15112 lines
652 KiB
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15112 lines
652 KiB
Plaintext
****The Project Gutenberg Etext of McTeague, by Frank Norris****
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McTeague, by Frank Norris
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September, 1994 [Etext #165]
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of McTeague, by Frank Norris
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{Editor's note: The word can~on has been changed to canyon
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McTeague
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A Story of San Francisco
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by Frank Norris
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CHAPTER 1
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It was Sunday, and, according to his custom on that day,
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McTeague took his dinner at two in the afternoon at the car
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conductors' coffee-joint on Polk Street. He had a thick
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gray soup; heavy, underdone meat, very hot, on a cold plate;
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two kinds of vegetables; and a sort of suet pudding, full of
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strong butter and sugar. On his way back to his office, one
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block above, he stopped at Joe Frenna's saloon and bought a
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pitcher of steam beer. It was his habit to leave the
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pitcher there on his way to dinner.
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Once in his office, or, as he called it on his signboard,
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"Dental Parlors," he took off his coat and shoes, unbuttoned
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his vest, and, having crammed his little stove full of coke,
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lay back in his operating chair at the bay window, reading
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the paper, drinking his beer, and smoking his huge porcelain
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pipe while his food digested; crop-full, stupid, and warm.
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By and by, gorged with steam beer, and overcome by the heat
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of the room, the cheap tobacco, and the effects of his heavy
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meal, he dropped off to sleep. Late in the afternoon his
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canary bird, in its gilt cage just over his head, began to
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sing. He woke slowly, finished the rest of his beer--very
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flat and stale by this time--and taking down his concertina
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from the bookcase, where in week days it kept the company of
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seven volumes of "Allen's Practical Dentist," played upon it
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some half-dozen very mournful airs.
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McTeague looked forward to these Sunday afternoons as a
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period of relaxation and enjoyment. He invariably spent
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them in the same fashion. These were his only pleasures--to
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eat, to smoke, to sleep, and to play upon his concertina.
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The six lugubrious airs that he knew, always carried him
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back to the time when he was a car-boy at the Big Dipper
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Mine in Placer County, ten years before. He remembered the
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years he had spent there trundling the heavy cars of ore
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in and out of the tunnel under the direction of his father.
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For thirteen days of each fortnight his father was a steady,
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hard-working shift-boss of the mine. Every other Sunday he
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became an irresponsible animal, a beast, a brute, crazy with
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alcohol.
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McTeague remembered his mother, too, who, with the help of
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the Chinaman, cooked for forty miners. She was an
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overworked drudge, fiery and energetic for all that, filled
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with the one idea of having her son rise in life and enter a
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profession. The chance had come at last when the father
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died, corroded with alcohol, collapsing in a few hours. Two
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or three years later a travelling dentist visited the mine
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and put up his tent near the bunk-house. He was more or
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less of a charlatan, but he fired Mrs. McTeague's ambition,
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and young McTeague went away with him to learn his
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profession. He had learnt it after a fashion, mostly by
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watching the charlatan operate. He had read many of the
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necessary books, but he was too hopelessly stupid to get
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much benefit from them.
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Then one day at San Francisco had come the news of his
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mother's death; she had left him some money--not much, but
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enough to set him up in business; so he had cut loose from
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the charlatan and had opened his "Dental Parlors" on Polk
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Street, an "accommodation street" of small shops in the
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residence quarter of the town. Here he had slowly collected
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a clientele of butcher boys, shop girls, drug clerks, and
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car conductors. He made but few acquaintances. Polk Street
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called him the "Doctor" and spoke of his enormous strength.
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For McTeague was a young giant, carrying his huge shock of
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blond hair six feet three inches from the ground; moving his
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immense limbs, heavy with ropes of muscle, slowly,
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ponderously. His hands were enormous, red, and covered with
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a fell of stiff yellow hair; they were hard as wooden
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mallets, strong as vises, the hands of the old-time car-boy.
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Often he dispensed with forceps and extracted a refractory
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tooth with his thumb and finger. His head was square-cut,
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angular; the jaw salient, like that of the carnivora.
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McTeague's mind was as his body, heavy, slow to act,
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sluggish. Yet there was nothing vicious about the man.
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Altogether he suggested the draught horse, immensely
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strong, stupid, docile, obedient.
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When he opened his "Dental Parlors," he felt that his life
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was a success, that he could hope for nothing better. In
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spite of the name, there was but one room. It was a corner
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room on the second floor over the branch post-office, and
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faced the street. McTeague made it do for a bedroom as well,
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sleeping on the big bed-lounge against the wall opposite the
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window. There was a washstand behind the screen in the
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corner where he manufactured his moulds. In the round bay
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window were his operating chair, his dental engine, and the
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movable rack on which he laid out his instruments. Three
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chairs, a bargain at the second-hand store, ranged
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themselves against the wall with military precision
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underneath a steel engraving of the court of Lorenzo de'
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Medici, which he had bought because there were a great many
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figures in it for the money. Over the bed-lounge hung a
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rifle manufacturer's advertisement calendar which he never
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used. The other ornaments were a small marble-topped centre
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table covered with back numbers of "The American System of
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Dentistry," a stone pug dog sitting before the little stove,
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and a thermometer. A stand of shelves occupied one corner,
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filled with the seven volumes of "Allen's Practical
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Dentist." On the top shelf McTeague kept his concertina and
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a bag of bird seed for the canary. The whole place exhaled
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a mingled odor of bedding, creosote, and ether.
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But for one thing, McTeague would have been perfectly
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contented. Just outside his window was his signboard--a
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modest affair--that read: "Doctor McTeague. Dental Parlors.
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Gas Given"; but that was all. It was his ambition, his
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dream, to have projecting from that corner window a huge
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gilded tooth, a molar with enormous prongs, something
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gorgeous and attractive. He would have it some day, on that
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he was resolved; but as yet such a thing was far beyond his
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means.
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When he had finished the last of his beer, McTeague slowly
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wiped his lips and huge yellow mustache with the side of his
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hand. Bull-like, he heaved himself laboriously up, and,
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going to the window, stood looking down into the street.
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The street never failed to interest him. It was one of
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|
those cross streets peculiar to Western cities, situated in
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|
the heart of the residence quarter, but occupied by small
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tradespeople who lived in the rooms above their shops.
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|
There were corner drug stores with huge jars of red, yellow,
|
|
and green liquids in their windows, very brave and gay;
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|
stationers' stores, where illustrated weeklies were tacked
|
|
upon bulletin boards; barber shops with cigar stands in
|
|
their vestibules; sad-looking plumbers' offices; cheap
|
|
restaurants, in whose windows one saw piles of unopened
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oysters weighted down by cubes of ice, and china pigs and
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cows knee deep in layers of white beans. At one end of the
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street McTeague could see the huge power-house of the cable
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|
line. Immediately opposite him was a great market; while
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farther on, over the chimney stacks of the intervening
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houses, the glass roof of some huge public baths glittered
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like crystal in the afternoon sun. Underneath him the
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branch post-office was opening its doors, as was its custom
|
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between two and three o'clock on Sunday afternoons. An
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acrid odor of ink rose upward to him. Occasionally a cable
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car passed, trundling heavily, with a strident whirring of
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jostled glass windows.
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|
On week days the street was very lively. It woke to its
|
|
work about seven o'clock, at the time when the newsboys made
|
|
their appearance together with the day laborers. The
|
|
laborers went trudging past in a straggling file--plumbers'
|
|
apprentices, their pockets stuffed with sections of lead
|
|
pipe, tweezers, and pliers; carpenters, carrying nothing but
|
|
their little pasteboard lunch baskets painted to imitate
|
|
leather; gangs of street workers, their overalls soiled with
|
|
yellow clay, their picks and long-handled shovels over their
|
|
shoulders; plasterers, spotted with lime from head to foot.
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|
This little army of workers, tramping steadily in one
|
|
direction, met and mingled with other toilers of a different
|
|
description--conductors and "swing men" of the cable company
|
|
going on duty; heavy-eyed night clerks from the drug stores
|
|
on their way home to sleep; roundsmen returning to the
|
|
precinct police station to make their night report, and
|
|
Chinese market gardeners teetering past under their heavy
|
|
baskets. The cable cars began to fill up; all along the
|
|
street could be seen the shopkeepers taking down their
|
|
shutters.
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Between seven and eight the street breakfasted. Now and
|
|
then a waiter from one of the cheap restaurants crossed from
|
|
one sidewalk to the other, balancing on one palm a tray
|
|
covered with a napkin. Everywhere was the smell of coffee
|
|
and of frying steaks. A little later, following in the path
|
|
of the day laborers, came the clerks and shop girls, dressed
|
|
with a certain cheap smartness, always in a hurry, glancing
|
|
apprehensively at the power-house clock. Their employers
|
|
followed an hour or so later--on the cable cars for the most
|
|
part whiskered gentlemen with huge stomachs, reading the
|
|
morning papers with great gravity; bank cashiers and
|
|
insurance clerks with flowers in their buttonholes.
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At the same time the school children invaded the street,
|
|
filling the air with a clamor of shrill voices, stopping at
|
|
the stationers' shops, or idling a moment in the doorways of
|
|
the candy stores. For over half an hour they held
|
|
possession of the sidewalks, then suddenly disappeared,
|
|
leaving behind one or two stragglers who hurried along with
|
|
great strides of their little thin legs, very anxious and
|
|
preoccupied.
|
|
|
|
Towards eleven o'clock the ladies from the great avenue a
|
|
block above Polk Street made their appearance, promenading
|
|
the sidewalks leisurely, deliberately. They were at their
|
|
morning's marketing. They were handsome women, beautifully
|
|
dressed. They knew by name their butchers and grocers and
|
|
vegetable men. From his window McTeague saw them in front
|
|
of the stalls, gloved and veiled and daintily shod, the
|
|
subservient provision men at their elbows, scribbling
|
|
hastily in the order books. They all seemed to know one
|
|
another, these grand ladies from the fashionable avenue.
|
|
Meetings took place here and there; a conversation was
|
|
begun; others arrived; groups were formed; little impromptu
|
|
receptions were held before the chopping blocks of butchers'
|
|
stalls, or on the sidewalk, around boxes of berries and
|
|
fruit.
|
|
|
|
From noon to evening the population of the street was of
|
|
a mixed character. The street was busiest at that time;
|
|
a vast and prolonged murmur arose--the mingled shuffling of
|
|
feet, the rattle of wheels, the heavy trundling of cable
|
|
cars. At four o'clock the school children once more swarmed
|
|
the sidewalks, again disappearing with surprising
|
|
suddenness. At six the great homeward march commenced; the
|
|
cars were crowded, the laborers thronged the sidewalks, the
|
|
newsboys chanted the evening papers. Then all at once the
|
|
street fell quiet; hardly a soul was in sight; the sidewalks
|
|
were deserted. It was supper hour. Evening began; and one
|
|
by one a multitude of lights, from the demoniac glare of the
|
|
druggists' windows to the dazzling blue whiteness of the
|
|
electric globes, grew thick from street corner to street
|
|
corner. Once more the street was crowded. Now there was no
|
|
thought but for amusement. The cable cars were loaded with
|
|
theatre-goers--men in high hats and young girls in furred
|
|
opera cloaks. On the sidewalks were groups and couples--the
|
|
plumbers' apprentices, the girls of the ribbon counters, the
|
|
little families that lived on the second stories over their
|
|
shops, the dressmakers, the small doctors, the harness-
|
|
makers--all the various inhabitants of the street were
|
|
abroad, strolling idly from shop window to shop window,
|
|
taking the air after the day's work. Groups of girls
|
|
collected on the corners, talking and laughing very loud,
|
|
making remarks upon the young men that passed them. The
|
|
tamale men appeared. A band of Salvationists began to sing
|
|
before a saloon.
|
|
|
|
Then, little by little, Polk Street dropped back to
|
|
solitude. Eleven o'clock struck from the power-house clock.
|
|
Lights were extinguished. At one o'clock the cable stopped,
|
|
leaving an abrupt silence in the air. All at once it seemed
|
|
very still. The ugly noises were the occasional footfalls of
|
|
a policeman and the persistent calling of ducks and geese in
|
|
the closed market. The street was asleep.
|
|
|
|
Day after day, McTeague saw the same panorama unroll itself.
|
|
The bay window of his "Dental Parlors" was for him a point
|
|
of vantage from which he watched the world go past.
|
|
|
|
On Sundays, however, all was changed. As he stood in the
|
|
bay window, after finishing his beer, wiping his lips, and
|
|
looking out into the street, McTeague was conscious of
|
|
the difference. Nearly all the stores were closed. No
|
|
wagons passed. A few people hurried up and down the
|
|
sidewalks, dressed in cheap Sunday finery. A cable car went
|
|
by; on the outside seats were a party of returning
|
|
picnickers. The mother, the father, a young man, and a
|
|
young girl, and three children. The two older people held
|
|
empty lunch baskets in their laps, while the bands of the
|
|
children's hats were stuck full of oak leaves. The girl
|
|
carried a huge bunch of wilting poppies and wild flowers.
|
|
|
|
As the car approached McTeague's window the young man got up
|
|
and swung himself off the platform, waving goodby to the
|
|
party. Suddenly McTeague recognized him.
|
|
|
|
"There's Marcus Schouler," he muttered behind his mustache.
|
|
|
|
Marcus Schouler was the dentist's one intimate friend. The
|
|
acquaintance had begun at the car conductors' coffee-joint,
|
|
where the two occupied the same table and met at every meal.
|
|
Then they made the discovery that they both lived in the
|
|
same flat, Marcus occupying a room on the floor above
|
|
McTeague. On different occasions McTeague had treated
|
|
Marcus for an ulcerated tooth and had refused to accept
|
|
payment. Soon it came to be an understood thing between
|
|
them. They were "pals."
