The Competitive Nephew Part 39
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"Suppose she don't," Lesengeld commented. "Ain't it better she should spoil some _Tzimmus_ which all it's got into it is carrots, potatoes, and a little chuck? If it would be that she makes a failure _mit Ganse oder_ chickens which it really costs money, understand me, then you got a right to kick."
"That's what I says," Belz replied, "_aber_ that Miss Duckman takes everything so particular. She kicks about it all the way up in the subway, which the next time I get one of my wife's relations in a Home, either it would be so far away she couldn't come to see us at all, or it would be so nearby that I don't got to lose a night's rest seeing her home. I didn't get to bed till pretty near two o'clock."
He stifled a yawn as he sat down at his desk.
"All the same, Lesengeld," he added, "they certainly got a nice place up there for old women. There's lots of respectable business men pays ten dollars a week for their wives in the Catskills already which they don't got it so comfortable. Ain't it a shame, Lesengeld, that with a charity like that which is really a charity, people don't support it better as they do?"
"I bet yer!" Lesengeld cried. "The way some people acts not only they ain't got no hearts, y'understand, but they ain't got no sense, neither. I seen a case yesterday where an old _Rosher_ actually refuses to pay a month's rent for his son's widder _mit_ a little boy, to save 'em being put out on the sidewalk. Afterward he goes broke, understand me, and when the boy grows up he's got the nerve to make a touch from him a couple of dollars and the boy goes to work and gives it to him.
If I would be the boy the old man could starve to death; I wouldn't give him not one cent. They call us sharks, Belz, but compared with such a _Haman_ we ain't even sardines."
"Sure, I know," Belz said as he consulted the firm's diary; "and if you wouldn't waste your time going on so many moving pictures, Lesengeld, might you would attend to business maybe. Yesterday was ten days that feller Rudnik's mortgage is past due, and what did you done about it?
Nothing, I suppose."
"Suppose again, Belz," Lesengeld retorted. "A feller was in here to see me about it and I agreed we would give Rudnik an extension."
"What!" Belz cried. "You agreed you would give him an extension! Are you crazy _oder_ what? The way money is so tight nowadays and real estate gone to h.e.l.landall, we as good as could get a deed of that house from that feller."
"Sure we could," Lesengeld replied calmly, "but we ain't going to. Once in a while, Belz, even in the second-mortgage business, circ.u.mstances alters cases, and this here is one of them cases; so before you are calling me all kinds of suckers, understand me, you should be so good and listen to what I got to tell you."
Belz shrugged his shoulders resignedly.
"Go as far as you like," he said, "_aber_ if it's something which you seen it on a moving pictures, Lesengeld, I don't want to hear it at all."
"It didn't happen on a moving pictures, Belz, but just the same if even you would seen it on a moving pictures you would say to yourself that with a couple of fellers like you and me, which a few hundred dollars one way or the other wouldn't make or break us, understand me, we would be all kinds of crooks and highwaymen if we would went to work and turn a lot of old widders out into the street."
"Lesengeld," Belz shouted impatiently, "do me the favour and don't make no speeches. What has turning a lot of old widders into the street got to do with Rudnik's mortgage?"
"It's got a whole lot to do with it," Lesengeld replied, "because Rudnik's house he is leaving to a Home for old women, and if we take away the house from him then the Home wouldn't get his house, and the Home is in such shape, Belz, that if it wouldn't make a big killing in the way of a legacy soon they would bust up sure."
"And that's all the reason why we should extend the mortgage on Rudnik?" Belz demanded.
"That's all the reason," Lesengeld answered; "with three hundred and fifty dollars a bonus."
"Then all I could say is," Belz declared, "we wouldn't do nothing of the kind. What is three =hundred and fifty dollars a bonus in these times, Lesengeld?"
"But the Home," Lesengeld protested.
"The Home should bust up," Belz cried. "What do I care about the Home?"
"_Aber_ the widders?" Lesengeld insisted. "If the Home busts up the widders is thrown into the street. Ain't it?"
"What is that my fault, Lesengeld? Did I make 'em widders?"
