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they will add it to the cost of their garments; and, Aaron, if you want any fourth, fifth, or sixth places I could stand here talking for an hour. But you got business to attend to, Aaron, and so you must excuse me."

      He thrust his hands into his trousers-pockets and walked stolidly toward the cutting room, while Aaron blinked in default of a suitable rejoinder.

      "My partner is right, Aaron," Max said. "He is right, Aaron, even if he is the kind of feller that would throw me out of the window, supposing I says half the things to you as he did. But, anyhow, Aaron, that ain't neither here nor there. You heard what Sam says, Aaron, and me, I stick to it also."

      Aaron blinked once or twice more and then he put on his hat.

      "All right," he said. "All right."

      He turned toward the front of the showroom where his nephew was sorting over a pile of garments.

      "Fillup!" he bellowed. "You should put on your hat and coat and come with me."

      It was during the third month of Philip Pinsky's employment with Greenberg & Sen that Blaukopf, the druggist, insisted on a new coat of white paint for the interior of his up-to-date store at the northwest corner of Madison Avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-second Street. His landlord demurred at first, but finally, in the middle of June, a painter's wagon stopped in front of the store and Harris Shein, painter and decorator, alighted with two assistants. They conveyed into the store pots of white lead and cans of turpentine, gasoline, and other inflammable liquids used in the removal and mixing of paints. Harris Shein was smoking a paper cigarette, and one of the assistants, profiting by his employer's example, pulled a corncob pipe from his pocket. Then, after he had packed the tobacco down firmly with his finger, he drew a match across the seat of his trousers and forthwith he began a three months' period of enforced abstinence from house-painting and decorating. Simultaneously Blaukopf's plate-glass show-window fell into the street, the horse ran away with the painter's wagon, a policeman turned in a fire alarm, three thousand children came on the run from a radius of ten blocks, and Mr. Blaukopf's stock in trade punctuated the cremation of his fixtures with loud explosions at uncertain intervals. In less than half an hour the entire building was gutted, and when the firemen withdrew their apparatus Mr. Blaukopf searched in vain for his prescription books. They had resolved themselves into their original elements, and the number on the label of the bottle which Aaron carried around in his breast-pocket provided no clew to the ingredients of the medicine thus contained.

      "That's a fine note," Aaron declared to Philip, as they surveyed the black ruins the next morning. "Now what would I do? Without that medicine I will cough my face off already."

      He examined the label of the bottle and sighed.

      "I suppose I could go and see that Doctor Goldenreich," he said, "and right away I am out ten dollars."

      "Why don't you ring up Miss Meyerson over at Zaretsky & Fatkin's?" Philip suggested.

      Aaron sighed heavily. His business relations with Greenberg & Sen had proved far from satisfactory, and it was only Philip's job and his own sense of shame that prevented him from resuming his dealings with Zaretsky & Fatkin.

      As for Sam and Max, they missed their old customer both financially and socially.

      "Yes, Sam," Max said the day after Blaukopf's fire, "things ain't the same around here like in former times already."

      "If you mean in the office, Max," Sam said, "I'm glad they ain't. That's a fine bookkeeper we got it, Max, and a fine woman, too. Ain't it a shame and a disgrace for young fellers nowadays, Max, that a fine woman like Miss Meyerson is already thirty-five and should be single? My Sarah is crazy about her. Her and Sarah goes to a matinee last Saturday afternoon together and Sarah asks her to dinner to-morrow."

      Max nodded.

      "With some bookkeepers, Sam," he said, "you couldn't do such things. Right away they would take advantage. Miss Meyerson, that's something else again. She takes an interest in our business, Sam. Even a grouch like Aaron Pinsky she treated good."

      "I bet yer," Sam replied. "I seen Elenbogen in the subway this morning and he tells me Aaron goes around blowing about paying a thousand dollars to a professor uptown and he gives him a medicine which cures his cough completely. I bet yer that's the same medicine which he got it originally from Miss Meyerson."

      "I bet yer," Max agreed as the telephone bell rang. Sam hastened to answer it.

      "Hallo!" he said. "Yes, this is Zaretsky & Fatkin. You want to speak to Miss Meyerson? All right. Miss Meyerson! Telephone!"

      Miss Meyerson came from her office and took the receiver from Sam.

      "Hello," she said. "Who is this, please?"

      The answer made her clap her hand over the transmitter.

      "It's Aaron Pinsky," she said to Max, and both partners sprang to their feet.

      "What does he want?" Sam hissed.

      Miss Meyerson waved them to silence and resumed her conversation over the 'phone.

      "Hello, Mr. Pinsky," she said. "What can I do for you?"

      She listened patiently to Aaron's narrative of the fire in Blaukopf's drug store, and when he had concluded she winked furtively at her employers.

      "Mr. Pinsky," she said, "won't you repeat that over again? I didn't understand it."

      Once more Aaron explained the details of the prescription book's incineration, and again Miss Meyerson winked.

      "Mr. Pinsky," she said, "I can't make out what you say. Why don't you stop in here at twelve o'clock? Mr. Zaretsky is going to Newark and Mr. Fatkin will be out to lunch."

      She listened carefully for a few minutes and then her face broke into a broad grin.

      "All right, Mr. Pinsky," she concluded. "Good-bye."

      She turned to her employers.

      "He's coming here at twelve o'clock," she said. "He told me that the drug store burnt down where he gets his cough medicine, and he wants another prescription. And I said I didn't understand him so as to get him over here."

      "Well, what good would that do?" Max asked.

      "I don't know exactly," Miss Meyerson answered, "but I saw Mr. Pinsky coming out of Greenberg & Sen's last week and he looked positively miserable. I guess he's just as anxious to get back here as you are to have him."

      "Sure, I know," Max commented, "but we wouldn't pay that young feller, Fillup, ten dollars a week, and that's all there is to it."

      "Perhaps you won't have to," said Miss Meyerson. "Perhaps if you leave this thing to me I can get Pinsky to come back here and have Philip stay over to Greenberg & Sen's."

      "Huh!" Max snorted. "A fine chance that boy got it to keep his job if Aaron Pinsky quits buying goods! They'll fire him on the spot."

      "Then we'll take him in here again," Sam declared. "He'll be glad to come back at the old figure, I bet yer."

      "That's all right," Max grunted. "Never meld your cards till you see what's in the widder. First, Miss Meyerson will talk to him, and then we will consider taking back Fillup."

      "Sure," Sam rejoined, "and you and me will go over to Wasserbauer's and wait there till Miss Meyerson telephones us."

      It was precisely twelve when the elevator stopped at Zaretsky & Fatkin's floor. Aaron Pinsky alighted and walked on tiptoe to the office.

      "Hallo, Miss Meyerson!" he said, extending his hand, "is any of the boys around?"

      "They're both out," Miss Meyerson replied, shaking Aaron's proffered hand. "It looks like old times to see you back here."

      "Don't it?" Pinsky said. "It feels like old times to me. Is the boys busy?"

      "Very," said Miss Meyerson. "We're doing twice the business that the books show we did a year ago."

      Aaron beamed.

      "That's good," he said. "Them boys deserves it, Miss Meyerson. When you come to consider it, Miss Meyerson, I got pretty good treatment here. The goods was always made up right and the prices also.

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