|
|
|
|
McTeague, listening, heard Marcus go up-stairs to his room
|
|
above. In a few minutes his door opened again. McTeague
|
|
knew that he had come out into the hall and was leaning over
|
|
the banisters.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac!" he called. McTeague came to his door.
|
|
|
|
"Hullo! 'sthat you, Mark?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure," answered Marcus. "Come on up."
|
|
|
|
"You come on down."
|
|
|
|
"No, come on up."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you come on down."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you lazy duck!" retorted Marcus, coming down the
|
|
stairs.
|
|
|
|
"Been out to the Cliff House on a picnic," he explained as
|
|
he sat down on the bed-lounge, "with my uncle and his
|
|
people--the Sieppes, you know. By damn! it was hot," he
|
|
suddenly vociferated. "Just look at that! Just look at
|
|
that!" he cried, dragging at his limp collar. "That's the
|
|
third one since morning; it is--it is, for a fact--and you
|
|
got your stove going." He began to tell about the picnic,
|
|
talking very loud and fast, gesturing furiously, very
|
|
excited over trivial details. Marcus could not talk without
|
|
getting excited.
|
|
|
|
"You ought t'have seen, y'ought t'have seen. I tell you, it
|
|
was outa sight. It was; it was, for a fact."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes," answered McTeague, bewildered, trying to follow.
|
|
"Yes, that's so."
|
|
|
|
In recounting a certain dispute with an awkward bicyclist,
|
|
in which it appeared he had become involved, Marcus quivered
|
|
with rage. "'Say that again,' says I to um. 'Just say that
|
|
once more, and'"--here a rolling explosion of oaths--
|
|
"'you'll go back to the city in the Morgue wagon. Ain't I
|
|
got a right to cross a street even, I'd like to know,
|
|
without being run down--what?' I say it's outrageous. I'd
|
|
a knifed him in another minute. It was an outrage. I say
|
|
it was an OUTRAGE."
|
|
|
|
"Sure it was," McTeague hastened to reply. "Sure, sure."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, and we had an accident," shouted the other, suddenly
|
|
off on another tack. "It was awful. Trina was in the swing
|
|
there--that's my cousin Trina, you know who I mean--and she
|
|
fell out. By damn! I thought she'd killed herself; struck
|
|
her face on a rock and knocked out a front tooth. It's a
|
|
wonder she didn't kill herself. It IS a wonder; it is,
|
|
for a fact. Ain't it, now? Huh? Ain't it? Y'ought t'have
|
|
seen."
|
|
|
|
McTeague had a vague idea that Marcus Schouler was stuck on
|
|
his cousin Trina. They "kept company" a good deal; Marcus
|
|
took dinner with the Sieppes every Saturday evening at their
|
|
home at B Street station, across the bay, and Sunday
|
|
afternoons he and the family usually made little excursions
|
|
into the suburbs. McTeague began to wonder dimly how it was
|
|
that on this occasion Marcus had not gone home with his
|
|
cousin. As sometimes happens, Marcus furnished the
|
|
explanation upon the instant.
|
|
|
|
"I promised a duck up here on the avenue I'd call for his
|
|
dog at four this afternoon."
|
|
|
|
Marcus was Old Grannis's assistant in a little dog
|
|
hospital that the latter had opened in a sort of alley just
|
|
off Polk Street, some four blocks above Old Grannis lived in
|
|
one of the back rooms of McTeague's flat. He was an
|
|
Englishman and an expert dog surgeon, but Marcus Schouler
|
|
was a bungler in the profession. His father had been a
|
|
veterinary surgeon who had kept a livery stable near by, on
|
|
California Street, and Marcus's knowledge of the diseases of
|
|
domestic animals had been picked up in a haphazard way, much
|
|
after the manner of McTeague's education. Somehow he
|
|
managed to impress Old Grannis, a gentle, simple-minded old
|
|
man, with a sense of his fitness, bewildering him with a
|
|
torrent of empty phrases that he delivered with fierce
|
|
gestures and with a manner of the greatest conviction.
|
|
|
|
"You'd better come along with me, Mac," observed Marcus.
|
|
"We'll get the duck's dog, and then we'll take a little
|
|
walk, huh? You got nothun to do. Come along."
|
|
|
|
McTeague went out with him, and the two friends proceeded up
|
|
to the avenue to the house where the dog was to be found.
|
|
It was a huge mansion-like place, set in an enormous garden
|
|
that occupied a whole third of the block; and while Marcus
|
|
tramped up the front steps and rang the doorbell boldly, to
|
|
show his independence, McTeague remained below on the
|
|
sidewalk, gazing stupidly at the curtained windows, the
|
|
marble steps, and the bronze griffins, troubled and a little
|
|
confused by all this massive luxury.
|
|
|
|
After they had taken the dog to the hospital and had left
|
|
him to whimper behind the wire netting, they returned to
|
|
Polk Street and had a glass of beer in the back room of Joe
|
|
Frenna's corner grocery.
|
|
|
|
Ever since they had left the huge mansion on the avenue,
|
|
Marcus had been attacking the capitalists, a class which he
|
|
pretended to execrate. It was a pose which he often
|
|
assumed, certain of impressing the dentist. Marcus had
|
|
picked up a few half-truths of political economy--it was
|
|
impossible to say where--and as soon as the two had settled
|
|
themselves to their beer in Frenna's back room he took up
|
|
the theme of the labor question. He discussed it at the
|
|
top of his voice, vociferating, shaking his fists, exciting
|
|
himself with his own noise. He was continually making use
|
|
of the stock phrases of the professional politician--phrases
|
|
he had caught at some of the ward "rallies" and
|
|
"ratification meetings." These rolled off his tongue with
|
|
incredible emphasis, appearing at every turn of his
|
|
conversation--"Outraged constituencies," "cause of labor,"
|
|
"wage earners," "opinions biased by personal interests,"
|
|
"eyes blinded by party prejudice." McTeague listened to
|
|
him, awestruck.
|
|
|
|
"There's where the evil lies," Marcus would cry. "The
|
|
masses must learn self-control; it stands to reason. Look at
|
|
the figures, look at the figures. Decrease the number of
|
|
wage earners and you increase wages, don't you? don't you?"
|
|
|
|
Absolutely stupid, and understanding never a word, McTeague
|
|
would answer:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, that's it--self-control--that's the word."
|
|
|
|
"It's the capitalists that's ruining the cause of labor,"
|
|
shouted Marcus, banging the table with his fist till the
|
|
beer glasses danced; "white-livered drones, traitors, with
|
|
their livers white as snow, eatun the bread of widows and
|
|
orphuns; there's where the evil lies."
|
|
|
|
Stupefied with his clamor, McTeague answered, wagging his
|
|
head:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's it; I think it's their livers."
|
|
|
|
Suddenly Marcus fell calm again, forgetting his pose all in
|
|
an instant.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mac, I told my cousin Trina to come round and see you
|
|
about that tooth of her's. She'll be in to-morrow, I
|
|
guess."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
After his breakfast the following Monday morning, McTeague
|
|
looked over the appointments he had written down in the
|
|
book-slate that hung against the screen. His writing was
|
|
immense, very clumsy, and very round, with huge, full-
|
|
bellied l's and h's. He saw that he had made an appointment
|
|
at one o'clock for Miss Baker, the retired dressmaker, a
|
|
little old maid who had a tiny room a few doors down the
|
|
hall. It adjoined that of Old Grannis.
|
|
|
|
Quite an affair had arisen from this circumstance. Miss
|
|
Baker and Old Grannis were both over sixty, and yet it was
|
|
current talk amongst the lodgers of the flat that the two
|
|
were in love with each other . Singularly enough, they were
|
|
not even acquaintances; never a word had passed between
|
|
them. At intervals they met on the stairway; he on his way
|
|
to his little dog hospital, she returning from a bit of
|
|
marketing in the street. At such times they passed each
|
|
other with averted eyes, pretending a certain pre-
|
|
occupation, suddenly seized with a great embarrassment, the
|
|
timidity of a second childhood. He went on about his
|
|
business, disturbed and thoughtful. She hurried up to her
|
|
tiny room, her curious little false curls shaking with her
|
|
agitation, the faintest suggestion of a flush coming and
|
|
going in her withered cheeks. The emotion of one of these
|
|
chance meetings remained with them during all the rest of
|
|
the day.
|
|
|
|
Was it the first romance in the lives of each? Did Old
|
|
Grannis ever remember a certain face amongst those that he
|
|
had known when he was young Grannis--the face of some pale-
|
|
haired girl, such as one sees in the old cathedral towns of
|
|
England? Did Miss Baker still treasure up in a seldom
|
|
opened drawer or box some faded daguerreotype, some strange
|
|
old-fashioned likeness, with its curling hair and high
|
|
stock? It was impossible to say.
|
|
|
|
Maria Macapa, the Mexican woman who took care of the
|
|
lodgers' rooms, had been the first to call the flat's
|
|
attention to the affair, spreading the news of it from room
|
|
to room, from floor to floor. Of late she had made a great
|
|
discovery; all the women folk of the flat were yet vibrant
|
|
with it. Old Grannis came home from his work at four
|
|
o'clock, and between that time and six Miss Baker would sit
|
|
in her room, her hands idle in her lap, doing nothing,
|
|
listening, waiting. Old Grannis did the same, drawing his
|
|
arm-chair near to the wall, knowing that Miss Baker was upon
|
|
the other side, conscious, perhaps, that she was thinking of
|
|
him; and there the two would sit through the hours of the
|
|
afternoon, listening and waiting, they did not know exactly
|
|
for what, but near to each other, separated only by the thin
|
|
partition of their rooms. They had come to know each
|
|
other's habits. Old Grannis knew that at quarter of five
|
|
precisely Miss Baker made a cup of tea over the oil stove on
|
|
the stand between the bureau and the window. Miss Baker
|
|
felt instinctively the exact moment when Old Grannis took
|
|
down his little binding apparatus from the second shelf of
|
|
his clothes closet and began his favorite occupation of
|
|
binding pamphlets--pamphlets that he never read, for all
|
|
that.
|
|
|
|
In his "Parlors" McTeague began his week's work. He glanced
|
|
in the glass saucer in which he kept his sponge-gold, and
|
|
noticing that he had used up all his pellets, set about
|
|
making some more. In examining Miss Baker's teeth at the
|
|
preliminary sitting he had found a cavity in one of the
|
|
incisors. Miss Baker had decided to have it filled with
|
|
gold. McTeague remembered now that it was what is called a
|
|
"proximate case," where there is not sufficient room to fill
|
|
with large pieces of gold. He told himself that he should
|
|
have to use "mats" in the filling. He made some dozen of
|
|
these "mats" from his tape of non-cohesive gold, cutting it
|
|
transversely into small pieces that could be inserted
|
|
edgewise between the teeth and consolidated by packing.
|
|
After he had made his "mats" he continued with the other
|
|
kind of gold fillings, such as he would have occasion to use
|
|
during the week; "blocks" to be used in large proximal
|
|
cavities, made by folding the tape on itself a number of
|
|
times and then shaping it with the soldering pliers;
|
|
"cylinders" for commencing fillings, which he formed by
|
|
rolling the tape around a needle called a "broach," cutting
|
|
it afterwards into different lengths. He worked slowly,
|
|
mechanically, turning the foil between his fingers with the
|
|
manual dexterity that one sometimes sees in stupid persons.
|
|
His head was quite empty of all thought, and he did not
|
|
whistle over his work as another man might have done. The
|
|
canary made up for his silence, trilling and chittering
|
|
continually, splashing about in its morning bath, keeping up
|
|
an incessant noise and movement that would have been
|
|
maddening to any one but McTeague, who seemed to have no
|
|
nerves at all.
|
|
|
|
After he had finished his fillings, he made a hook broach
|
|
from a bit of piano wire to replace an old one that he had
|
|
lost. It was time for his dinner then, and when he returned
|
|
from the car conductors' coffee-joint, he found Miss Baker
|
|
waiting for him.
|
|
|
|
The ancient little dressmaker was at all times willing to
|
|
talk of Old Grannis to anybody that would listen, quite
|
|
unconscious of the gossip of the flat. McTeague found her
|
|
all a-flutter with excitement. Something extraordinary had
|
|
happened. She had found out that the wall-paper in Old
|
|
Grannis's room was the same as that in hers.
|
|
|
|
"It has led me to thinking, Doctor McTeague," she exclaimed,
|
|
shaking her little false curls at him. "You know my room is
|
|
so small, anyhow, and the wall-paper being the same--the
|
|
pattern from my room continues right into his--I declare, I
|
|
believe at one time that was all one room. Think of it, do
|
|
you suppose it was? It almost amounts to our occupying the
|
|
same room. I don't know--why, really--do you think I should
|
|
speak to the landlady about it? He bound pamphlets last
|
|
night until half-past nine. They say that he's the younger
|
|
son of a baronet; that there are reasons for his not coming
|
|
to the title; his stepfather wronged him cruelly."
|
|
|
|
No one had ever said such a thing. It was preposterous to
|
|
imagine any mystery connected with Old Grannis. Miss Baker
|
|
had chosen to invent the little fiction, had created the
|
|
title and the unjust stepfather from some dim memories of
|
|
the novels of her girlhood.
|
|
|
|
She took her place in the operating chair. McTeague
|
|
began the filling. There was a long silence. It was
|
|
impossible for McTeague to work and talk at the same time.
