"But I wouldn't pay one cent to that sucker, Slotkin, Mawruss," Abe added.
"Sure not," Morris agreed.
"Might you wouldn't have to pay him nothing, maybe," Goldman suggested.
"What d'ye mean?" Abe cried.
"Might if you would take it the loft he would call off the strike," said Goldman.
"That's so, Mawruss," Abe murmured, as though this phase of the matter had just occurred to him for the first time.
"Maybe Goldman is right, Abe," Morris replied. "Maybe if we took it the loft Slotkin would call off the strike."
"After all, Mawruss," Abe said, "the loft ain't a bad loft, Mawruss. If it wasn't such a good loft, Mawruss, I would say it no, Mawruss, we shouldn't take the loft; but the loft is a first-class A Number One loft."
"S'enough, Abe," Morris replied. "You don't have to tell it me a hundred times already. I ain't disputing it's a good loft; and so if Slotkin calls off the strike we take the loft."
At this juncture the store door opened and Slotkin himself entered.