Abe and Mawruss - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Places is all the same to me now," Gurin said--"women, too, Mr.
Perlmutter. I a.s.sure you, Mr. Perlmutter, since the day I am leaving Minsk one woman is the same as another to me. I ain't got no use for none of 'em."
"_Geh weg_, Gurin," Morris cried impatiently. "You talk like a fool. Just because one lady goes back on you, understand me, is that a reason you wouldn't got no use for no ladies at all? You might just as well say, Gurin, because one customer busts up on you, y'understand, you would never try to sell another customer so long as you live. Now this here Mrs. Gladstein, Gurin, is a lady which while I never seen this here lady _im_ Russland, y'understand, if you will just come out to Bridgetown with me, Gurin, I give you a guaranty Russland wouldn't figure at all."
Gurin shook his head sadly.
"You don't know me, Mr. Perlmutter," he said. "While I am going with plenty _Schatchens_ to see young ladies already, Mr. Perlmutter, I a.s.sure you my heart ain't in it. People gets the impression because I am a swell dresser, Mr. Perlmutter, that I am looking to get married; but believe me, Mr. Perlmutter, it ain't so."
"Then what do you go for, Gurin?" Morris asked. "_Schatchens_ don't like to fool away their time no more as I do, Gurin; and you could take it from me, no girl is going to the trouble to fix herself up and make a nice supper for you and the _Schatchen_ simply for the pleasure of seeing a swell dresser, Gurin."
"That's just the point, Mr. Perlmutter," Gurin said. "A feller which runs a store like this one and eats his meals in restaurants, understand me, must got to get a little home cooking once in a while. Ain't it?"
"Why not get married and be done with it?" Morris retorted; "and then you could get home cooking all the time."
Once more Gurin shook his head.
"Without love, Mr. Perlmutter, marriage is nix," he said.
"_Schmooes!_" Morris exclaimed. "Do you think when I got married I loved my wife, Gurin? _Oser_ a _stuck_. And to-day yet I am crazy about her.
With a business man, Gurin, love comes after marriage."
B. Gurin rose wearily to his feet and shot his cuffs by way of showing impatience.
"What is the use talking, Mr. Perlmutter?" he protested. "When I want to get married I would get married--otherwise not."
He flecked away an imaginary grain of dust from the lapel of his coat and walked slowly toward the door.
"Are you going home on the New Haven road _oder_ the Harlem road?" he asked.
Morris scowled, and his indignation lent such force to the gesture with which he put on his hat that the impact sounded like a blow on a tambourine.
"_Schon gut_, Gurin," he said. "I am through with you."
He paused at the doorway and lit a cigar.
"And one thing I could tell you, Gurin," he concluded. "Either you would send us a check the first thing to-morrow morning, _oder_ we would give your account to our lawyers, and that's all there is to it."
He puffed away at his cigar as he trudged down the street, and he had nearly reached the corner when he heard a familiar voice shouting: "Mr.
Perlmutter!" He turned to view B. Gurin hastening after him.
"Well, Gurin," he grunted, "what you want now?"
Gurin stopped and gasped for breath, and Morris's heart gave a triumphant leap as he noted the anxiety displayed on B. Gurin's clean-shaven features.
"Speak up, Gurin," he said; "I got to get my train."
Gurin smiled in surrender.
"All right, Mr. Perlmutter," he murmured; "make for me a date and I will look the lady over."
When Morris entered his place of business the next morning he found his partner examining the advertising columns of a morning paper with an absorption hardly justified by the tabulated list of births, marriages and deaths at which he was gazing.
"What's biting you now, Abe?" Morris demanded.
"What d'ye mean, what's biting me?" Abe rejoined, and Morris blushed in the consciousness of his oversleeping that morning by more than half an hour.
"Say, lookyhere, Abe," he cried. "I don't know what you are driving into, understand me, but if you think you could get _brogus_ at me just because I am ten minutes late once in a while, y'understand, let me tell you I am catching a twelve o'clock train from Mount Vernon last night, and not alone I am talking myself blue in the face to that feller Gurin, y'understand, but when I got home already I couldn't get to sleep till I told the whole thing to my Minnie yet."
Abe nodded slowly.
"Yes, Abe," Morris continued, "I got to go over the story twice over already, and even then, y'understand, my Minnie gets mad because I didn't contradict myself.
"Only one idee that woman got it in her head, Abe. If I am out of the house _schon_ ten minutes already you couldn't tell her otherwise but I am playing auction pinocle."
"Well, you might just as well of been playing auction pinocle last night for all the good it would do us."
"What are you talking about--all the good it would do us?" Morris almost whimpered.
"I actually got the feller dead to rights, Abe, and all I must do now is to work from the other end."
Abe burst into a mirthless laugh and handed Morris the paper.
"You should of worked the other end first, Mawruss," he declared, as he indicated an advertising item with his thumb. "That's what Leon Sammet did, Mawruss."
Morris seized the paper and his face grew purple as he read the following notice:
ENGAGED: Asimof--Gladstein. Mrs. Sonia Gladstein, of Bridgetown, Pa., to Jacob Asimof, of Dotyville, Pa. At home, Sunday next 3 to 7 at the residence of Mrs. Leah Sammet, 86-3/4 West One Hundredth and Eighteenth Street. No cards.
"Leon's mother makes the engagement party for 'em, Mawruss," Abe said dryly. "Costs a whole lot of money, too, and I bet yer Mrs. Gladstein wouldn't notice it at all in the next six months' statements Leon sends to her."
Morris stifled a groan as he laid down the paper and forced himself to smile confidently.
"What difference does an engagement make, Abe?" he asked. "An engagement ain't a wedding, Abe, and it ain't too late even now."
Again Abe indulged in a bitter laugh.
"You're a regular optician, Mawruss," he said. "You never give up hope."
"That's all right, Abe," Morris retorted. "We could stand a couple opticians in this concern. Always you are ready to lay down on a proposition just as soon as things goes a little wrong, understand me, but me I think differencely."
Abe shrugged and rose to his feet.
"Well, Mawruss," he said, "take off your hat and coat and stay a while.
Maybe we could do a little business here this morning for a change."
"Maybe we could and maybe we couldn't, Abe," Morris rejoined, as he b.u.t.toned up his coat; "but just the same I am going to do something which you will really be surprised."