|
|
|
|
He was just burnishing the last "mat" in Miss Baker's tooth,
|
|
when the door of the "Parlors" opened, jangling the bell
|
|
which he had hung over it, and which was absolutely
|
|
unnecessary. McTeague turned, one foot on the pedal of his
|
|
dental engine, the corundum disk whirling between his
|
|
fingers.
|
|
|
|
It was Marcus Schouler who came in, ushering a young girl of
|
|
about twenty.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, Mac," exclaimed Marcus; "busy? Brought my cousin
|
|
round about that broken tooth."
|
|
|
|
McTeague nodded his head gravely.
|
|
|
|
"In a minute," he answered.
|
|
|
|
Marcus and his cousin Trina sat down in the rigid chairs
|
|
underneath the steel engraving of the Court of Lorenzo de'
|
|
Medici. They began talking in low tones. The girl looked
|
|
about the room, noticing the stone pug dog, the rifle
|
|
manufacturer's calendar, the canary in its little gilt
|
|
prison, and the tumbled blankets on the unmade bed-lounge
|
|
against the wall. Marcus began telling her about McTeague.
|
|
"We're pals," he explained, just above a whisper. "Ah,
|
|
Mac's all right, you bet. Say, Trina, he's the strongest
|
|
duck you ever saw. What do you suppose? He can pull out
|
|
your teeth with his fingers; yes, he can. What do you think
|
|
of that? With his fingers, mind you; he can, for a fact.
|
|
Get on to the size of him, anyhow. Ah, Mac's all right!"
|
|
|
|
Maria Macapa had come into the room while he had been
|
|
speaking. She was making up McTeague's bed. Suddenly Marcus
|
|
exclaimed under his breath: "Now we'll have some fun. It's
|
|
the girl that takes care of the rooms. She's a greaser, and
|
|
she's queer in the head. She ain't regularly crazy, but
|
|
I don't know, she's queer. Y'ought to hear her go on about
|
|
a gold dinner service she says her folks used to own. Ask
|
|
her what her name is and see what she'll say." Trina shrank
|
|
back, a little frightened.
|
|
|
|
"No, you ask," she whispered.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, go on; what you 'fraid of?" urged Marcus. Trina
|
|
shook her head energetically, shutting her lips together.
|
|
|
|
"Well, listen here," answered Marcus, nudging her; then
|
|
raising his voice, he said:
|
|
|
|
"How do, Maria?" Maria nodded to him over her shoulder as
|
|
she bent over the lounge.
|
|
|
|
"Workun hard nowadays, Maria?"
|
|
|
|
"Pretty hard."
|
|
|
|
"Didunt always have to work for your living, though, did
|
|
you, when you ate offa gold dishes?" Maria didn't answer,
|
|
except by putting her chin in the air and shutting her eyes,
|
|
as though to say she knew a long story about that if she had
|
|
a mind to talk. All Marcus's efforts to draw her out on the
|
|
subject were unavailing. She only responded by movements of
|
|
her head.
|
|
|
|
"Can't always start her going," Marcus told his cousin.
|
|
|
|
"What does she do, though, when you ask her about her name?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, sure," said Marcus, who had forgotten. "Say, Maria,
|
|
what's your name?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh?" asked Maria, straightening up, her hands on he hips.
|
|
|
|
"Tell us your name," repeated Marcus.
|
|
|
|
"Name is Maria--Miranda--Macapa." Then, after a pause, she
|
|
added, as though she had but that moment thought of it, "Had
|
|
a flying squirrel an' let him go."
|
|
|
|
Invariably Maria Macapa made this answer. It was not always
|
|
she would talk about the famous service of gold plate, but a
|
|
question as to her name never failed to elicit the same
|
|
strange answer, delivered in a rapid undertone: "Name is
|
|
Maria--Miranda--Macapa." Then, as if struck with an after
|
|
thought, "Had a flying squirrel an' let him go."
|
|
|
|
Why Maria should associate the release of the mythical
|
|
squirrel with her name could not be said. About Maria the
|
|
flat knew absolutely nothing further than that she was
|
|
Spanish-American. Miss Baker was the oldest lodger in the
|
|
flat, and Maria was a fixture there as maid of all work
|
|
when she had come. There was a legend to the effect that
|
|
Maria's people had been at one time immensely wealthy in
|
|
Central America.
|
|
|
|
Maria turned again to her work. Trina and Marcus watched
|
|
her curiously. There was a silence. The corundum burr in
|
|
McTeague's engine hummed in a prolonged monotone. The
|
|
canary bird chittered occasionally. The room was warm, and
|
|
the breathing of the five people in the narrow space made
|
|
the air close and thick. At long intervals an acrid odor of
|
|
ink floated up from the branch post-office immediately
|
|
below.
|
|
|
|
Maria Macapa finished her work and started to leave. As she
|
|
passed near Marcus and his cousin she stopped, and drew a
|
|
bunch of blue tickets furtively from her pocket. "Buy a
|
|
ticket in the lottery?" she inquired, looking at the girl.
|
|
"Just a dollar."
|
|
|
|
"Go along with you, Maria," said Marcus, who had but thirty
|
|
cents in his pocket. "Go along; it's against the law."
|
|
|
|
"Buy a ticket," urged Maria, thrusting the bundle toward
|
|
Trina. "Try your luck. The butcher on the next block won
|
|
twenty dollars the last drawing."
|
|
|
|
Very uneasy, Trina bought a ticket for the sake of being rid
|
|
of her. Maria disappeared.
|
|
|
|
"Ain't she a queer bird?" muttered Marcus. He was much
|
|
embarrassed and disturbed because he had not bought the
|
|
ticket for Trina.
|
|
|
|
But there was a sudden movement. McTeague had just finished
|
|
with Miss Baker.
|
|
|
|
"You should notice," the dressmaker said to the dentist, in
|
|
a low voice, "he always leaves the door a little ajar in the
|
|
afternoon." When she had gone out, Marcus Schouler brought
|
|
Trina forward.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mac, this is my cousin, Trina Sieppe." The two shook
|
|
hands dumbly, McTeague slowly nodding his huge head with its
|
|
great shock of yellow hair. Trina was very small and
|
|
prettily made. Her face was round and rather pale; her eyes
|
|
long and narrow and blue, like the half-open eyes of a
|
|
little baby; her lips and the lobes of her tiny ears
|
|
were pale, a little suggestive of anaemia; while across the
|
|
bridge of her nose ran an adorable little line of freckles.
|
|
But it was to her hair that one's attention was most
|
|
attracted. Heaps and heaps of blue-black coils and braids,
|
|
a royal crown of swarthy bands, a veritable sable tiara,
|
|
heavy, abundant, odorous. All the vitality that should have
|
|
given color to her face seemed to have been absorbed by this
|
|
marvellous hair. It was the coiffure of a queen that
|
|
shadowed the pale temples of this little bourgeoise. So
|
|
heavy was it that it tipped her head backward, and the
|
|
position thrust her chin out a little. It was a charming
|
|
poise, innocent, confiding, almost infantile.
|
|
|
|
She was dressed all in black, very modest and plain. The
|
|
effect of her pale face in all this contrasting black was
|
|
almost monastic.
|
|
|
|
"Well," exclaimed Marcus suddenly, "I got to go. Must get
|
|
back to work. Don't hurt her too much, Mac. S'long,
|
|
Trina."
|
|
|
|
McTeague and Trina were left alone. He was embarrassed,
|
|
troubled. These young girls disturbed and perplexed him.
|
|
He did not like them, obstinately cherishing that intuitive
|
|
suspicion of all things feminine--the perverse dislike of an
|
|
overgrown boy. On the other hand, she was perfectly at her
|
|
ease; doubtless the woman in her was not yet awakened; she
|
|
was yet, as one might say, without sex. She was almost like
|
|
a boy, frank, candid, unreserved.
|
|
|
|
She took her place in the operating chair and told him what
|
|
was the matter, looking squarely into his face. She had
|
|
fallen out of a swing the afternoon of the preceding day;
|
|
one of her teeth had been knocked loose and the other
|
|
altogether broken out.
|
|
|
|
McTeague listened to her with apparent stolidity, nodding
|
|
his head from time to time as she spoke. The keenness of
|
|
his dislike of her as a woman began to be blunted. He
|
|
thought she was rather pretty, that he even liked her
|
|
because she was so small, so prettily made, so good natured
|
|
and straightforward.
|
|
|
|
"Let's have a look at your teeth," he said, picking up his
|
|
mirror. "You better take your hat off." She leaned back in
|
|
her chair and opened her mouth, showing the rows of
|
|
little round teeth, as white and even as the kernels on an
|
|
ear of green corn, except where an ugly gap came at the
|
|
side.
|
|
|
|
McTeague put the mirror into her mouth, touching one and
|
|
another of her teeth with the handle of an excavator. By
|
|
and by he straightened up, wiping the moisture from the
|
|
mirror on his coat-sleeve.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Doctor," said the girl, anxiously, "it's a dreadful
|
|
disfigurement, isn't it?" adding, "What can you do about
|
|
it?"
|
|
|
|
"Well," answered McTeague, slowly, looking vaguely about on
|
|
the floor of the room, "the roots of the broken tooth are
|
|
still in the gum; they'll have to come out, and I guess I'll
|
|
have to pull that other bicuspid. Let me look again. Yes,"
|
|
he went on in a moment, peering into her mouth with the
|
|
mirror, "I guess that'll have to come out, too." The tooth
|
|
was loose, discolored, and evidently dead. "It's a curious
|
|
case," McTeague went on. "I don't know as I ever had a
|
|
tooth like that before. It's what's called necrosis. It
|
|
don't often happen. It'll have to come out sure."
|
|
|
|
Then a discussion was opened on the subject, Trina sitting
|
|
up in the chair, holding her hat in her lap; McTeague
|
|
leaning against the window frame his hands in his pockets,
|
|
his eyes wandering about on the floor. Trina did not want
|
|
the other tooth removed; one hole like that was bad enough;
|
|
but two--ah, no, it was not to be thought of.
|
|
|
|
But McTeague reasoned with her, tried in vain to make her
|
|
understand that there was no vascular connection between the
|
|
root and the gum. Trina was blindly persistent, with the
|
|
persistency of a girl who has made up her mind.
|
|
|
|
McTeague began to like her better and better, and after a
|
|
while commenced himself to feel that it would be a pity to
|
|
disfigure such a pretty mouth. He became interested;
|
|
perhaps he could do something, something in the way of a
|
|
crown or bridge. "Let's look at that again," he said,
|
|
picking up his mirror. He began to study the situation very
|
|
carefully, really desiring to remedy the blemish.
|
|
|
|
It was the first bicuspid that was missing, and though part
|
|
of the root of the second (the loose one) would remain
|
|
after its extraction, he was sure it would not be strong
|
|
enough to sustain a crown. All at once he grew obstinate,
|
|
resolving, with all the strength of a crude and primitive
|
|
man, to conquer the difficulty in spite of everything. He
|
|
turned over in his mind the technicalities of the case. No,
|
|
evidently the root was not strong enough to sustain a crown;
|
|
besides that, it was placed a little irregularly in the
|
|
arch. But, fortunately, there were cavities in the two
|
|
teeth on either side of the gap--one in the first molar and
|
|
one in the palatine surface of the cuspid; might he not
|
|
drill a socket in the remaining root and sockets in the
|
|
molar and cuspid, and, partly by bridging, partly by
|
|
crowning, fill in the gap? He made up his mind to do it.
|
|
|
|
Why he should pledge himself to this hazardous case McTeague
|
|
was puzzled to know. With most of his clients he would have
|
|
contented himself with the extraction of the loose tooth and
|
|
the roots of the broken one. Why should he risk his
|
|
reputation in this case? He could not say why.
|
|
|
|
It was the most difficult operation he had ever performed.
|
|
He bungled it considerably, but in the end he succeeded
|
|
passably well. He extracted the loose tooth with his
|
|
bayonet forceps and prepared the roots of the broken one as
|
|
if for filling, fitting into them a flattened piece of
|
|
platinum wire to serve as a dowel. But this was only the
|
|
beginning; altogether it was a fortnight's work. Trina came
|
|
nearly every other day, and passed two, and even three,
|
|
hours in the chair.
|
|
|
|
By degrees McTeague's first awkwardness and suspicion
|
|
vanished entirely. The two became good friends. McTeague
|
|
even arrived at that point where he could work and talk to
|
|
her at the same time--a thing that had never before been
|
|
possible for him.
|
|
|
|
Never until then had McTeague become so well acquainted with
|
|
a girl of Trina's age. The younger women of Polk Street--
|
|
the shop girls, the young women of the soda fountains, the
|
|
waitresses in the cheap restaurants--preferred another
|
|
dentist, a young fellow just graduated from the college, a
|
|
poser, a rider of bicycles, a man about town, who wore
|
|
astonishing waistcoats and bet money on greyhound
|
|
coursing. Trina was McTeague's first experience. With her
|
|
the feminine element suddenly entered his little world. It
|
|
was not only her that he saw and felt, it was the woman, the
|
|
whole sex, an entire new humanity, strange and alluring,
|
|
that he seemed to have discovered. How had he ignored it so
|
|
long? It was dazzling, delicious, charming beyond all
|
|
words. His narrow point of view was at once enlarged and
|
|
confused, and all at once he saw that there was something
|
|
else in life besides concertinas and steam beer. Everything
|
|
had to be made over again. His whole rude idea of life had
|
|
to be changed. The male virile desire in him tardily
|
|
awakened, aroused itself, strong and brutal. It was
|
|
resistless, untrained, a thing not to be held in leash an
|
|
instant.