"Sure, I know, Belz; _aber_ one or two of 'em ain't widders. One or two of 'em is old maids and they would got to go and live back with their relations. Especially"--he concluded with a twinkle in his eye--"especially one of 'em by the name Blooma Duckman."
"Do you mean to told me," Belz faltered, "that them now--widders is in the Bella Hirshkind Home?"
"For Indignant Females," Lesengeld added, "which Max Schindelberger is president from it also."
Belz nodded and remained silent for at least five minutes.
"I'll tell you, Lesengeld," he said at last, "after all it's a hard thing a woman should be left a widder."
"You bet your life it's a hard thing, Belz!" Lesengeld agreed fervently. "Last week I seen it a woman she is kissing her husband good-bye, and the baby also kisses him good-bye--decent, respectable, hard-working people, understand me--and not two minutes later he gets run down by a trollyer car. The next week they take away from her the furniture, understand me, and she puts the baby into a day nursery, and what happens after that I didn't wait to see at all. Cost me ten cents yet in a drug store for some mathematic spirits of ammonia for Mrs.
Lesengeld--she carries on so terrible about it."
Belz sighed tremulously.
"All right, Lesengeld," he said; "write Rudnik we would extend the mortgage and he should call here to-morrow."
"If I got to lose the house I got to lose it," Harris Rudnik declared as he sat in B. Lesengeld's revolving chair on the following morning.
"I ain't got long to live anyhow."
He tucked his hands into his coat-pocket and glared balefully at Schindelberger, who shrugged his shoulders.
"That's the way he is talking right along," he said. "Did you ever hear the like? Mind you, it ain't that he's got anybody he should leave the house to, Mr. Belz, but he ain't got no use for women."
"What d'ye mean, I ain't got no use for women?" Rudnik cried. "I got just so much use for women as you got it, _aber_ not for a lot of women which all their lives men make suckers of themselves working their heads off they should keep 'em in luxury, understand me, and then the men dies, y'understand, right away the widders is put in homes and other men which ain't related to 'em at all must got to leave 'em their hard-earned _Geld_, Mr. Belz, so they could sit with their hands folded doing nothing."
"What are you talking nonsense doing nothing!" Schindelberger retorted.
"Them old women works like anything up there. I told you before a dozen times, Rudnik, them women is making underwear and jelly and stockings and _Gott weiss was noch_."
Rudnik turned appealingly to Belz.
"Mr. Belz," he said, "do me the favour and let me leave my money to a _Talmud Torah oder_ a Free Loan a.s.sociation."
"Free Loan a.s.sociation!" Lesengeld and Belz exclaimed with one voice.
"An idee!" Belz shouted. "What d'ye take us for, Rudnik? You are going too far."
"Cutthroats!" Lesengeld muttered hoa.r.s.ely. "Stealing bread out of people's mouths yet. A lot of people goes to them _Roshoyim_ and fools 'em into lending 'em money they should play _Stuss_ and _Tarrok_, while their families is starving yet. If you want to leave your house to a Free Loan a.s.sociation, Rudnik, you might just so well blow it up _mit_ dynamite and be done with it."
"_Aber_ a _Talmud Torah_ School," Rudnik cried; "that's something which you couldn't got no objection to."
"Don't talk like a fool, Rudnik!" Schindelberger interrupted. "When you got a chance to leave your money to a Home for widders, what are you fooling away your time making suggestions like _Talmud Torah_ schools for? A young feller would get along in business if he never even seen the outside of a _Talmud Torah_, _aber_ if the widders lose their Home, understand me, they would starve to death."
"Yow, they would starve to death!" Rudnik said. "You could trust a widder she wouldn't starve, Mr. Schindelberger. Them which didn't got no relations they could easy find suckers to give 'em money, and them which did got relations, their families should look after 'em."
Belz grew crimson with pent-up indignation.
"Loafer!" he roared. "What d'ye mean, their families should look after 'em?"
Belz walked furiously up and down the office and glowered at the trembling and confused Rudnik.
"Seemingly you ain't got no feelings at all, Rudnik," he continued.
"Schindelberger tells you over and over again they are working them poor widders to death up there, and yet you want to take away the roofs from their backs even."
The Competitive Nephew Part 39
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The Competitive Nephew Part 39 summary
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