rooms. On only one occasion, when a gusty wind was stirring unease in people’s hearts, did Alojzy approach from the other direction and stand in her way. He rose up suddenly in front of her right on the street corner, like an advertising column.
“What do you want?” she asked.
“P-. . pl-. . pl-. .,” the fireman began, then fell silent with his mouth open as if he’d choked on the consonants. He stood there taut as a string, the wind flapping the tails of his old overcoat.