|
|
|
|
Little by little, by gradual, almost imperceptible degrees,
|
|
the thought of Trina Sieppe occupied his mind from day to
|
|
day, from hour to hour. He found himself thinking of her
|
|
constantly; at every instant he saw her round, pale face;
|
|
her narrow, milk-blue eyes; her little out-thrust chin; her
|
|
heavy, huge tiara of black hair. At night he lay awake for
|
|
hours under the thick blankets of the bed-lounge, staring
|
|
upward into the darkness, tormented with the idea of her,
|
|
exasperated at the delicate, subtle mesh in which he found
|
|
himself entangled. During the forenoons, while he went
|
|
about his work, he thought of her. As he made his plaster-
|
|
of-paris moulds at the washstand in the corner behind the
|
|
screen he turned over in his mind all that had happened, all
|
|
that had been said at the previous sitting. Her little
|
|
tooth that he had extracted he kept wrapped in a bit of
|
|
newspaper in his vest pocket. Often he took it out and held
|
|
it in the palm of his immense, horny hand, seized with some
|
|
strange elephantine sentiment, wagging his head at it,
|
|
heaving tremendous sighs. What a folly!
|
|
|
|
At two o'clock on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays Trina
|
|
arrived and took her place in the operating chair. While at
|
|
his work McTeague was every minute obliged to bend closely
|
|
over her; his hands touched her face, her cheeks, her
|
|
adorable little chin; her lips pressed against his fingers.
|
|
She breathed warmly on his forehead and on his eyelids,
|
|
while the odor of her hair, a charming feminine perfume,
|
|
sweet, heavy, enervating, came to his nostrils, so
|
|
penetrating, so delicious, that his flesh pricked and
|
|
tingled with it; a veritable sensation of faintness passed
|
|
over this huge, callous fellow, with his enormous bones and
|
|
corded muscles. He drew a short breath through his nose;
|
|
his jaws suddenly gripped together vise-like.
|
|
|
|
But this was only at times--a strange, vexing spasm, that
|
|
subsided almost immediately. For the most part, McTeague
|
|
enjoyed the pleasure of these sittings with Trina with a
|
|
certain strong calmness, blindly happy that she was there.
|
|
This poor crude dentist of Polk Street, stupid, ignorant,
|
|
vulgar, with his sham education and plebeian tastes, whose
|
|
only relaxations were to eat, to drink steam beer, and to
|
|
play upon his concertina, was living through his first
|
|
romance, his first idyl. It was delightful. The long hours
|
|
he passed alone with Trina in the "Dental Parlors," silent,
|
|
only for the scraping of the instruments and the pouring of
|
|
bud-burrs in the engine, in the foul atmosphere, overheated
|
|
by the little stove and heavy with the smell of ether,
|
|
creosote, and stale bedding, had all the charm of secret
|
|
appointments and stolen meetings under the moon.
|
|
|
|
By degrees the operation progressed. One day, just after
|
|
McTeague had put in the temporary gutta-percha fillings and
|
|
nothing more could be done at that sitting, Trina asked him
|
|
to examine the rest of her teeth. They were perfect, with
|
|
one exception--a spot of white caries on the lateral surface
|
|
of an incisor. McTeague filled it with gold, enlarging the
|
|
cavity with hard-bits and hoe-excavators, and burring in
|
|
afterward with half-cone burrs. The cavity was deep, and
|
|
Trina began to wince and moan. To hurt Trina was a positive
|
|
anguish for McTeague, yet an anguish which he was obliged to
|
|
endure at every hour of the sitting. It was harrowing--he
|
|
sweated under it--to be forced to torture her, of all women
|
|
in the world; could anything be worse than that?
|
|
|
|
"Hurt?" he inquired, anxiously.
|
|
|
|
She answered by frowning, with a sharp intake of breath,
|
|
putting her fingers over her closed lips and nodding her
|
|
head. McTeague sprayed the tooth with glycerite of
|
|
tannin, but without effect. Rather than hurt her he found
|
|
himself forced to the use of anaesthesia, which he hated.
|
|
He had a notion that the nitrous oxide gas was dangerous, so
|
|
on this occasion, as on all others, used ether.
|
|
|
|
He put the sponge a half dozen times to Trina's face, more
|
|
nervous than he had ever been before, watching the symptoms
|
|
closely. Her breathing became short and irregular; there
|
|
was a slight twitching of the muscles. When her thumbs
|
|
turned inward toward the palms, he took the sponge away.
|
|
She passed off very quickly, and, with a long sigh, sank
|
|
back into the chair.
|
|
|
|
McTeague straightened up, putting the sponge upon the rack
|
|
behind him, his eyes fixed upon Trina's face. For some time
|
|
he stood watching her as she lay there, unconscious and
|
|
helpless, and very pretty. He was alone with her, and she
|
|
was absolutely without defense.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly the animal in the man stirred and woke; the evil
|
|
instincts that in him were so close to the surface leaped to
|
|
life, shouting and clamoring.
|
|
|
|
It was a crisis--a crisis that had arisen all in an instant;
|
|
a crisis for which he was totally unprepared. Blindly, and
|
|
without knowing why, McTeague fought against it, moved by an
|
|
unreasoned instinct of resistance. Within him, a certain
|
|
second self, another better McTeague rose with the brute;
|
|
both were strong, with the huge crude strength of the man
|
|
himself. The two were at grapples. There in that cheap and
|
|
shabby "Dental Parlor" a dreaded struggle began. It was the
|
|
old battle, old as the world, wide as the world--the sudden
|
|
panther leap of the animal, lips drawn, fangs aflash,
|
|
hideous, monstrous, not to be resisted, and the simultaneous
|
|
arousing of the other man, the better self that cries,
|
|
"Down, down," without knowing why; that grips the monster;
|
|
that fights to strangle it, to thrust it down and back.
|
|
|
|
Dizzied and bewildered with the shock, the like of which he
|
|
had never known before, McTeague turned from Trina, gazing
|
|
bewilderedly about the room. The struggle was bitter; his
|
|
teeth ground themselves together with a little rasping
|
|
sound; the blood sang in his ears; his face flushed scarlet;
|
|
his hands twisted themselves together like the knotting of
|
|
cables. The fury in him was as the fury of a young bull in
|
|
the heat of high summer. But for all that he shook his huge
|
|
head from time to time, muttering:
|
|
|
|
"No, by God! No, by God!"
|
|
|
|
Dimly he seemed to realize that should he yield now he would
|
|
never be able to care for Trina again. She would never be
|
|
the same to him, never so radiant, so sweet, so adorable;
|
|
her charm for him would vanish in an instant. Across her
|
|
forehead, her little pale forehead, under the shadow of her
|
|
royal hair, he would surely see the smudge of a foul ordure,
|
|
the footprint of the monster. It would be a sacrilege, an
|
|
abomination. He recoiled from it, banding all his strength
|
|
to the issue.
|
|
|
|
"No, by God! No, by God!"
|
|
|
|
He turned to his work, as if seeking a refuge in it. But as
|
|
he drew near to her again, the charm of her innocence and
|
|
helplessness came over him afresh. It was a final protest
|
|
against his resolution. Suddenly he leaned over and kissed
|
|
her, grossly, full on the mouth. The thing was done before
|
|
he knew it. Terrified at his weakness at the very moment he
|
|
believed himself strong, he threw himself once more into his
|
|
work with desperate energy. By the time he was fastening
|
|
the sheet of rubber upon the tooth, he had himself once more
|
|
in hand. He was disturbed, still trembling, still vibrating
|
|
with the throes of the crisis, but he was the master; the
|
|
animal was downed, was cowed for this time, at least.
|
|
|
|
But for all that, the brute was there. Long dormant, it was
|
|
now at last alive, awake. From now on he would feel its
|
|
presence continually; would feel it tugging at its chain,
|
|
watching its opportunity. Ah, the pity of it! Why could he
|
|
not always love her purely, cleanly? What was this
|
|
perverse, vicious thing that lived within him, knitted to
|
|
his flesh?
|
|
|
|
Below the fine fabric of all that was good in him ran the
|
|
foul stream of hereditary evil, like a sewer. The vices and
|
|
sins of his father and of his father's father, to the third
|
|
and fourth and five hundredth generation, tainted him.
|
|
The evil of an entire race flowed in his veins. Why should
|
|
it be? He did not desire it. Was he to blame?
|
|
|
|
But McTeague could not understand this thing. It had faced
|
|
him, as sooner or later it faces every child of man; but its
|
|
significance was not for him. To reason with it was beyond
|
|
him. He could only oppose to it an instinctive stubborn
|
|
resistance, blind, inert.
|
|
|
|
McTeague went on with his work. As he was rapping in the
|
|
little blocks and cylinders with the mallet, Trina slowly
|
|
came back to herself with a long sigh. She still felt a
|
|
little confused, and lay quiet in the chair. There was a
|
|
long silence, broken only by the uneven tapping of the
|
|
hardwood mallet. By and by she said, "I never felt a
|
|
thing," and then she smiled at him very prettily beneath the
|
|
rubber dam. McTeague turned to her suddenly, his mallet in
|
|
one hand, his pliers holding a pellet of sponge-gold in the
|
|
other. All at once he said, with the unreasoned simplicity
|
|
and directness of a child: "Listen here, Miss Trina, I like
|
|
you better than any one else; what's the matter with us
|
|
getting married?"
|
|
|
|
Trina sat up in the chair quickly, and then drew back from
|
|
him, frightened and bewildered.
|
|
|
|
"Will you? Will you?" said McTeague. "Say, Miss Trina,
|
|
will you?"
|
|
|
|
"What is it? What do you mean?" she cried, confusedly, her
|
|
words muffled beneath the rubber.
|
|
|
|
"Will you?" repeated McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," she exclaimed, refusing without knowing why,
|
|
suddenly seized with a fear of him, the intuitive feminine
|
|
fear of the male. McTeague could only repeat the same thing
|
|
over and over again. Trina, more and more frightened at his
|
|
huge hands--the hands of the old-time car-boy--his immense
|
|
square-cut head and his enormous brute strength, cried out:
|
|
"No, no," behind the rubber dam, shaking her head violently,
|
|
holding out her hands, and shrinking down before him in the
|
|
operating chair. McTeague came nearer to her, repeating the
|
|
same question. "No, no," she cried, terrified. Then, as
|
|
she exclaimed, "Oh, I am sick," was suddenly taken with a
|
|
fit of vomiting. It was the not unusual after effect of the
|
|
ether, aided now by her excitement and nervousness.
|
|
McTeague was checked. He poured some bromide of potassium
|
|
into a graduated glass and held it to her lips.
|
|
|
|
"Here, swallow this," he said.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
Once every two months Maria Macapa set the entire flat in
|
|
commotion. She roamed the building from garret to cellar,
|
|
searching each corner, ferreting through every old box and
|
|
trunk and barrel, groping about on the top shelves of
|
|
closets, peering into rag-bags, exasperating the lodgers
|
|
with her persistence and importunity. She was collecting
|
|
junks, bits of iron, stone jugs, glass bottles, old sacks,
|
|
and cast-off garments. It was one of her perquisites. She
|
|
sold the junk to Zerkow, the rags-bottles-sacks man, who
|
|
lived in a filthy den in the alley just back of the flat,
|
|
and who sometimes paid her as much as three cents a pound.
|
|
The stone jugs, however, were worth a nickel. The money
|
|
that Zerkow paid her, Maria spent on shirt waists and dotted
|
|
blue neckties, trying to dress like the girls who tended the
|
|
soda-water fountain in the candy store on the corner. She
|
|
was sick with envy of these young women. They were in the
|
|
world, they were elegant, they were debonair, they had their
|
|
"young men."
|
|
|
|
On this occasion she presented herself at the door of Old
|
|
Grannis's room late in the afternoon. His door stood a
|
|
little open. That of Miss Baker was ajar a few inches. The
|
|
two old people were "keeping company" after their fashion.
|
|
|
|
"Got any junk, Mister Grannis?" inquired Maria, standing
|
|
in the door, a very dirty, half-filled pillowcase over one
|
|
arm.
|
|
|
|
"No, nothing--nothing that I can think of, Maria," replied
|
|
Old Grannis, terribly vexed at the interruption, yet not
|
|
wishing to be unkind. "Nothing I think of. Yet, however--
|
|
perhaps--if you wish to look."
|
|
|
|
He sat in the middle of the room before a small pine table.
|
|
His little binding apparatus was before him. In his fingers
|
|
was a huge upholsterer's needle threaded with twine, a brad-
|
|
awl lay at his elbow, on the floor beside him was a great
|
|
pile of pamphlets, the pages uncut. Old Grannis bought the
|
|
"Nation" and the "Breeder and Sportsman." In the latter he
|
|
occasionally found articles on dogs which interested him.
|
|
The former he seldom read. He could not afford to subscribe
|
|
regularly to either of the publications, but purchased their
|
|
back numbers by the score, almost solely for the pleasure he
|
|
took in binding them.
|
|
|
|
"What you alus sewing up them books for, Mister Grannis?"
|
|
asked Maria, as she began rummaging about in Old Grannis's
|
|
closet shelves. "There's just hundreds of 'em in here on
|
|
yer shelves; they ain't no good to you."
|
|
|
|
"Well, well," answered Old Grannis, timidly, rubbing his
|
|
chin, "I--I'm sure I can't quite say; a little habit, you
|
|
know; a diversion, a--a--it occupies one, you know. I don't
|
|
smoke; it takes the place of a pipe, perhaps."
|
|
|
|
"Here's this old yellow pitcher," said Maria, coming out of
|
|
the closet with it in her hand. "The handle's cracked; you
|
|
don't want it; better give me it."
