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'If he sold it reasonably,' added Mendel.
'Even unreasonably you must make a sacrifice for the Sabbath,' said the _Parna.s.s_. 'Besides, divided among the lot of you, the loss would be little.'
'And you can buy in my barometer with the rest,' added Peleg.
'We could call a meeting of marine-dealers,' said Barzinsky, disregarding him. 'We could say to them we must sacrifice ourselves for our religion.'
'Tell that to the marine-dealers!' murmured Straumann.
'And that we must buy out the Sabbath-breaker at any cost.'
'Buy! buy!' said Straumann. 'If you'd only thought of that sort of "Buy! buy!" at the first!'
'Order, order!' said the _Parna.s.s_.
'It would be more in order,' said Straumann, 'to appoint an executive sub-committee to deal with the question. I'm sick of it. And surely we as a Synagogue Council can't be in order in ordering some of our members to buy out another.'
'Hear, hear!' His suggestion found general approval. It took a long discussion, however, before the synagogue decided to wash its hands of responsibility, and give over to a sub-committee of three the task of ridding Sudminster of its plague-spot by any means that commended itself to them.
Solomon Barzinsky, Ephraim Mendel, and Peleg the p.a.w.nbroker were elected to const.i.tute this Council of Three.
XVII
The glad news spread through the Sudminster Congregation that Simeon Samuels had at last been bought out--at a terrible loss to the martyred marine-dealers who had had to load themselves with chutney and other unheard-of and unsaleable stock. But they would get back their losses, it was felt, by the removal of his rivalry. Carts were drawn up before the dismantled plate-gla.s.s window carrying off its criminal contents, and Simeon Samuels stood stroking his beard amid the ruins.
Then the shop closed; the shutters that should have honoured the Sabbath now depressed the Tuesday. Simeon Samuels was seen to get into the London train. The demon that troubled their sanct.i.ty had been exorcised. A great peace reigned in every heart, almost like the Sabbath peace coming into the middle of the week.
'If they had only taken my advice earlier,' said Solomon Barzinsky to his wife, as he rolled his forkful of beef in the chutney.
'You can write to your father, Deborah,' said Lazarus Levy, 'that we no longer need the superior reach-me-downs.'
On the Wednesday strange new rumours began to circulate, and those who hastened to confirm them stood dumbfounded before great posters on all the shutters:
CLOSED FOR RE-STOCKING
THE OLD-FAs.h.i.+ONED STOCK OF THIS BUSINESS HAVING BEEN SOLD OFF TO THE TRADE,
SIMEON SAMUELS
IS TAKING THE OPPORTUNITY TO LAY IN THE BEST AND MOST UP-TO-DATE LONDON AND CONTINENTAL GOODS FOR HIS CUSTOMERS.
_BARGAINS AND NOVELTIES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT._
RE-OPEN SAt.u.r.dAY NEXT
XVIII
A hurried emergency meeting of the Executive Sub-Committee was called.
'He has swindled us,' said Solomon Barzinsky. 'This paper signed by him merely undertakes to shut up his shop. And he will plead he meant for a day or two.'
'And he agreed to leave the town,' wailed Peleg, 'but he meant to buy goods.'
'Well, we can have the law of him,' said Mendel. 'We paid him compensation for disturbance.'
'And can't he claim he _was_ disturbed?' shrieked Barzinsky. 'His whole stock turned upside down!'
'Let him claim!' said Mendel. 'There is such a thing as obtaining money under false pretences.'
'And such a thing as becoming the laughing-stock of the heathen,' said Peleg. 'We must grin and bear it ourselves.'
'It's all very well for you to grin,' said Solomon tartly. '_We've_ got to bear it. You didn't take over any of his old rubbish.'
'Didn't I, indeed? What about the barometer?'
'Confound your barometer!' cried Ephraim Mendel. 'I'll have the law of him; I've made up my mind.'
'Well, you'll have to bear the cost, then,' said Peleg. 'It's none of my business.'
'Yes, it is,' shouted Mendel. 'As a member of the Sub-Committee you can't dissociate yourselves from us.'
'A nice idea that--I'm to be dragged into your law-suits!'
'Hush, leave off these squabbles!' said Solomon Barzinsky. 'The law is slow, and not even sure. The time has come for desperate measures. We must root out the plague-spot with our own hands.'
'Hear, hear,' said the rest of the Sub-Committee.
XIX
On the succeeding Sabbath Simeon Samuels was not the only figure in the synagogue absorbed in devotion. Solomon Barzinsky, Ephraim Mendel, and Peleg the p.a.w.nbroker were all rapt in equal piety, while the rest of the congregation was shaken with dreadful gossip about them. Their shops were open, too, it would seem.
Immediately after the service the _Parna.s.s_ arrested Solomon Barzinsky's exit, and asked him if the rumour were true.
'Perfectly true,' replied Solomon placidly. 'The Executive Sub-Committee pa.s.sed the resolution to----'
'To break the Sabbath!' interrupted the _Parna.s.s_.
'We had already sacrificed our money; there was nothing left but to sacrifice our deepest feelings----'
'But what for?'
'Why, to destroy his advantage, of course. Five-sixths of his Sabbath profits depend on the marine-dealers closing, and when he sees he's breaking the Sabbath in vain----'
'Rubbis.h.!.+ You are asked to stop a congregational infection, and you----'
'Vaccinate ourselves with the same stuff, to make sure the attack shall be light.'