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Potash here."
He took the stairs to the cutting-room three at a jump. "Abe," he cried, "Miss Aaronson is downstairs."
Abe's face, which wore a worried frown, grew darker still as he regarded his partner malevolently. "What's the matter with you, Mawruss?" he said. "Can't you remember a simple name like Atkinson?"
"Atkinson!" Morris cried. "That's it--_Atkinson_. I've been trying to remember it that name for four hours already. But, anyhow, she's downstairs, Abe."
Abe rose from his task and made at once for the stairs, with Morris following at his heels. In four strides he had reached the show-room, but no sooner had he crossed the threshold than he started back violently, thereby knocking the breath out of Morris, who was nearly precipitated to the floor.
"Morris," he hissed, "who is that there lady?"
"Why," Morris answered, "that's Miss Aaronson--I mean Atkinson--ain't it?"
"Atkinson!" Abe yelled. "That ain't Miss Atkinson."
"Then who _is_ she?" Morris asked.
"Who _is_ she?" Abe repeated. "That's a fine question for you to ask _me_. You take a lady for a fifteen-dollar oitermobile ride, and spend it as much more for lunch in her, _and you don't even know her name_!"
A cold perspiration broke out on Morris and he fairly staggered into the show-room. "Lady," he croaked, "do me a favor and tell me what is your name, please."
The lady laughed. "Well, Mr. Perlmutter," she said, "I'm sure this is most extraordinary. Of course, there is such a thing as combining business and pleasure; but, as I told Mr. Tuchman when he insisted on taking me up to the Heatherbloom Inn, the Board of Trustees control the placing of the orders. I have only a perfunctory duty to perform when I examine the finished clothing."
"Board of Trustees!" Morris exclaimed.
"Yes, the Board of Trustees of the Home for Female Orphans of Veterans, at Oceanhurst, Long Island. I am the superintendent--Miss Taylor--and I had an appointment at Lapidus & Elenbogen's to inspect a thousand blue-serge suits. Lapidus & Elenbogen were the successful bidders, you know. And there was really no reason for Mr. Tuchman's hospitality, since I had nothing whatever to do with their receiving the contract, nor could I possibly influence the placing of any future orders."
Morris nodded slowly. "So you ain't Miss Atkinson, then, lady?" he said.
The lady laughed again. "I'm very sorry if I'm the innocent recipient under false pretenses of a lunch and an automobile ride," she said, rising. "And you'll excuse me if I must hurry away to keep my appointment at Lapidus & Elenbogen's? I have to catch a train back to Oceanhurst at five o'clock, too."
She held out her hand and Morris took it sheepishly.
"I hope you'll forgive me," she said.
"I can't blame _you_, lady," Morris replied as they went toward the front door. "It ain't _your_ fault, lady."
He held the door open for her. "And as for that Max Tuchman," he said, "I hope they send him up for life."
Abe stood in the show-room doorway as Morris returned from the front of the store and fixed his partner with a terrible glare. "Yes, Mawruss,"
he said, "you're a fine piece of work, I must say."
Morris shrugged his shoulders and sat down. "That's what comes of not minding your own business," he retorted. "I'm the inside, Abe, and you're the outside, and it's your business to look after the out-of-town trade. I told you I don't know nothing about this here lady-buyer business. You ordered the oitermobile. I ain't got nothing to do with it, and, anyhow, I don't want to hear no more about it."
A pulse was beating in Abe's cheeks as he paced up and down before replying.
"_You_ don't want to hear no more about it, Mawruss, I know," he said; "but _I_ want to hear about it. I got a _right_ to hear about it, Mawruss. I got a right to hear it how a man could make such a fool out of himself. Tell me, Mawruss, what name did you ask it for when you went to the clerk at the Prince William Hotel?"
Morris jumped to his feet. "Lillian Russell!" he roared, and banged the show-room door behind him.
For the remainder of the day Morris and Abe avoided each other, and it was not until the next morning that Morris ventured to address his partner.
"Did you get it any word from Marcus Bramson?" he asked.
"I ain't seen nor heard nothing," Abe replied. "I can't understand it, Mawruss; the man promised me, mind you, he would be here sure. Maybe you seen him up to the hotel, Mawruss?"
"I seen him," Morris replied, "but not at the hotel, Abe. I seen him up at that Heatherbloom Inn, Abe--with a lady."