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis did want the pitcher; true, he never used it
|
|
now, but he had kept it a long time, and somehow he held to
|
|
it as old people hold to trivial, worthless things that they
|
|
have had for many years.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that pitcher--well, Maria, I--I don't know. I'm
|
|
afraid--you see, that pitcher----"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, go 'long," interrupted Maria Macapa, "what's the good
|
|
of it?"
|
|
|
|
"If you insist, Maria, but I would much rather--" he rubbed
|
|
his chin, perplexed and annoyed, hating to refuse, and
|
|
wishing that Maria were gone.
|
|
|
|
"Why, what's the good of it?" persisted Maria. He could
|
|
give no sufficient answer. "That's all right," she
|
|
asserted, carrying the pitcher out.
|
|
|
|
"Ah--Maria--I say, you--you might leave the door--ah, don't
|
|
quite shut it--it's a bit close in here at times." Maria
|
|
grinned, and swung the door wide. Old Grannis was horribly
|
|
embarrassed; positively, Maria was becoming unbearable.
|
|
|
|
"Got any junk?" cried Maria at Miss Baker's door. The
|
|
little old lady was sitting close to the wall in her
|
|
rocking-chair; her hands resting idly in her lap.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Maria," she said plaintively, "you are always after
|
|
junk; you know I never have anything laying 'round like
|
|
that."
|
|
|
|
It was true. The retired dressmaker's tiny room was a
|
|
marvel of neatness, from the little red table, with its
|
|
three Gorham spoons laid in exact parallels, to the decorous
|
|
geraniums and mignonettes growing in the starch box at the
|
|
window, underneath the fish globe with its one venerable
|
|
gold fish. That day Miss Baker had been doing a bit of
|
|
washing; two pocket handkerchiefs, still moist, adhered to
|
|
the window panes, drying in the sun.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I guess you got something you don't want," Maria went
|
|
on, peering into the corners of the room. "Look-a-here what
|
|
Mister Grannis gi' me," and she held out the yellow pitcher.
|
|
Instantly Miss Baker was in a quiver of confusion. Every
|
|
word spoken aloud could be perfectly heard in the next room.
|
|
What a stupid drab was this Maria! Could anything be more
|
|
trying than this position?
|
|
|
|
"Ain't that right, Mister Grannis?" called Maria; "didn't
|
|
you gi' me this pitcher?" Old Grannis affected not to hear;
|
|
perspiration stood on his forehead; his timidity overcame
|
|
him as if he were a ten-year-old schoolboy. He half rose
|
|
from his chair, his fingers dancing nervously upon his chin.
|
|
|
|
Maria opened Miss Baker's closet unconcernedly. "What's the
|
|
matter with these old shoes?" she exclaimed, turning about
|
|
with a pair of half-worn silk gaiters in her hand. They
|
|
were by no means old enough to throw away, but Miss
|
|
Baker was almost beside herself. There was no telling what
|
|
might happen next. Her only thought was to be rid of Maria.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, anything. You can have them; but go, go. There's
|
|
nothing else, not a thing."
|
|
|
|
Maria went out into the hall, leaving Miss Baker's door wide
|
|
open, as if maliciously. She had left the dirty pillow-case
|
|
on the floor in the hall, and she stood outside, between the
|
|
two open doors, stowing away the old pitcher and the half-
|
|
worn silk shoes. She made remarks at the top of her voice,
|
|
calling now to Miss Baker, now to Old Grannis. In a way she
|
|
brought the two old people face to face. Each time they
|
|
were forced to answer her questions it was as if they were
|
|
talking directly to each other.
|
|
|
|
"These here are first-rate shoes, Miss Baker. Look here,
|
|
Mister Grannis, get on to the shoes Miss Baker gi' me. You
|
|
ain't got a pair you don't want, have you? You two people
|
|
have less junk than any one else in the flat. How do you
|
|
manage, Mister Grannis? You old bachelors are just like old
|
|
maids, just as neat as pins. You two are just alike--you
|
|
and Mister Grannis--ain't you, Miss Baker?"
|
|
|
|
Nothing could have been more horribly constrained, more
|
|
awkward. The two old people suffered veritable torture.
|
|
When Maria had gone, each heaved a sigh of unspeakable
|
|
relief. Softly they pushed to their doors, leaving open a
|
|
space of half a dozen inches. Old Grannis went back to his
|
|
binding. Miss Baker brewed a cup of tea to quiet her
|
|
nerves. Each tried to regain their composure, but in vain.
|
|
Old Grannis's fingers trembled so that he pricked them with
|
|
his needle. Miss Baker dropped her spoon twice. Their
|
|
nervousness would not wear off. They were perturbed, upset.
|
|
In a word, the afternoon was spoiled.
|
|
|
|
Maria went on about the flat from room to room. She had
|
|
already paid Marcus Schouler a visit early that morning
|
|
before he had gone out. Marcus had sworn at her, excitedly
|
|
vociferating; "No, by damn! No, he hadn't a thing for her;
|
|
he hadn't, for a fact. It was a positive persecution. Every
|
|
day his privacy was invaded. He would complain to the
|
|
landlady, he would. He'd move out of the place." In the
|
|
end he had given Maria seven empty whiskey flasks, an iron
|
|
grate, and ten cents--the latter because he said she wore
|
|
her hair like a girl he used to know.
|
|
|
|
After coming from Miss Baker's room Maria knocked at
|
|
McTeague's door. The dentist was lying on the bed-lounge in
|
|
his stocking feet, doing nothing apparently, gazing up at
|
|
the ceiling, lost in thought.
|
|
|
|
Since he had spoken to Trina Sieppe, asking her so abruptly
|
|
to marry him, McTeague had passed a week of torment. For
|
|
him there was no going back. It was Trina now, and none
|
|
other. It was all one with him that his best friend,
|
|
Marcus, might be in love with the same girl. He must have
|
|
Trina in spite of everything; he would have her even in
|
|
spite of herself. He did not stop to reflect about the
|
|
matter; he followed his desire blindly, recklessly, furious
|
|
and raging at every obstacle. And she had cried "No, no!"
|
|
back at him; he could not forget that. She, so small and
|
|
pale and delicate, had held him at bay, who was so huge, so
|
|
immensely strong.
|
|
|
|
Besides that, all the charm of their intimacy was gone.
|
|
After that unhappy sitting, Trina was no longer frank and
|
|
straight-forward. Now she was circumspect, reserved,
|
|
distant. He could no longer open his mouth; words failed
|
|
him. At one sitting in particular they had said but good-
|
|
day and good-by to each other. He felt that he was clumsy
|
|
and ungainly. He told himself that she despised him.
|
|
|
|
But the memory of her was with him constantly. Night after
|
|
night he lay broad awake thinking of Trina, wondering about
|
|
her, racked with the infinite desire of her. His head burnt
|
|
and throbbed. The palms of his hands were dry. He dozed
|
|
and woke, and walked aimlessly about the dark room, bruising
|
|
himself against the three chairs drawn up "at attention"
|
|
under the steel engraving, and stumbling over the stone pug
|
|
dog that sat in front of the little stove.
|
|
|
|
Besides this, the jealousy of Marcus Schouler harassed him.
|
|
Maria Macapa, coming into his "Parlor" to ask for junk,
|
|
found him flung at length upon the bed-lounge, gnawing at
|
|
his fingers in an excess of silent fury. At lunch that
|
|
day Marcus had told him of an excursion that was planned for
|
|
the next Sunday afternoon. Mr. Sieppe, Trina's father,
|
|
belonged to a rifle club that was to hold a meet at
|
|
Schuetzen Park across the bay. All the Sieppes were going;
|
|
there was to be a basket picnic. Marcus, as usual, was
|
|
invited to be one of the party. McTeague was in agony. It
|
|
was his first experience, and he suffered all the worse for
|
|
it because he was totally unprepared. What miserable
|
|
complication was this in which he found himself involved?
|
|
It seemed so simple to him since he loved Trina to take her
|
|
straight to himself, stopping at nothing, asking no
|
|
questions, to have her, and by main strength to carry her
|
|
far away somewhere, he did not know exactly where, to some
|
|
vague country, some undiscovered place where every day was
|
|
Sunday.
|
|
|
|
"Got any junk?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What? What is it?" exclaimed McTeague, suddenly
|
|
rousing up from the lounge. Often Maria did very well in
|
|
the "Dental Parlors." McTeague was continually breaking
|
|
things which he was too stupid to have mended; for him
|
|
anything that was broken was lost. Now it was a cuspidor,
|
|
now a fire-shovel for the little stove, now a China shaving
|
|
mug.
|
|
|
|
"Got any junk?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know--I don't remember," muttered McTeague. Maria
|
|
roamed about the room, McTeague following her in his huge
|
|
stockinged feet. All at once she pounced upon a sheaf of
|
|
old hand instruments in a coverless cigar-box, pluggers,
|
|
hard bits, and excavators. Maria had long coveted such a
|
|
find in McTeague's "Parlor," knowing it should be somewhere
|
|
about. The instruments were of the finest tempered steel
|
|
and really valuable.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Doctor, I can have these, can't I?" exclaimed Maria.
|
|
"You got no more use for them." McTeague was not at all sure
|
|
of this. There were many in the sheaf that might be
|
|
repaired, reshaped.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," he said, wagging his head. But Maria Macapa,
|
|
knowing with whom she had to deal, at once let loose a
|
|
torrent of words. She made the dentist believe that he had
|
|
no right to withhold them, that he had promised to save
|
|
them for her. She affected a great indignation, pursing her
|
|
lips and putting her chin in the air as though wounded in
|
|
some finer sense, changing so rapidly from one mood to
|
|
another, filling the room with such shrill clamor, that
|
|
McTeague was dazed and benumbed.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, all right, all right," he said, trying to make himself
|
|
heard. "It WOULD be mean. I don't want 'em." As he
|
|
turned from her to pick up the box, Maria took advantage of
|
|
the moment to steal three "mats" of sponge-gold out of the
|
|
glass saucer. Often she stole McTeague's gold, almost under
|
|
his very eyes; indeed, it was so easy to do so that there
|
|
was but little pleasure in the theft. Then Maria took
|
|
herself off. McTeague returned to the sofa and flung
|
|
himself upon it face downward.
|
|
|
|
A little before supper time Maria completed her search. The
|
|
flat was cleaned of its junk from top to bottom. The dirty
|
|
pillow-case was full to bursting. She took advantage of the
|
|
supper hour to carry her bundle around the corner and up
|
|
into the alley where Zerkow lived.
|
|
|
|
When Maria entered his shop, Zerkow had just come in from
|
|
his daily rounds. His decrepit wagon stood in front of his
|
|
door like a stranded wreck; the miserable horse, with its
|
|
lamentable swollen joints, fed greedily upon an armful of
|
|
spoiled hay in a shed at the back.
|
|
|
|
The interior of the junk shop was dark and damp, and foul
|
|
with all manner of choking odors. On the walls, on the
|
|
floor, and hanging from the rafters was a world of debris,
|
|
dust-blackened, rust-corroded. Everything was there, every
|
|
trade was represented, every class of society; things of
|
|
iron and cloth and wood; all the detritus that a great city
|
|
sloughs off in its daily life. Zerkow's junk shop was the
|
|
last abiding-place, the almshouse, of such articles as had
|
|
outlived their usefulness.
|
|
|
|
Maria found Zerkow himself in the back room, cooking some
|
|
sort of a meal over an alcohol stove. Zerkow was a Polish
|
|
Jew--curiously enough his hair was fiery red. He was a dry,
|
|
shrivelled old man of sixty odd. He had the thin, eager,
|
|
cat-like lips of the covetous; eyes that had grown keen as
|
|
those of a lynx from long searching amidst muck and
|
|
debris; and claw-like, prehensile fingers--the fingers of a
|
|
man who accumulates, but never disburses. It was impossible
|
|
to look at Zerkow and not know instantly that greed--
|
|
inordinate, insatiable greed--was the dominant passion of
|
|
the man. He was the Man with the Rake, groping hourly in
|
|
the muck-heap of the city for gold, for gold, for gold. It
|
|
was his dream, his passion; at every instant he seemed to
|
|
feel the generous solid weight of the crude fat metal in his
|
|
palms. The glint of it was constantly in his eyes; the
|
|
jangle of it sang forever in his ears as the jangling of
|
|
cymbals.
|
|
|
|
"Who is it? Who is it?" exclaimed Zerkow, as he heard
|
|
Maria's footsteps in the outer room. His voice was faint,
|
|
husky, reduced almost to a whisper by his prolonged habit of
|
|
street crying.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it's you again, is it?" he added, peering through the
|
|
gloom of the shop. "Let's see; you've been here before,
|
|
ain't you? You're the Mexican woman from Polk Street.
|
|
Macapa's your name, hey?"
|
|
|
|
Maria nodded. "Had a flying squirrel an' let him go," she
|
|
muttered, absently. Zerkow was puzzled; he looked at her
|
|
sharply for a moment, then dismissed the matter with a
|
|
movement of his head.
|
|
|
|
"Well, what you got for me?" he said. He left his supper to
|
|
grow cold, absorbed at once in the affair.
|
|
|
|
Then a long wrangle began. Every bit of junk in Maria's
|
|
pillow-case was discussed and weighed and disputed. They
|
|
clamored into each other's faces over Old Grannis's cracked
|
|
pitcher, over Miss Baker's silk gaiters, over Marcus
|
|
Schouler's whiskey flasks, reaching the climax of
|
|
disagreement when it came to McTeague's instruments.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, no, no!" shouted Maria. "Fifteen cents for the lot! I
|
|
might as well make you a Christmas present! Besides, I got
|
|
some gold fillings off him; look at um."
|
|
|
|
Zerkow drew a quick breath as the three pellets suddenly
|
|
flashed in Maria's palm. There it was, the virgin metal,
|
|
the pure, unalloyed ore, his dream, his consuming desire.
