"Yes, about that."
"That's not true, Philip," came over the transom from the sick room. "I set the alarm at four-thirty, Phil sleeps till five-thirty, drinks one cup of coffee, leaves his eggs, and catches the twenty-of-six car."
"You now have the story," said Phil. "It's a stinking long day, isn't it?"
"Phil has it all figured out," Elizabeth shouted from the back room. "From six to nine, he pays his rent—"
"Yes, I've figured it that way," he said. "The money I earn between nine and one is enough to pay my day's board and my wife's; one to three is clothes and shoes; three to five, all other expenses; five to six I work for myself!"
"That's bully; I think I'll figure mine."
"But there aren't any evenings, are there," he went on, "or any Sundays?"
Suddenly he looked up at the chandelier. "See all the pipes in that," he said; "I find pipes and tubes everywhere, since I've worked in the mill. It's darn interesting to pick them out. The radiator in this room is made of pipe, see; the bed in the back room; notice those banisters outside. I see them everywhere I look. If I had a little money, I'd put it in a pipe mill. 'S money in that game, once you get the market; Coglin and I have it all doped out."
For fifteen minutes, Phil's enthusiasm for pipe-manufacture built the mills of the future.