Page:Anthology of Modern Slavonic Literature in Prose and Verse by Paul Selver.djvu/55

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THE TINY MAN
31

An uncanny, dark narrow room, Along the walls of which were arranged cupboards with certain alembics and phials. There was a strangely irritating and perplexing odour.

The Armenian lit the lamp, opened a cupboard, fumbled about there and fetched down an alembic with a greenish liquid.

"Good droplets," he said ; "you give one drop in a glass of water, go to sleep quietly, and not wake up."

"No, I don't want that," said Saranin, vexedly. "You don't think I've come for that!"

"My dear man," said the Armenian in a wheedling voice, "you will take another wife, after your own size, very simple matter."

"I don't want to," cried Saranin.

"Well, don't shout," the Armenian cut him short. "Why are you getting angry, dear man? You are spoiling your temper for nothing. You don't want it, then don't take it. I'll give you other things. But they are dear, ah, ah, dear."

The Armenian, squatting down on his haunches, which gave his long figure a comical appearance, fetched out a square-shaped bottle. In it glittered a transparent liquid. The Armenian said softly, with a mysterious look:

"You drink one drop, you lose a pound; you drink forty drops, you lose forty pounds' weight. A drop, a pound. A drop, a rouble. Count the drops, give the roubles."