An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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âYou like the coat, eh?â was Rubensteinâs ingratiating comment as she opened the door. âWell, that shows you have good taste, Iâll say. Thatâs one of the nobbiest little coats weâve ever had to show in this store yet. A real beauty, that. And how it would look on such a beautiful girl as you!â He took it out of the window and held it up. âI seen you when you was looking at it yesterday.â A gleam of greedy admiration was in his eye.
And noting this, and feeling that a remote and yet not wholly unfriendly air would win her more consideration and courtesy than a more intimate one, Hortense merely said, âYes?â
âYes, indeed. And I said right away, thereâs a girl that knows a really swell coat when she sees it.â
The flattering unction soothed, in spite of herself.
âLook at that! Look at that!â went on Mr. Rubinstein, turning the coat about and holding it before her. âWhere in Kansas City will you find anything to equal that today? Look at this silk lining hereâ âgenuine Mallinson silkâ âand these slant pockets. And the buttons. You think those things donât make a different-looking coat? There ainât another one like it in Kansas City todayâ ânot one. And there wonât be. We designed it ourselves and we never repeat our models. We protect our customers. But come back here.â (He led the way to a triple mirror at the back.) âIt takes the right person to wear a coat like thisâ âto get the best effect out of it. Let me try it on you.â
And by the artificial light Hortense was now privileged to see how really fetching she did look in it. She cocked her head and twisted and turned and buried one small ear in the fur, while Mr. Rubenstein stood by, eyeing her with not a little admiration and almost rubbing his hands.
âThere now,â he continued. âLook at that. What do you say to that, eh? Didnât I tell you it was the very thing for you? A find for you. A pickup. Youâll never get another coat like that in this city. If you do, Iâll make you a present of this one.â He came very near, extending his plump hands, palms up.
âWell, I must say it does look smart on me,â commented Hortense, her vainglorious soul yearning for it. âI can wear anything like this, though.â She twisted and turned the more, forgetting him entirely and the effect her interest would have on his cost price. Then she added: âHow much is it?â
âWell, itâs really a two-hundred-dollar coat,â began Mr. Rubenstein artfully. Then noting a shadow of relinquishment pass swiftly over Hortenseâs face, he added quickly: âThat sounds like a lot of money, but of course we donât ask so much for it down here. One hundred and fifty is our price. But if that coat was at Jarekâs, thatâs what youâd pay for it and more. We havenât got the location here and we donât have to pay the high rents. But itâs worth every cent of two hundred.â
âWhy, I think thatâs a terrible price to ask for it, just awful,â exclaimed Hortense sadly, beginning to remove the coat. She was feeling as though life were depriving her of nearly all that was worth while. âWhy, at Biggs and Beckâs they have lots of three-quarter mink and beaver coats for that much, and classy styles, too.â
âMaybe, maybe. But not that coat,â insisted Mr. Rubenstein stubbornly. âJust look at it again. Look at the collar. You mean to say you can find a coat like that up there? If you can, Iâll buy the coat for you and sell it to you again for a hundred dollars. Actually, this is a special coat. Itâs copied from one of the smartest coats that was in New York last summer before the season opened. It has class. You wonât find no coat like this coat.â
âOh, well, just the same, a hundred and fifty dollars is more than I can pay,â commented Hortense dolefully, at the same time slipping on her old broadcloth jacket with the fur collar and cuffs, and edging toward the door.
âWait! You like the coat?â wisely observed Mr. Rubenstein, after deciding that even a hundred dollars was too much for her purse, unless it could be supplemented by some manâs. âItâs really a two-hundred-dollar coat. Iâm telling you that straight. Our regular price is one hundred and fifty. But if you could bring me a hundred and twenty-five dollars, since you want it so much, well, Iâll let you have it for that. And thatâs like finding it. A stunning-looking girl like you oughtnât to have no trouble in finding a dozen fellows who would be glad to buy that coat and give it to you. I know I would, if I thought you would be nice to me.â
He beamed ingratiatingly up at her, and Hortense, sensing the nature of the overture and resenting itâ âfrom himâ âdrew back slightly. At the same time she was not wholly displeased by the compliment involved. But she was not coarse enough, as yet, to feel that just anyone should be allowed to give her anything. Indeed not. It must be someone she liked, or at least someone that was enslaved by her.
And yet, even as Mr. Rubenstein spoke, and for some time afterwards, her mind began running upon possible individualsâ âfavoritesâ âwho, by the necromancy of her charm for them, might be induced to procure this coat for her. Charlie Wilkens for instanceâ âhe of the Orphia cigar storeâ âwho was most certainly devoted to her after his fashion, but a fashion, however, which did not suggest that he might do much for her without getting a good deal in return.
And then there was Robert Kain, another youthâ âvery tall, very cheerful and very ambitious in regard to her, who was connected with one
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