|
|
His fingers twitched and hooked themselves into his
|
|
palms, his thin lips drew tight across his teeth.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, you got some gold," he muttered, reaching for it.
|
|
|
|
Maria shut her fist over the pellets. "The gold goes with
|
|
the others," she declared. "You'll gi' me a fair price for
|
|
the lot, or I'll take um back."
|
|
|
|
In the end a bargain was struck that satisfied Maria.
|
|
Zerkow was not one who would let gold go out of his house.
|
|
He counted out to her the price of all her junk, grudging
|
|
each piece of money as if it had been the blood of his
|
|
veins. The affair was concluded.
|
|
|
|
But Zerkow still had something to say. As Maria folded up
|
|
the pillow-case and rose to go, the old Jew said:
|
|
|
|
"Well, see here a minute, we'll--you'll have a drink before
|
|
you go, won't you? Just to show that it's all right between
|
|
us." Maria sat down again.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I guess I'll have a drink," she answered.
|
|
|
|
Zerkow took down a whiskey bottle and a red glass tumbler
|
|
with a broken base from a cupboard on the wall. The two
|
|
drank together, Zerkow from the bottle, Maria from the
|
|
broken tumbler. They wiped their lips slowly, drawing
|
|
breath again. There was a moment's silence.
|
|
|
|
"Say," said Zerkow at last, "how about those gold dishes you
|
|
told me about the last time you were here?"
|
|
|
|
"What gold dishes?" inquired Maria, puzzled.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, you know," returned the other. "The plate your father
|
|
owned in Central America a long time ago. Don't you know,
|
|
it rang like so many bells? Red gold, you know, like
|
|
oranges?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah," said Maria, putting her chin in the air as if she knew
|
|
a long story about that if she had a mind to tell it. "Ah,
|
|
yes, that gold service."
|
|
|
|
"Tell us about it again," said Zerkow, his bloodless lower
|
|
lip moving against the upper, his claw-like fingers feeling
|
|
about his mouth and chin. "Tell us about it; go on."
|
|
|
|
He was breathing short, his limbs trembled a little. It was
|
|
as if some hungry beast of prey had scented a quarry. Maria
|
|
still refused, putting up her head, insisting that she had
|
|
to be going.
|
|
|
|
"Let's have it," insisted the Jew. "Take another
|
|
drink." Maria took another swallow of the whiskey. "Now, go
|
|
on," repeated Zerkow; "let's have the story." Maria squared
|
|
her elbows on the deal table, looking straight in front of
|
|
her with eyes that saw nothing.
|
|
|
|
"Well, it was this way," she began. "It was when I was
|
|
little. My folks must have been rich, oh, rich into the
|
|
millions--coffee, I guess--and there was a large house, but
|
|
I can only remember the plate. Oh, that service of plate!
|
|
It was wonderful. There were more than a hundred pieces,
|
|
and every one of them gold. You should have seen the sight
|
|
when the leather trunk was opened. It fair dazzled your
|
|
eyes. It was a yellow blaze like a fire, like a sunset;
|
|
such a glory, all piled up together, one piece over the
|
|
other. Why, if the room was dark you'd think you could see
|
|
just the same with all that glitter there. There wa'n't a
|
|
piece that was so much as scratched; every one was like a
|
|
mirror, smooth and bright, just like a little pool when the
|
|
sun shines into it. There was dinner dishes and soup
|
|
tureens and pitchers; and great, big platters as long as
|
|
that and wide too; and cream-jugs and bowls with carved
|
|
handles, all vines and things; and drinking mugs, every one
|
|
a different shape; and dishes for gravy and sauces; and then
|
|
a great, big punch-bowl with a ladle, and the bowl was all
|
|
carved out with figures and bunches of grapes. Why, just
|
|
only that punch-bowl was worth a fortune, I guess. When all
|
|
that plate was set out on a table, it was a sight for a king
|
|
to look at. Such a service as that was! Each piece was
|
|
heavy, oh, so heavy! and thick, you know; thick, fat gold,
|
|
nothing but gold--red, shining, pure gold, orange red--and
|
|
when you struck it with your knuckle, ah, you should have
|
|
heard! No church bell ever rang sweeter or clearer. It was
|
|
soft gold, too; you could bite into it, and leave the dent
|
|
of your teeth. Oh, that gold plate! I can see it just as
|
|
plain--solid, solid, heavy, rich, pure gold; nothing but
|
|
gold, gold, heaps and heaps of it. What a service that was!"
|
|
|
|
Maria paused, shaking her head, thinking over the vanished
|
|
splendor. Illiterate enough, unimaginative enough on all
|
|
other subjects, her distorted wits called up this picture
|
|
with marvellous distinctness. It was plain she saw the
|
|
plate clearly. Her description was accurate, was almost
|
|
eloquent.
|
|
|
|
Did that wonderful service of gold plate ever exist outside
|
|
of her diseased imagination? Was Maria actually remembering
|
|
some reality of a childhood of barbaric luxury? Were her
|
|
parents at one time possessed of an incalculable fortune
|
|
derived from some Central American coffee plantation, a
|
|
fortune long since confiscated by armies of
|
|
insurrectionists, or squandered in the support of
|
|
revolutionary governments?
|
|
|
|
It was not impossible. Of Maria Macapa's past prior to the
|
|
time of her appearance at the "flat" absolutely nothing
|
|
could be learned. She suddenly appeared from the unknown, a
|
|
strange woman of a mixed race, sane on all subjects but that
|
|
of the famous service of gold plate; but unusual, complex,
|
|
mysterious, even at her best.
|
|
|
|
But what misery Zerkow endured as he listened to her tale!
|
|
For he chose to believe it, forced himself to believe it,
|
|
lashed and harassed by a pitiless greed that checked at no
|
|
tale of treasure, however preposterous. The story ravished
|
|
him with delight. He was near someone who had possessed
|
|
this wealth. He saw someone who had seen this pile of gold.
|
|
He seemed near it; it was there, somewhere close by, under
|
|
his eyes, under his fingers; it was red, gleaming,
|
|
ponderous. He gazed about him wildly; nothing, nothing but
|
|
the sordid junk shop and the rust-corroded tins. What
|
|
exasperation, what positive misery, to be so near to it and
|
|
yet to know that it was irrevocably, irretrievably lost! A
|
|
spasm of anguish passed through him. He gnawed at his
|
|
bloodless lips, at the hopelessness of it, the rage, the
|
|
fury of it.
|
|
|
|
"Go on, go on," he whispered; "let's have it all over again.
|
|
Polished like a mirror, hey, and heavy? Yes, I know, I
|
|
know. A punch-bowl worth a fortune. Ah! and you saw it,
|
|
you had it all!"
|
|
|
|
Maria rose to go. Zerkow accompanied her to the door,
|
|
urging another drink upon her.
|
|
|
|
"Come again, come again," he croaked. "Don't wait till
|
|
you've got junk; come any time you feel like it, and tell me
|
|
more about the plate."
|
|
|
|
He followed her a step down the alley.
|
|
|
|
"How much do you think it was worth?" he inquired,
|
|
anxiously.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, a million dollars," answered Maria, vaguely.
|
|
|
|
When Maria had gone, Zerkow returned to the back room of the
|
|
shop, and stood in front of the alcohol stove, looking down
|
|
into his cold dinner, preoccupied, thoughtful.
|
|
|
|
"A million dollars," he muttered in his rasping, guttural
|
|
whisper, his finger-tips wandering over his thin, cat-like
|
|
lips. "A golden service worth a million dollars; a punch-
|
|
bowl worth a fortune; red gold plates, heaps and piles.
|
|
God!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 4
|
|
|
|
|
|
The days passed. McTeague had finished the operation on
|
|
Trina's teeth. She did not come any more to the "Parlors."
|
|
Matters had readjusted themselves a little between the two
|
|
during the last sittings. Trina yet stood upon her reserve,
|
|
and McTeague still felt himself shambling and ungainly in
|
|
her presence; but that constraint and embarrassment that had
|
|
followed upon McTeague's blundering declaration broke up
|
|
little by little. In spite of themselves they were
|
|
gradually resuming the same relative positions they had
|
|
occupied when they had first met.
|
|
|
|
But McTeague suffered miserably for all that. He never
|
|
would have Trina, he saw that clearly. She was too good for
|
|
him; too delicate, too refined, too prettily made for him,
|
|
who was so coarse, so enormous, so stupid. She was for
|
|
someone else--Marcus, no doubt--or at least for some finer-
|
|
grained man. She should have gone to some other dentist;
|
|
the young fellow on the corner, for instance, the poser, the
|
|
rider of bicycles, the courser of grey-hounds. McTeague
|
|
began to loathe and to envy this fellow. He spied upon him
|
|
going in and out of his office, and noted his salmon-pink
|
|
neckties and his astonishing waistcoats.
|
|
|
|
One Sunday, a few days after Trina's last sitting, McTeague
|
|
met Marcus Schouler at his table in the car conductors'
|
|
coffee-joint, next to the harness shop.
|
|
|
|
"What you got to do this afternoon, Mac?" inquired the
|
|
other, as they ate their suet pudding.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing, nothing," replied McTeague, shaking his head. His
|
|
mouth was full of pudding. It made him warm to eat, and
|
|
little beads of perspiration stood across the bridge of his
|
|
nose. He looked forward to an afternoon passed in his
|
|
operating chair as usual. On leaving his "Parlors" he had
|
|
put ten cents into his pitcher and had left it at Frenna's
|
|
to be filled.
|
|
|
|
"What do you say we take a walk, huh?" said Marcus. "Ah,
|
|
that's the thing--a walk, a long walk, by damn! It'll be
|
|
outa sight. I got to take three or four of the dogs out for
|
|
exercise, anyhow. Old Grannis thinks they need ut. We'll
|
|
walk out to the Presidio."
|
|
|
|
Of late it had become the custom of the two friends to take
|
|
long walks from time to time. On holidays and on those
|
|
Sunday afternoons when Marcus was not absent with the
|
|
Sieppes they went out together, sometimes to the park,
|
|
sometimes to the Presidio, sometimes even across the bay.
|
|
They took a great pleasure in each other's company, but
|
|
silently and with reservation, having the masculine horror
|
|
of any demonstration of friendship.
|
|
|
|
They walked for upwards of five hours that afternoon, out
|
|
the length of California Street, and across the Presidio
|
|
Reservation to the Golden Gate. Then they turned, and,
|
|
following the line of the shore, brought up at the Cliff
|
|
House. Here they halted for beer, Marcus swearing that his
|
|
mouth was as dry as a hay-bin. Before starting on their
|
|
walk they had gone around to the little dog hospital, and
|
|
Marcus had let out four of the convalescents, crazed with
|
|
joy at the release.
|
|
|
|
"Look at that dog," he cried to McTeague, showing him a
|
|
finely-bred Irish setter. "That's the dog that belonged
|
|
to the duck on the avenue, the dog we called for that day.
|
|
I've bought 'um. The duck thought he had the distemper, and
|
|
just threw 'um away. Nothun wrong with 'um but a little
|
|
catarrh. Ain't he a bird? Say, ain't he a bird? Look at
|
|
his flag; it's perfect; and see how he carries his tail on a
|
|
line with his back. See how stiff and white his whiskers
|
|
are. Oh, by damn! you can't fool me on a dog. That dog's a
|
|
winner."
|
|
|
|
At the Cliff House the two sat down to their beer in a quiet
|
|
corner of the billiard-room. There were but two players.
|
|
Somewhere in another part of the building a mammoth music-
|
|
box was jangling out a quickstep. From outside came the
|
|
long, rhythmical rush of the surf and the sonorous barking
|
|
of the seals upon the seal rocks. The four dogs curled
|
|
themselves down upon the sanded floor.
|
|
|
|
"Here's how," said Marcus, half emptying his glass. "Ah-h!"
|
|
he added, with a long breath, "that's good; it is, for a
|
|
fact."
|
|
|
|
For the last hour of their walk Marcus had done nearly all
|
|
the talking. McTeague merely answering him by uncertain
|
|
movements of the head. For that matter, the dentist had
|
|
been silent and preoccupied throughout the whole afternoon.
|
|
At length Marcus noticed it. As he set down his glass with
|
|
a bang he suddenly exclaimed:
|
|
|
|
"What's the matter with you these days, Mac? You got a bean
|
|
about somethun, hey? Spit ut out."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," replied McTeague, looking about on the floor,
|
|
rolling his eyes; "nothing, no, no."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, rats!" returned the other. McTeague kept silence. The
|
|
two billiard players departed. The huge music-box struck
|
|
into a fresh tune.
|
|
|
|
"Huh!" exclaimed Marcus, with a short laugh, "guess you're
|
|
in love."
|
|
|
|
McTeague gasped, and shuffled his enormous feet under the
|
|
table.
|
|
|
|
"Well, somethun's bitun you, anyhow," pursued Marcus.
|
|
"Maybe I can help you. We're pals, you know. Better tell
|
|
me what's up; guess we can straighten ut out. Ah, go
|
|
on; spit ut out."
|
|
|
|
The situation was abominable. McTeague could not rise to
|
|
it. Marcus was his best friend, his only friend. They were
|
|
"pals" and McTeague was very fond of him. Yet they were
|
|
both in love, presumably, with the same girl, and now Marcus
|
|
would try and force the secret out of him; would rush
|
|
blindly at the rock upon which the two must split, stirred
|
|
by the very best of motives, wishing only to be of service.
|
|
Besides this, there was nobody to whom McTeague would have
|
|
better preferred to tell his troubles than to Marcus, and
|
|
yet about this trouble, the greatest trouble of his life, he
|
|
must keep silent; must refrain from speaking of it to Marcus
|
|
above everybody.
