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Appointment in Samarra - John O'Hara [60]

By Root 5381 0
’re the kind of a guy that d fire me for what I been telling you, then you’re not the kind of a guy I always took you for, and I don t want to work for you. So that s that. Lute stood up slowly. Sit down, Lute. Julian was unable to say more than that. The two men sat opposite each other for a few minutes. Lute offered Julian a cigarette and Julian took it, and Julian gave Lute a light. Presently Julian said: What do you think I ought to do, Lute?

Gee, I wish I knew. I guess let it ride for the time being. You were cockeyed, and that s one consolation. Maybe Charney will take that into consideration. Aw, what the hell. We’ll get by. Don t take it to heart too much. I ll see you this afternoon around quitting time. I have to go to Collieryville now, but it ll work out one way or another. Shake?

Shake, said Julian. They shook hands and smiled, and Lute left, and Julian heard him telling Mary Klein that everything had been decided; they weren t going to handle automobiles any more; just airplanes. It isn’t true, is it, Mr. English? What Luther Fliegler just told me?

What did he tell you?

That we were going to stop selling cars and sell airplanes instead. I don t think there s any market for airplanes around here.

Don t let it worry you for a couple of years, Mary, said Julian. You know Lute.

And how! said Mary Klein. It was one of those mornings when he could tell himself that he was up to his ears in work or that he had nothing to do, and either with equal honesty. His hangover did not bother him inordinately; he knew he could work in spite of whatever effect the night before still maintained. He wanted to work; the difficulty was in getting started. He wanted to work to put things out of his mind, and he tried to the extent of getting out some scratch paper and pencils with the idea of working out some sort of summary or recapitulation of the year s business of the Gibbsville-Cadillac Motor Car Company. This was a good time to do that; when no salesmen would disturb him, and when there was nothing much else he could do. But the words, summary, recapitulation they made him think of Lute and how he had recapitulated and summarized his performance of the night before, including the consequences. The Quilty business well, he thought he knew what to expect there: O Dowd probably hadn t said a word to old Quilty, but when O Dowd did hear about Julian s throwing the highball at Harry Reilly, he would hotfoot out to Quilty and make the sale. O Dowd was a good salesman, and he knew how to handle a situation like this. Julian hated to lose that sale, too, because no matter how people joke about it, when you place a car with an undertaker, you have a pretty good advertisement. Undertakers keep their cars in the best of shape, black and gleaming and polished and clean. Julian knew this from his own reaction; he often had thought that if you had to die, it wouldn’t be so bad to ride to the cemetery in Quilty s luxurious hearse, followed by Quilty s well-kept Studebaker sedans. Whenever he heard the tune, Saint James Infirmary, he always thought of old Quilty. And the sale would be for cash. That wouldn’t be hard to take. It certainly made it hard to lose. He wondered if Harry Reilly had gone to work already. Harry was a very rich man and handling his investments and holdings was a full-time job, but he also managed to know what was going on in other people s businesses, and it would be just like him to know that old Quilty was thinking of buying a Cadillac. It was just the kind of thing he would know. After all, why shouldn t he know it? He had lent Julian twenty thousand dollars last summer, and that was a nice piece of change no matter how much Harry might be worth. It was enough to excuse any extraordinary interest Harry might be taking in Julian s business. Twenty thousand dollars! Why in God s name had he ever asked for that much? He knew perfectly well why he had asked for that much: at the time he needed ten thousand, but he figured he might as well get a good hunk while he was at it. Ten thousand had gone in no time: it cost, even with the cheap labor and construction costs of last summer, about eight thousand to build the inclined driveway inside the building, which he had calculated would mean eventually a great saving in electric power bills through decreased use of the elevator. So far it hadn t made much difference, if any. In fact, Julian would not have argued very long if someone suggested that the driveway was an ill-advised project. Then what else was there? Well, there were those two three-wheel motorcycles. The idea of them was a mechanic would ride the motorcycle to, say, the Davis garage, hook some kind of gadget on the Davis Cadillac, and drive the car, with the motorcycle trailing along behind, back to the Gibbsville-Cadillac Motor Car Company for servicing or repairs. That was another idea that was going to make a saving, but the saving, Julian was sure, had failed to make a showing on the books. And why two motorcycles? One was enough. More than enough. Then there were the trees, those beautiful, slender trees. Julian had conditioned himself against ever seeing them when he passed them, but now he made himself think of them. There they were out there in the little strip of grass along the curb. Seven-hundred and sixty-six dollars and forty-five cents worth of them, including freight and planting. Julian knew to the penny what they cost, but he still was not sure of the name of them. They had been purchased while he was in a fine, naturalistic mood as an aftermath of a City Beautiful luncheon. There had been trees a long time ago where the Gibbsville-Cadillac Motor Car Company now stood, and there had been trees along the curb, but they had been chopped down. Then one day Julian went to a City Beautiful luncheon and everybody got up and said a few words about trees and what they did for a residential section Julian s garage was in a residential section and by the oddest coincidence there chanced to be a man from a nursery at the luncheon, and Julian signed. And that about took care of the extra ten thousand dollars. The other ten thousand had gone for expenses, real ones, like payments on notes, payroll, and so on. Lute was right on another score: Ed Charney was a good customer. I m a good customer of Ed s, Julian reminded himself, but he s a better one of mine. Something ought to be done about Ed, but he supposed the best thing to do for the present was to lay off trying to fix it up. Yes, he certainly had loused things up last night: Ed Charney sore at him, Caroline well, he wouldn

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