'Well, it's only for a couple more weeks,' said Wasserman. 'During the summer, he has Sundays off.' He hesitated and glanced at the clock at the back of the room. 'That brings up a matter I'd like to talk about for a minute. We've got a couple of more meetings before we adjourn for the summer, but I think we ought to consider the rabbi's contract.'

'What about it, Jacob? It runs through the High Holidays, doesn't it?'

'That's true, it does. That's the way rabbis' contracts are always written, so that the temple always has a rabbi for the holiday services. Which is why it's customary to consider the new contract at this time of year. Then if the congregation decides they want to make a change, they have a chance to look around for a new rabbi. And if the rabbi wants to make a change, it gives him a chance to line up a new congregation. I think it might be a good idea if we voted right now to extend our rabbi's contract for another year, and send him a letter to that effect.'

'Why? Is he looking around for something else, or did he mention it to you?'

Wasserman shook his head. 'No, he hasn't spoken about it. I just think it might be a good idea to send him a letter before he does.'

'Just a minute, Jacob, how do we know the rabbi wants to continue? Hadn't we ought to get a letter from him first?'

'I think he likes it here and I think he'd be willing to continue,' said Wasserman. 'As for the letter, it's usually the employer who notifies. Naturally, we'd have to give him a raise. I think an increase of five hundred dollars would be a proper token of appreciation.'

'Mr. Chairman.' It was the harsh voice of Al Becker. The vice-president straddled his chair and leaned forward, supporting his heavy torso on clenched fists on the desk in front of him. 'Mr. Chairman, it seems to me that with the tough time we're having, with a brand-new temple and all, that five hundred dollars is a pretty expensive token.'

'Yeah, five hundred dollars is a lot of money.'

'He's only been here a year.'

'Well, that's the best time to give it to him, isn't it, right after his first year?'

'You've got to give him some kind of a raise, and five hundred dollars is only a little more than five percent of his salary.'

'Gentlemen, gentlemen.' Wasserman rapped on the desk with the ruler.

'I move we lay the whole matter on the table for a week or two,' said Meyer Goldfarb.

'What's to lay on the table?'

'Meyer always wants to postpone when it comes to spending money.'

'It only hurts for a little while.'

'Mr. Chairman.' It was Al Becker again. 'I second Meyer's motion to lay the matter on the table until next week. That's been our rule-whenever something involved spending a lot of money we've always held it over for at least a week. Now, I consider this a large expenditure. Five hundred dollars is a lot of money, and the new salary, ten thousand dollars, is an awful lot of money. All we've got here now is a bare quorum. I think on a matter as important as this, we ought to have a larger turnout. I move that Lennie be instructed to write to all members of the board asking them to be sure to come to next week's meeting to discuss a matter of special importance.'

'There's a motion on the floor.'

'Well, it's the same idea. All right, I'll make mine an amendment to the motion.'

'Any discussion on the amendment?' asked Wasserman.

'Just a minute, Mr. Chairman,' called Meyer Goldfarb. 'That amendment is to my motion, so if I accept it then we don't have to have any discussion. I just change my motion, see.'

'All right, restate your motion then.'

'I move that the motion to extend the rabbi's contract-'

'Just a minute, Meyer, there was no such motion.'

'Jacob made the motion.'

'Jacob didn't make any motion. He just made a suggestion. Besides, he was in the chair-'

'Gentlemen,' said Wasserman, banging with his ruler, 'what's the sense of all this motion, amendment, amendment to the amendment. I didn't make a motion, I did make a motion? Is it the sense of this meeting that we should put off any action on the rabbi's contract until next week?'

'Yeah.'

'Sure, why not? The rabbi won't run away.'

'Even out of respect to the rabbi, there ought to be more people here.'

'All right,' said Wasserman, 'so let's hold it over already. If there's no other business'-he waited for a moment-'then this meeting stands adjourned.'

4

Tuesday the weather was fine and mild, and elspeth Bleech and her Mend Celia Saunders, who took care of the Hoskins' children a couple of doors away, led their charges to the park, a ragged bit of turf a few blocks beyond the temple. The little procession was essentially a herding operation. The children ran ahead, but because Johnnie Serafino was still very young, Elspeth always took the stroller along. Sometimes he walked with the two women, his little fist tightly clutching the side or the chrome handle of the carriage, and sometimes he would clamber aboard and insist on being pushed.

Elspeth and Celia would walk about fifty feet and then stop to check on the whereabouts of their charges. If they had fallen behind they called to them, or ran back to pull them apart or make them drop something they had found in the gutter or a trash barrel.

Celia tried to persuade her friend to spend Thursday, their day off, together in Salem. 'They're having a sale at Adelson's, and I wanted to see about another bathing suit. We could take the one o'clock bus-'

'I was thinking of going to Lynn,' said Elspeth.

'Why Lynn?'

'Well, I've been feeling sort of, you know, sickly lately and I thought I ought to have a check-up by a doctor. Maybe he could give me a tonic, or something.' 'You don't need no tonic, El. What you need is a little exercise and some relaxation. Now you take my advice. You come into Salem with me and we can do some shopping, and then we can take in a movie in the afternoon. We can have a bite somewhere and after that we can go bowling. There's the nicest bunch of fellows come down the alleys Thursday nights. We have the grandest times just kidding around. No rough stuff and nobody gets fresh. We just have a lot of fun hacking around.'

'Hm-I guess it's nice all right, but I just don't feel up to it, Cele. I'm tired most afternoons, and in the mornings I wake up and I feel light-headed, kind of.'

'Well, I know the reason for that,' said Celia positively. 'You do?'

'You just don't get enough sleep. That's your trouble. Staying up until two or three o'clock every morning, it's a wonder to me you can stand on your feet. And six days a week. I don't know of another girl who doesn't get Sundays off. Them Serafinos are taking advantage of you-they're working you to death.'

'Oh, I get enough sleep. I don't have to stay up until they get home.' She shrugged. 'It's just that alone in the house with only the kids, I kind of don't like to get undressed and into bed. Most of the time, I nap on the couch. And then I nap in the afternoon, too. I get plenty of sleep, Cele.' 'But Sundays-'

'Well, it's the only day they have for visiting their friends. I don't mind really. And Mrs. Serafino told me when I first came that anytime I wanted a Sunday off she would arrange for it. They're really quite nice to me. Mr. Serafino said that if I wanted to go downtown to church, he'd drive me-the buses being so bad on Sundays.'

Celia halted in her stride and looked at Elspeth. 'Tell me, does he ever bother you any?' 'Bother me?'

'You know, does he ever try to get fresh when the missus isn't around?'

'Oh no,' said Elspeth quickly. 'Where'd you get that idea?'

'I don't trust those nightclub types. And I don't like the way he looks at a girl.'

'That's silly. He hardly says two words to me.'

'Is it? Well, let me tell you something-Gladys, that's the girl that had your job before you-Mrs. Serafino fired

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