|
|
|
|
McTeague began dimly to feel that life was too much for him.
|
|
How had it all come about? A month ago he was perfectly
|
|
content; he was calm and peaceful, taking his little
|
|
pleasures as he found them. His life had shaped itself;
|
|
was, no doubt, to continue always along these same lines. A
|
|
woman had entered his small world and instantly there was
|
|
discord. The disturbing element had appeared. Wherever the
|
|
woman had put her foot a score of distressing complications
|
|
had sprung up, like the sudden growth of strange and
|
|
puzzling flowers.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mac, go on; let's have ut straight," urged Marcus,
|
|
leaning toward him. "Has any duck been doing you dirt?" he
|
|
cried, his face crimson on the instant.
|
|
|
|
"No," said McTeague, helplessly.
|
|
|
|
"Come along, old man," persisted Marcus; "let's have ut.
|
|
What is the row? I'll do all I can to help you."
|
|
|
|
It was more than McTeague could bear. The situation had got
|
|
beyond him. Stupidly he spoke, his hands deep in his
|
|
pockets, his head rolled forward.
|
|
|
|
"It's--it's Miss Sieppe," he said.
|
|
|
|
"Trina, my cousin? How do you mean?" inquired Marcus
|
|
sharply.
|
|
|
|
"I--I--I don' know," stammered McTeague, hopelessly
|
|
confounded.
|
|
|
|
"You mean," cried Marcus, suddenly enlightened, "that
|
|
you are--that you, too."
|
|
|
|
McTeague stirred in his chair, looking at the walls of the
|
|
room, avoiding the other's glance. He nodded his head, then
|
|
suddenly broke out:
|
|
|
|
"I can't help it. It ain't my fault, is it?"
|
|
|
|
Marcus was struck dumb; he dropped back in his chair
|
|
breathless. Suddenly McTeague found his tongue.
|
|
|
|
"I tell you, Mark, I can't help it. I don't know how it
|
|
happened. It came on so slow that I was, that--that--that
|
|
it was done before I knew it, before I could help myself. I
|
|
know we're pals, us two, and I knew how--how you and Miss
|
|
Sieppe were. I know now, I knew then; but that wouldn't
|
|
have made any difference. Before I knew it--it--it--there I
|
|
was. I can't help it. I wouldn't 'a' had ut happen for
|
|
anything, if I could 'a' stopped it, but I don' know, it's
|
|
something that's just stronger than you are, that's all.
|
|
She came there--Miss Sieppe came to the parlors there three
|
|
or four times a week, and she was the first girl I had ever
|
|
known,--and you don' know! Why, I was so close to her I
|
|
touched her face every minute, and her mouth, and smelt her
|
|
hair and her breath--oh, you don't know anything about it.
|
|
I can't give you any idea. I don' know exactly myself; I
|
|
only know how I'm fixed. I--I--it's been done; it's too
|
|
late, there's no going back. Why, I can't think of anything
|
|
else night and day. It's everything. It's--it's--oh, it's
|
|
everything! I--I--why, Mark, it's everything--I can't
|
|
explain." He made a helpless movement with both hands.
|
|
|
|
Never had McTeague been so excited; never had he made so
|
|
long a speech. His arms moved in fierce, uncertain
|
|
gestures, his face flushed, his enormous jaws shut together
|
|
with a sharp click at every pause. It was like some
|
|
colossal brute trapped in a delicate, invisible mesh,
|
|
raging, exasperated, powerless to extricate himself.
|
|
|
|
Marcus Schouler said nothing. There was a long silence.
|
|
Marcus got up and walked to the window and stood looking
|
|
out, but seeing nothing. "Well, who would have thought of
|
|
this?" he muttered under his breath. Here was a fix.
|
|
Marcus cared for Trina. There was no doubt in his mind
|
|
about that. He looked forward eagerly to the Sunday
|
|
afternoon excursions. He liked to be with Trina. He, too,
|
|
felt the charm of the little girl--the charm of the small,
|
|
pale forehead; the little chin thrust out as if in
|
|
confidence and innocence; the heavy, odorous crown of black
|
|
hair. He liked her immensely. Some day he would speak; he
|
|
would ask her to marry him. Marcus put off this matter of
|
|
marriage to some future period; it would be some time--a
|
|
year, perhaps, or two. The thing did not take definite
|
|
shape in his mind. Marcus "kept company" with his cousin
|
|
Trina, but he knew plenty of other girls. For the matter of
|
|
that, he liked all girls pretty well. Just now the
|
|
singleness and strength of McTeague's passion startled him.
|
|
McTeague would marry Trina that very afternoon if she would
|
|
have him; but would he--Marcus? No, he would not; if it
|
|
came to that, no, he would not. Yet he knew he liked Trina.
|
|
He could say--yes, he could say--he loved her. She was his
|
|
"girl." The Sieppes acknowledged him as Trina's "young
|
|
man." Marcus came back to the table and sat down sideways
|
|
upon it.
|
|
|
|
"Well, what are we going to do about it, Mac?" he said.
|
|
|
|
"I don' know," answered McTeague, in great distress. "I
|
|
don' want anything to--to come between us, Mark."
|
|
|
|
"Well, nothun will, you bet!" vociferated the other. "No,
|
|
sir; you bet not, Mac."
|
|
|
|
Marcus was thinking hard. He could see very clearly that
|
|
McTeague loved Trina more than he did; that in some strange
|
|
way this huge, brutal fellow was capable of a greater
|
|
passion than himself, who was twice as clever. Suddenly
|
|
Marcus jumped impetuously to a resolution.
|
|
|
|
"Well, say, Mac," he cried, striking the table with his
|
|
fist, "go ahead. I guess you--you want her pretty bad. I'll
|
|
pull out; yes, I will. I'll give her up to you, old man."
|
|
|
|
The sense of his own magnanimity all at once overcame
|
|
Marcus. He saw himself as another man, very noble, self-
|
|
sacrificing; he stood apart and watched this second self
|
|
with boundless admiration and with infinite pity. He
|
|
was so good, so magnificent, so heroic, that he almost
|
|
sobbed. Marcus made a sweeping gesture of resignation,
|
|
throwing out both his arms, crying:
|
|
|
|
"Mac, I'll give her up to you. I won't stand between you."
|
|
There were actually tears in Marcus's eyes as he spoke.
|
|
There was no doubt he thought himself sincere. At that
|
|
moment he almost believed he loved Trina conscientiously,
|
|
that he was sacrificing himself for the sake of his friend.
|
|
The two stood up and faced each other, gripping hands. It
|
|
was a great moment; even McTeague felt the drama of it.
|
|
What a fine thing was this friendship between men! the
|
|
dentist treats his friend for an ulcerated tooth and refuses
|
|
payment; the friend reciprocates by giving up his girl.
|
|
This was nobility. Their mutual affection and esteem
|
|
suddenly increased enormously. It was Damon and Pythias; it
|
|
was David and Jonathan; nothing could ever estrange them.
|
|
Now it was for life or death.
|
|
|
|
"I'm much obliged," murmured McTeague. He could think of
|
|
nothing better to say. "I'm much obliged," he repeated;
|
|
"much obliged, Mark."
|
|
|
|
"That's all right, that's all right," returned Marcus
|
|
Schouler, bravely, and it occurred to him to add, "You'll be
|
|
happy together. Tell her for me--tell her---tell her----"
|
|
Marcus could not go on. He wrung the dentist's hand
|
|
silently.
|
|
|
|
It had not appeared to either of them that Trina might
|
|
refuse McTeague. McTeague's spirits rose at once. In
|
|
Marcus's withdrawal he fancied he saw an end to all his
|
|
difficulties. Everything would come right, after all. The
|
|
strained, exalted state of Marcus's nerves ended by putting
|
|
him into fine humor as well. His grief suddenly changed to
|
|
an excess of gaiety. The afternoon was a success. They
|
|
slapped each other on the back with great blows of the open
|
|
palms, and they drank each other's health in a third round
|
|
of beer.
|
|
|
|
Ten minutes after his renunciation of Trina Sieppe, Marcus
|
|
astounded McTeague with a tremendous feat.
|
|
|
|
"Looka here, Mac. I know somethun you can't do. I'll bet
|
|
you two bits I'll stump you." They each put a quarter on
|
|
the table. "Now watch me," cried Marcus. He caught up
|
|
a billiard ball from the rack, poised it a moment in front
|
|
of his face, then with a sudden, horrifying distension of
|
|
his jaws crammed it into his mouth, and shut his lips over
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
For an instant McTeague was stupefied, his eyes bulging.
|
|
Then an enormous laugh shook him. He roared and shouted,
|
|
swaying in his chair, slapping his knee. What a josher was
|
|
this Marcus! Sure, you never could tell what he would do
|
|
next. Marcus slipped the ball out, wiped it on the
|
|
tablecloth, and passed it to McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"Now let's see you do it."
|
|
|
|
McTeague fell suddenly grave. The matter was serious. He
|
|
parted his thick mustaches and opened his enormous jaws like
|
|
an anaconda. The ball disappeared inside his mouth. Marcus
|
|
applauded vociferously, shouting, "Good work!" McTeague
|
|
reached for the money and put it in his vest pocket, nodding
|
|
his head with a knowing air.
|
|
|
|
Then suddenly his face grew purple, his jaws moved
|
|
convulsively, he pawed at his cheeks with both hands. The
|
|
billiard ball had slipped into his mouth easily enough; now,
|
|
however, he could not get it out again.
|
|
|
|
It was terrible. The dentist rose to his feet, stumbling
|
|
about among the dogs, his face working, his eyes starting.
|
|
Try as he would, he could not stretch his jaws wide enough
|
|
to slip the ball out. Marcus lost his wits, swearing at the
|
|
top of his voice. McTeague sweated with terror;
|
|
inarticulate sounds came from his crammed mouth; he waved
|
|
his arms wildly; all the four dogs caught the excitement and
|
|
began to bark. A waiter rushed in, the two billiard players
|
|
returned, a little crowd formed. There was a veritable
|
|
scene.
|
|
|
|
All at once the ball slipped out of McTeague's jaws as
|
|
easily as it had gone in. What a relief! He dropped into a
|
|
chair, wiping his forehead, gasping for breath.
|
|
|
|
On the strength of the occasion Marcus Schouler invited the
|
|
entire group to drink with him.
|
|
|
|
By the time the affair was over and the group dispersed it
|
|
was after five. Marcus and McTeague decided they would
|
|
ride home on the cars. But they soon found this impossible.
|
|
The dogs would not follow. Only Alexander, Marcus's new
|
|
setter, kept his place at the rear of the car. The other
|
|
three lost their senses immediately, running wildly about
|
|
the streets with their heads in the air, or suddenly
|
|
starting off at a furious gallop directly away from the car.
|
|
Marcus whistled and shouted and lathered with rage in vain.
|
|
The two friends were obliged to walk. When they finally
|
|
reached Polk Street, Marcus shut up the three dogs in the
|
|
hospital. Alexander he brought back to the flat with him.
|
|
|
|
There was a minute back yard in the rear, where Marcus had
|
|
made a kennel for Alexander out of an old water barrel.
|
|
Before he thought of his own supper Marcus put Alexander to
|
|
bed and fed him a couple of dog biscuits. McTeague had
|
|
followed him to the yard to keep him company. Alexander
|
|
settled to his supper at once, chewing vigorously at the
|
|
biscuit, his head on one side.
|
|
|
|
"What you going to do about this--about that--about--about
|
|
my cousin now, Mac?" inquired Marcus.
|
|
|
|
McTeague shook his head helplessly. It was dark by now and
|
|
cold. The little back yard was grimy and full of odors.
|
|
McTeague was tired with their long walk. All his uneasiness
|
|
about his affair with Trina had returned. No, surely she
|
|
was not for him. Marcus or some other man would win her in
|
|
the end. What could she ever see to desire in him--in him,
|
|
a clumsy giant, with hands like wooden mallets? She had
|
|
told him once that she would not marry him. Was that not
|
|
final?
|
|
|
|
"I don' know what to do, Mark," he said.
|
|
|
|
"Well, you must make up to her now," answered Marcus. "Go
|
|
and call on her."
|
|
|
|
McTeague started. He had not thought of calling on her.
|
|
The idea frightened him a little.
|
|
|
|
"Of course," persisted Marcus, "that's the proper caper.
|
|
What did you expect? Did you think you was never going to
|
|
see her again?"
|
|
|
|
"I don' know, I don' know," responded the dentist, looking
|
|
stupidly at the dog.
|
|
|
|
"You know where they live," continued Marcus Schouler.
|
|
"Over at B Street station, across the bay. I'll take you
|
|
over there whenever you want to go. I tell you what, we'll
|
|
go over there Washington's Birthday. That's this next
|
|
Wednesday; sure, they'll be glad to see you." It was good of
|
|
Marcus. All at once McTeague rose to an appreciation of
|
|
what his friend was doing for him. He stammered:
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mark--you're--you're all right, anyhow."
|
|
|
|
"Why, pshaw!" said Marcus. "That's all right, old man. I'd
|
|
like to see you two fixed, that's all. We'll go over
|
|
Wednesday, sure."
|
|
|
|
They turned back to the house. Alexander left off eating
|
|
and watched them go away, first with one eye, then with the
|
|
other. But he was too self-respecting to whimper. However,
|
|
by the time the two friends had reached the second landing
|
|
on the back stairs a terrible commotion was under way in the
|
|
little yard. They rushed to an open window at the end of the
|
|
hall and looked down.
|
|
|
|
A thin board fence separated the flat's back yard from that
|
|
used by the branch post-office. In the latter place lived a
|
|
collie dog. He and Alexander had smelt each other out,
|
|
blowing through the cracks of the fence at each other.
