"Now what?"
"How much do you want for that damned shop?"
"I don't want money. I want a job. If you are going to take my life-work away from me, you ought to give me something else to do."
"What job?"
"You suggested it yourself the other day. I want to manage your new hotel."
"Don't be a fool! What do you know about managing an hotel?"
"Nothing. It will be your pleasing task to teach me the business while the shanty is being run up."
There was a pause, while Mr. Brewster chewed three inches off a pen-holder.
"Very well," he said at last.
"Topping!" said Archie. "I knew you'd see it. I'll study your methods, what! Adding some of my own, of course. You know, I've thought of one improvement on the Cosmopolis already."
"Improvement on the Cosmopolis!" cried Mr. Brewster, gashed in his finest feelings.
"Yes. There's one point where the old Cosmop slips up badly, and I'm going to see that it's corrected at my little shack. Customers will be entreated to leave their boots outside their doors at night, and they'll find them cleaned in the morning. Well, pip, pip! I must be popping. Time is money, you know, with us business men."