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Aside from his clothing, however, there was little to betray the connoisseur of fine arts and antiques in the person of Jacob Paul, who possessed the brisk, businesslike manner and steel-blue eyes of a detective sergeant.
"h.e.l.lo, Ringentaub!" he said. "You are doing a rus.h.i.+ng business here--ain't it? More customers in the back room too?"
He glanced sharply at the open doorway in the part.i.tion, through which Elkan and Dishkes could be seen engaged in earnest conversation.
"_Yow_--customers!" Ringentaub exclaimed. "You know how it is in the antic business, Mr. Paul. For a hundred that looks, understand me, one buys; and that one, Mr. Paul, he comes into your place a dozen times before he makes up his mind yet."
"Well," Paul said with a smile, "I've made up my mind at last, Ringentaub, and I'll take them other two chairs at forty-five dollars."
Ringentaub nodded his head slowly.
"I thought you would, Mr. Paul," he said; "but just the same you are a little late, on account this here gentleman already bought 'em for fifty dollars."
A shade of disappointment pa.s.sed over Paul's face as he turned to Max Merech.
"I congratulate you, Mister----"
"Merech," Max suggested.
"Merech," Paul continued. "You paid a high price for a couple of good pieces."
"I ain't paying nothing," Max replied. "I bought 'em for this lady here and her husband."
It was then that Jacob Paul for the first time noticed Yetta's presence, and he bowed apologetically.
"Is he also a collector?" he asked, and Max shook his head.
"He's in the garment business," Yetta volunteered, "for himself."
A puzzled expression wrinkled Paul's flat nose.
"I guess I ain't caught the name," he said.
"Lubliner," Yetta replied; "Elkan Lubliner, of Polatkin, Scheikowitz & Company."
"You don't tell me?" Jacob Paul said. "And so Mr. Lubliner is interested in antiques. That's quite a jump, from cloaks and suits to antiques already."
"Well," Merech explained, "Mr. Lubliner is refurnis.h.i.+ng his house."
"Maybe," Elkan added as he appeared in the doorway of the part.i.tion, followed by Dishkes and Mrs. Ringentaub. "Buying a couple pieces of furniture is one thing, Merech, and refurnis.h.i.+ng your house is another."
"You made a good start anyhow," Paul interrupted. "A couple chairs like them gives a tone to a room which is got crayon portraits hanging in it even."
Yetta blushed in the consciousness of what she had always considered to be a fine likeness of Elkan's grandfather--the Lubliner _Rav_--which hung in a silver-and-plush frame over the mantelpiece of the Lubliner front parlour. Elkan was unashamed, however, and he glared angrily at the connoisseur, who had started to leave the store.
"I suppose," he cried, "it ain't up to date that a feller should have hanging in his flat a portrait of his grandfather--_olav hasholem!_--which he was a learned man and a _Tzadek_, if there ever was one."
Paul hesitated, with his hand on the doork.n.o.b.
"I'll tell you, Mr. Lubliner," he said solemnly; "to me a crayon portrait is rotten, understand me, if it would be of a _Tzadek oder_ a murderer."
And with a final bow to Mrs. Lubliner he banged the door behind him.
"Well, what d'ye think for a _Rosher_ like that?" Elkan exclaimed.
"The fellow is disappointed that you got ahead of him buying the chairs, Mr. Lubliner," Ringentaub explained; "so he takes a chance that you and Mrs. Lubliner is that kind of people which is got hanging in the parlour crayon portraits, understand me, and he knocks you for it."
Elkan shrugged his shoulders.
"What could you expect from a feller which is content at fifty years of age to be a collector only?" he asked, and Dishkes nodded sympathetically.
"I bet yer, Mr. Lubliner," he agreed; "and so I would be at your store to-morrow morning at ten o'clock sure."
"I don't doubt your word for a minute, Elkan," Marcus Polatkin said the following morning when Elkan related to him the events of the preceding night; "_aber_ you couldn't blame Sammet none. Concerns like Sammet Brothers, which they are such dirty crooks that everybody is got suspicions of 'em, y'understand, must got to pay their bills prompt to the day, Elkan; because if they wouldn't be themselves good collectors, understand me, they would bust up quick."
"Sammet Brothers ain't in no danger of busting up," Elkan declared.
"Ain't they?" Marcus rejoined. "Well, you would be surprised, Elkan, if I would tell you that only yesterday already I am speaking to a feller by the name Hirsch, which works for years by the Hamsuckett Mills as city salesman, understand me, and he says that the least Sammet Brothers owes them people is ten thousand dollars."
"That shows what a big business they must do," Elkan said.
"_Yow_--a big business!" Marcus concluded. "This here Hirsch says not only Sammet Brothers' business falls off something terrible, y'understand, but they are also getting to be pretty slow pay; and if it wouldn't be that the Hamsuckett people is helping 'em along, _verstehst du_, they would of gone up _schon_ long since already."
"And a good job too," Elkan said. "The cloak-and-suit trade could worry along without 'em, Mr. Polatkin; but anyhow, Mr. Polatkin, I ain't concerned with Sammet Brothers. The point is this: Dishkes says he has got a good stand there on Amsterdam Avenue, and if he could only hold on a couple months longer he wouldn't got no difficulty in pulling through."
Polatkin shrugged his shoulders.
"For my part," he said, "it wouldn't make no difference if Dishkes busts up now _oder_ two months from now."
"But the way he tells me yesterday," Elkan replied, "not only he wouldn't got to bust up on us if he gets his two months' extension, but he says he would be doing a good business at that time."
Polatkin nodded skeptically.
"Sure, I know, Elkan," he said. "If everybody which is asking an extension would do the business they hope to do before the extension is up, Elkan," he said, "all the prompt-pay fellows must got to close up shop on account there wouldn't be enough business to go round."
"Well, anyhow," Elkan rejoined, "he's coming here to see us this morning, Mr. Polatkin, and he could show you how he figures it that he's got hopes to pull through."
Polatkin made a deprecatory gesture with his hand.
"If a feller is going to bust up on me, Elkan, I'd just as lief he ain't got no hopes at all," he grumbled; "otherwise he wastes your whole day on you figuring out his next season's profits if he can only stall off his creditors. With such a hoping feller, if you don't want to be out time as well as money, understand me, you should quick file a pet.i.tion in bankruptcy against him; otherwise he wouldn't give you no peace at all."
Nevertheless, when Dishkes arrived, half an hour later, Polatkin ushered him into the firm's office and summoned Scheikowitz and Elkan to the conference.
"Well, Dishkes," he said in kindly accents, "you are up against it."
Dishkes nodded. He was by no means of a robust physical type, and his hands trembled so nervously as he fumbled for his papers in his breast pocket that he dropped its contents on the office floor. Elkan stooped to a.s.sist in retrieving the scattered papers, and among the doc.u.ments he gathered together was a cabinet photograph.