"With a lady?" Abe cried. "Are you sure it was a lady, Mawruss? Maybe she was a relation."
"Relations you don't take it to expensive places like the Heatherbloom Inn, Abe," Morris replied. "And, anyhow, this wasn't no relation, Abe; this was a lady. Why should a man blush for a relation, ain't it?"
"Did he blush?" Abe asked; but the question remained unanswered, for as Morris was about to reply the store door opened and Marcus Bramson entered.
"Ah, Mr. Bramson," Abe cried, "ain't it a beautiful weather?"
He seized the newcomer by the hand and shook it up and down. Mr. Bramson received the greeting solemnly.
"Abe," he said, "I am a man of my word, ain't it? And so I come here to buy goods; but, all the same, I tell you the truth: I was pretty near going to Lapidus & Elenbogen's."
"Lapidus & Elenbogen's!" Abe cried. "Why so?"
At this juncture Morris appeared at the show-room door and beamed at Mr. Bramson, who looked straight over his head in cold indifference; whereupon Morris found some business to attend to in the rear of the store.
"That's what I said," Mr. Bramson replied, "Lapidus & Elenbogen's; and you would of deserved it."
"Mr. Bramson," Abe protested, "did I ever done you something that you should talk that way?"
"_Me_ you never done nothing to, Abe," said Mr. Bramson, "but to treat a lady what _is_ a lady, Abe, like a dawg, Abe, I must say it I'm surprised.
"_I_ never treated no lady like a dawg, Mr. Bramson," Abe replied. "You must be mistaken."
"Well, maybe it wasn't you, Abe," Mr. Bramson went on; "but if it wasn't you it was your partner there, that Mawruss Perlmutter. Yesterday I seen him up to the Heatherbloom Inn, Abe, and I a.s.sure you, Abe, I was never before in my life in such a high-price place--coffee and cake, Abe, believe me, one dollar and a quarter."
He paused to let the information sink in. "But what could I do?" he asked. "I was walking through the side entrance of the Prince William Hotel yesterday, Abe, just on my way down to see you, when I seen it a lady sitting on a bench, looking like she would like to cry only for shame for the people. Well, Abe, I looked again, Abe, and would you believe it, Abe, it was Miss Atkinson, what used to work for me as saleswoman and got a job by The Golden Rule Store, Elmira, as a.s.sistant buyer, and is now buyer by Moe Gerschel, The Emporium, Duluth."
Abe nodded; he knew what was coming.
"So, naturally, I asks her what it is the matter with her, and she says Potash & Perlmutter had an appointment to take her out in an oitermobile at two o'clock, and here it was three o'clock already and they ain't showed up yet. Potash & Perlmutter is friends of mine, Miss Atkinson, I says, and I'm sure something must have happened, or otherwise they would not of failed to be here. So I says for her to ring you up, Abe, and find out. But she says she would see you first in--she wouldn't ring you up for all the oitermobiles in New York. So I says, well, I says, if you don't want to ring 'em up _I'll_ ring 'em up; and she says I should mind my own business. So then I says, if _you_ wouldn't ring 'em up and _I_ wouldn't ring 'em up I'll do _this_ for you, Miss Atkinson: You and me will go for an oitermobile ride, I says, and we'll have just so good a time as if Potash & Perlmutter was paying for it. And so we did, Abe. I took Miss Atkinson up to the Heatherbloom Inn, and it costed me thirty dollars, Abe, including a cigar, which I wouldn't charge you nothing for."
"Charge _me_ nothing!" Abe cried. "Of course you wouldn't charge me nothing. You wouldn't charge me nothing, Mr. Bramson, because I wouldn't _pay_ you nothing. I didn't ask you to take Miss Atkinson out in an oitermobile."
"I know you didn't, Abe," Mr. Bramson replied firmly, "but either you will pay for it or I will go over to Lapidus & Elenbogen's and _they_ will pay for it. They'll be only too glad to pay for it, Abe, because I bet yer Miss Atkinson she give 'em a pretty big order already, Abe."
Abe frowned and then shrugged. "All right," he said; "if I must I must.
So come on now, Mr. Bramson, and look over the line."
In the meantime Morris had repaired to the bookkeeper's desk and was looking over the daybook with an unseeing eye. His mind was occupied with bitter reflections when Ralph Tuchman interrupted him.