Again I won. “Two hundred and forty against two hundred and forty?”
“Isn’t that too much?” I ask.
He made no reply. We played the game. Once more it was mine. “Four hundred and eighty against four hundred and eighty?”
I says, “Well, sir, I don’t want to wrong you. Let us make it a hundred rubles that you owe me, and call it square.”
You ought to have heard how he yelled at this, and yet he was not a proud man at all. “Either play, or don’t play!” says he.
Well, I see there’s nothing to be done. “Three hundred and eighty, then, if you please,” says I.