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"Why," Scharley said, drawing vigorously on his imagination, "he says to me what a bright young feller he is and----"
Here he reflected that in a highly compet.i.tive trade like the cloak and suit business this statement sounded a trifle exaggerated.
"And," he went on hurriedly, "he told me how he saw you and him with Mrs. Lesengeld up at the hotel the other evening, and I says, 'What,' I says, 'you don't mean Mrs. Lesengeld whose husband used to was in the pants business?' and he said he didn't know, 'because,' I says, 'if that's the same party,' I says, 'I would like for her to come up to the hotel and take dinner with me some time,' I says."
He smiled cordially at Mrs. Lesengeld.
"And I hope you will," he concluded earnestly, "to-morrow night sure."
Mrs. Lesengeld shook her head.
"I ain't fixed to go to no swell hotel," she demurred. "I ain't got no clothes nor nothing."
"What do you care about clothes, Mrs. Lesengeld?" Scharley protested.
"And besides," Yetta said with sudden inspiration, "we could get up a little chafing-dish dinner in our room, ain't it?"
"For that matter we could do it in my room," Scharley cried, as there sounded a vigorous knocking on the outside of the door leading to the veranda, and a moment later Williams entered.
"Excuse me, Mr. Scharley," he said, "but I have to be getting back to the hotel and if you're quite through we'll go and look at that map of the lots down in the office."
Scharley waved his hand airily.
"Sit down, Mr. Williams," he said, "and drink the cup of coffee of your life."
He handed the room clerk a cigar.
"I could promise you one thing, Mr. Williams," he went on, "I got a great idee of buying some lots here and building a little house on 'em, _gemutlich_ just like this, and if I do, Williams, I would take them lots from you for certain sure. Only one thing, Williams, I want you to do me for a favour."
He paused and puffed carefully on his cigar.
"I want you to pick me out a couple good vacant rooms on the top floor of the Salisbury for Sat.u.r.day night," he said, "where I could give a shaving-dish party, so if any of the guests of the hotel objects, understand me, they wouldn't get the smell of the _Bortch_, coffee, and brown stewed fish sweet and sour."
On the following Wednesday afternoon Elkan sat at his desk, while Marcus Polatkin and Philip Scheikowitz leaned over his left shoulder and right shoulder respectively, and watched carefully the result of a pencilled addition which Elkan was making.
"With them crepe meteors," Elkan said at last, "Scharley's order comes to four thousand three hundred dollars."
Polatkin and Scheikowitz nodded in unison.
"It ain't bad for a start," Scheikowitz volunteered as he sat down and lit a cigar.
"For a finish, neither," Polatkin added, "so far as that's concerned."
Elkan wheeled round in his chair and grinned delightedly.
"And you ought to seen Sol Klinger when we walked into the Hanging Gardens," he said. "He got white like a sheet. It tickled Scharley to death, and he went right to work and put his arm through Mrs.
Lesengeld's arm and took her right down to the middle table, like she would be a queen already."
"Sure," Scheikowitz agreed, "what does a real merchant like Scharley care if she would wear a _sheitel oder_ not, so long as she is a lady already."
Elkan's grin spread until it threatened to engulf his ears.
"She didn't wear no _sheitel_," he said.
"What!" Scheikowitz cried. "I didn't think a religious woman like Mrs.
Lesengeld would take off her _sheitel_ at _her_ time of life."
"What d'ye mean _her_ time of life?" Elkan cried indignantly. "Friday afternoon yet before Yetta went home from her place there at Bognor Park, Mrs. Lesengeld says to her that a widder don't got to wear no _sheitel_ if she don't want to, which if you think, Mr. Scheikowitz, that fifty-three is a time of life, understand me, I think differencely, especially when I seen her with her hair all fixed up on Sat.u.r.day night."
"Who fixed it?" Marcus Polatkin asked, and Elkan grinned again.
"Who d'ye suppose?" he replied. "Why, her and Yetta spent pretty near an hour up in our room before they got through, and I tell yer with the way they turned up the hem and fixed the sleeves of one of Yetta's black dresses, it fitted her like it would be made for her."
"And did she look good in it?" Scheikowitz inquired.
"Did she look good in it!" Elkan exclaimed. "Well, you can just bet your life, Mr. Polatkin, that there Hortense Feldman wasn't one, two, six with her. In fact, Mr. Polatkin, you would take your oath already that there wasn't two years between 'em. I had a good chance to compare 'em on account when we went down to the Hanging Gardens, understand me, Miss Feldman sits at the next table already."
Polatkin smiled broadly.
"She must have had a big _Schreck_," he commented. "Why, B. Gans told me last Sat.u.r.day that Henry D. Feldman thinks that he's going to fix the whole thing up between her and Scharley."
"I guess he ain't got that idee no longer," Elkan declared, "because everybody in Egremont knows Scharley was down visiting Mrs. Lesengeld over Sunday, and takes her and her daughter Fannie and Fannie's husband out oitermobiling."
"You don't tell me?" Scheikowitz exclaimed.
"Furthermore, on Monday," Elkan continued, "he goes down there to dinner with me and Yetta, and Mrs. Lesengeld cooks some _Tebeches_ which fairly melts in your mouth already."
He smacked his lips over the recollection.
"Yesterday, as you know," he went on, "I took Scharley and Mrs.
Lesengeld over to Coney Island in an oitermobile and to-night yet we are all going sailing on Egremont Bay."
Polatkin rose to his feet and shrugged his shoulders.
"Well," he said, "why not? They're about the same age."
"He's two years older as she is," Elkan declared, "and I bet yer they wouldn't lose no time. It'll be next fall sure."
One busy morning three months later Elkan ripped open a heavy cream-laid envelope and drew out the following announcement, engraved in shaded old English type:
=Mrs. Fannie Stubin= =has the honor of announcing the marriage= =of her mother=
=Mrs. Sarah Lesengeld= =to= =Mr. Jacob Scharley=