|
|
Suddenly the quarrel had exploded on either side of the
|
|
fence. The dogs raged at each other, snarling and barking,
|
|
frantic with hate. Their teeth gleamed. They tore at the
|
|
fence with their front paws. They filled the whole night
|
|
with their clamor.
|
|
|
|
"By damn!" cried Marcus, "they don't love each other. Just
|
|
listen; wouldn't that make a fight if the two got together?
|
|
Have to try it some day."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 5
|
|
|
|
|
|
Wednesday morning, Washington's Birthday, McTeague rose very
|
|
early and shaved himself. Besides the six mournful
|
|
concertina airs, the dentist knew one song. Whenever he
|
|
shaved, he sung this song; never at any other time. His
|
|
voice was a bellowing roar, enough to make the window sashes
|
|
rattle. Just now he woke up all the lodgers in his hall
|
|
with it. It was a lamentable wail:
|
|
|
|
|
|
"No one to love, none to caress,
|
|
Left all alone in this world's wilderness."
|
|
|
|
|
|
As he paused to strop his razor, Marcus came into his room,
|
|
half-dressed, a startling phantom in red flannels.
|
|
|
|
Marcus often ran back and forth between his room and the
|
|
dentist's "Parlors" in all sorts of undress. Old Miss Baker
|
|
had seen him thus several times through her half-open door,
|
|
as she sat in her room listening and waiting. The old
|
|
dressmaker was shocked out of all expression. She was
|
|
outraged, offended, pursing her lips, putting up her head.
|
|
She talked of complaining to the landlady. "And Mr. Grannis
|
|
right next door, too. You can understand how trying it is
|
|
for both of us." She would come out in the hall after one
|
|
of these apparitions, her little false curls shaking,
|
|
talking loud and shrill to any one in reach of her voice.
|
|
|
|
"Well," Marcus would shout, "shut your door, then, if you
|
|
don't want to see. Look out, now, here I come again. Not
|
|
even a porous plaster on me this time."
|
|
|
|
On this Wednesday morning Marcus called McTeague out into
|
|
the hall, to the head of the stairs that led down to the
|
|
street door.
|
|
|
|
"Come and listen to Maria, Mac," said he.
|
|
|
|
Maria sat on the next to the lowest step, her chin
|
|
propped by her two fists. The red-headed Polish Jew, the
|
|
ragman Zerkow, stood in the doorway. He was talking
|
|
eagerly.
|
|
|
|
"Now, just once more, Maria," he was saying. "Tell it to us
|
|
just once more." Maria's voice came up the stairway in a
|
|
monotone. Marcus and McTeague caught a phrase from time to
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
"There were more than a hundred pieces, and every one of
|
|
them gold--just that punch-bowl was worth a fortune-thick,
|
|
fat, red gold."
|
|
|
|
"Get onto to that, will you?" observed Marcus. "The old
|
|
skin has got her started on the plate. Ain't they a pair
|
|
for you?"
|
|
|
|
"And it rang like bells, didn't it?" prompted Zerkow.
|
|
|
|
"Sweeter'n church bells, and clearer."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, sweeter'n bells. Wasn't that punch-bowl awful heavy?"
|
|
|
|
"All you could do to lift it."
|
|
|
|
"I know. Oh, I know," answered Zerkow, clawing at his lips.
|
|
"Where did it all go to? Where did it go?"
|
|
|
|
Maria shook her head.
|
|
|
|
"It's gone, anyhow."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, gone, gone! Think of it! The punch-bowl gone, and the
|
|
engraved ladle, and the plates and goblets. What a sight it
|
|
must have been all heaped together!"
|
|
|
|
"It was a wonderful sight."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, wonderful; it must have been."
|
|
|
|
On the lower steps of that cheap flat, the Mexican woman and
|
|
the red-haired Polish Jew mused long over that vanished,
|
|
half-mythical gold plate.
|
|
|
|
Marcus and the dentist spent Washington's Birthday across
|
|
the bay. The journey over was one long agony to McTeague.
|
|
He shook with a formless, uncertain dread; a dozen times he
|
|
would have turned back had not Marcus been with him. The
|
|
stolid giant was as nervous as a schoolboy. He fancied that
|
|
his call upon Miss Sieppe was an outrageous affront. She
|
|
would freeze him with a stare; he would be shown the door,
|
|
would be ejected, disgraced.
|
|
|
|
As they got off the local train at B Street station they
|
|
suddenly collided with the whole tribe of Sieppes--the
|
|
mother, father, three children, and Trina--equipped for
|
|
one of their eternal picnics. They were to go to Schuetzen
|
|
Park, within walking distance of the station. They were
|
|
grouped about four lunch baskets. One of the children, a
|
|
little boy, held a black greyhound by a rope around its
|
|
neck. Trina wore a blue cloth skirt, a striped shirt waist,
|
|
and a white sailor; about her round waist was a belt of
|
|
imitation alligator skin.
|
|
|
|
At once Mrs. Sieppe began to talk to Marcus. He had written
|
|
of their coming, but the picnic had been decided upon after
|
|
the arrival of his letter. Mrs. Sieppe explained this to
|
|
him. She was an immense old lady with a pink face and
|
|
wonderful hair, absolutely white. The Sieppes were a
|
|
German-Swiss family.
|
|
|
|
"We go to der park, Schuetzen Park, mit alle dem childern, a
|
|
little eggs-kursion, eh not soh? We breathe der freshes
|
|
air, a celubration, a pignic bei der seashore on. Ach, dot
|
|
wull be soh gay, ah?"
|
|
|
|
"You bet it will. It'll be outa sight," cried Marcus,
|
|
enthusiastic in an instant. "This is m' friend Doctor
|
|
McTeague I wrote you about, Mrs. Sieppe."
|
|
|
|
"Ach, der doktor," cried Mrs. Sieppe.
|
|
|
|
McTeague was presented, shaking hands gravely as Marcus
|
|
shouldered him from one to the other.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Sieppe was a little man of a military aspect, full of
|
|
importance, taking himself very seriously. He was a member
|
|
of a rifle team. Over his shoulder was slung a Springfield
|
|
rifle, while his breast was decorated by five bronze medals.
|
|
|
|
Trina was delighted. McTeague was dumfounded. She appeared
|
|
positively glad to see him.
|
|
|
|
"How do you do, Doctor McTeague," she said, smiling at him
|
|
and shaking his hand. "It's nice to see you again. Look,
|
|
see how fine my filling is." She lifted a corner of her lip
|
|
and showed him the clumsy gold bridge.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, Mr. Sieppe toiled and perspired. Upon him
|
|
devolved the responsibility of the excursion. He seemed to
|
|
consider it a matter of vast importance, a veritable
|
|
expedition.
|
|
|
|
"Owgooste!" he shouted to the little boy with the black
|
|
greyhound, "you will der hound und basket number three
|
|
carry. Der tervins," he added, calling to the two smallest
|
|
boys, who were dressed exactly alike, "will releef one
|
|
unudder mit der camp-stuhl und basket number four. Dat is
|
|
comprehend, hay? When we make der start, you childern will
|
|
in der advance march. Dat is your orders. But we do not
|
|
start," he exclaimed, excitedly; "we remain. Ach Gott,
|
|
Selina, who does not arrive."
|
|
|
|
Selina, it appeared, was a niece of Mrs. Sieppe's. They were
|
|
on the point of starting without her, when she suddenly
|
|
arrived, very much out of breath. She was a slender,
|
|
unhealthy looking girl, who overworked herself giving
|
|
lessons in hand-painting at twenty-five cents an hour.
|
|
McTeague was presented. They all began to talk at once,
|
|
filling the little station-house with a confusion of
|
|
tongues.
|
|
|
|
"Attention!" cried Mr. Sieppe, his gold-headed cane in one
|
|
hand, his Springfield in the other. "Attention! We
|
|
depart." The four little boys moved off ahead; the
|
|
greyhound suddenly began to bark, and tug at his leash. The
|
|
others picked up their bundles.
|
|
|
|
"Vorwarts!" shouted Mr. Sieppe, waving his rifle and
|
|
assuming the attitude of a lieutenant of infantry leading a
|
|
charge. The party set off down the railroad track.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe walked with her husband, who constantly left her
|
|
side to shout an order up and down the line. Marcus
|
|
followed with Selina. McTeague found himself with Trina at
|
|
the end of the procession.
|
|
|
|
"We go off on these picnics almost every week," said Trina,
|
|
by way of a beginning, "and almost every holiday, too. It
|
|
is a custom."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, a custom," answered McTeague, nodding; "a custom
|
|
--that's the word."
|
|
|
|
"Don't you think picnics are fine fun, Doctor McTeague?" she
|
|
continued. "You take your lunch; you leave the dirty city
|
|
all day; you race about in the open air, and when lunchtime
|
|
comes, oh, aren't you hungry? And the woods and the grass
|
|
smell so fine!"
|
|
|
|
"I don' know, Miss Sieppe," he answered, keeping his eyes
|
|
fixed on the ground between the rails. "I never went on
|
|
a picnic."
|
|
|
|
"Never went on a picnic?" she cried, astonished. "Oh,
|
|
you'll see what fun we'll have. In the morning father and
|
|
the children dig clams in the mud by the shore, an' we bake
|
|
them, and--oh, there's thousands of things to do."
|
|
|
|
"Once I went sailing on the bay," said McTeague. "It was in
|
|
a tugboat; we fished off the heads. I caught three
|
|
codfishes."
|
|
|
|
"I'm afraid to go out on the bay," answered Trina, shaking
|
|
her head, "sailboats tip over so easy. A cousin of mine,
|
|
Selina's brother, was drowned one Decoration Day. They
|
|
never found his body. Can you swim, Doctor McTeague?"
|
|
|
|
"I used to at the mine."
|
|
|
|
"At the mine? Oh, yes, I remember, Marcus told me you were a
|
|
miner once."
|
|
|
|
"I was a car-boy; all the car-boys used to swim in the
|
|
reservoir by the ditch every Thursday evening. One of them
|
|
was bit by a rattlesnake once while he was dressing. He was
|
|
a Frenchman, named Andrew. He swelled up and began to
|
|
twitch."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, how I hate snakes! They're so crawly and graceful--
|
|
but, just the same, I like to watch them. You know that
|
|
drug store over in town that has a showcase full of live
|
|
ones?"
|
|
|
|
"We killed the rattler with a cart whip."
|
|
|
|
"How far do you think you could swim? Did you ever try?
|
|
D'you think you could swim a mile?"
|
|
|
|
"A mile? I don't know. I never tried. I guess I could."
|
|
|
|
"I can swim a little. Sometimes we all go out to the
|
|
Crystal Baths."
|
|
|
|
"The Crystal Baths, huh? Can you swim across the tank?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I can swim all right as long as papa holds my chin up.
|
|
Soon as he takes his hand away, down I go. Don't you hate
|
|
to get water in your ears?"
|
|
|
|
"Bathing's good for you."
|
|
|
|
"If the water's too warm, it isn't. It weakens you."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Sieppe came running down the tracks, waving his cane.
|
|
|
|
"To one side," he shouted, motioning them off the track;
|
|
"der drain gomes." A local passenger train was just passing
|
|
B Street station, some quarter of a mile behind them.
|
|
The party stood to one side to let it pass. Marcus put a
|
|
nickel and two crossed pins upon the rail, and waved his hat
|
|
to the passengers as the train roared past. The children
|
|
shouted shrilly. When the train was gone, they all rushed
|
|
to see the nickel and the crossed pins. The nickel had been
|
|
jolted off, but the pins had been flattened out so that they
|
|
bore a faint resemblance to opened scissors. A great
|
|
contention arose among the children for the possession of
|
|
these "scissors." Mr. Sieppe was obliged to intervene. He
|
|
reflected gravely. It was a matter of tremendous moment.
|
|
The whole party halted, awaiting his decision.
|
|
|
|
"Attend now," he suddenly exclaimed. "It will not be soh
|
|
soon. At der end of der day, ven we shall have home
|
|
gecommen, den wull it pe adjudge, eh? A REward of merit
|
|
to him who der bes' pehaves. It is an order. Vorwarts!"
|
|
|
|
"That was a Sacramento train," said Marcus to Selina as they
|
|
started off; "it was, for a fact."
|
|
|
|
"I know a girl in Sacramento," Trina told McTeague. "She's
|
|
forewoman in a glove store, and she's got consumption."
|
|
|
|
"I was in Sacramento once," observed McTeague, "nearly eight
|
|
years ago."
|
|
|
|
"Is it a nice place--as nice as San Francisco?"
|
|
|
|
"It's hot. I practised there for a while."
|
|
|
|
"I like San Francisco," said Trina, looking across the bay
|
|
to where the city piled itself upon its hills.
|
|
|
|
"So do I," answered McTeague. "Do you like it better than
|
|
living over here?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, sure, I wish we lived in the city. If you want to go
|
|
across for anything it takes up the whole day."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, the whole day--almost."
|
|
|
|
"Do you know many people in the city? Do you know anybody
|
|
named Oelbermann? That's my uncle. He has a wholesale toy
|
|
store in the Mission. They say he's awful rich."
|
|
|
|
"No, I don' know him."
|
|
|
|
"His stepdaughter wants to be a nun. Just fancy! And Mr.
|
|
Oelbermann won't have it. He says it would be just like
|
|
burying his child. Yes, she wants to enter the convent
|
|
of the Sacred Heart. Are you a Catholic, Doctor McTeague?"
|
|
|
|
"No. No, I--"
|
|
|
|
"Papa is a Catholic. He goes to Mass on the feast days once
|
|
in a while. But mamma's Lutheran."
|
|
|
|
"The Catholics are trying to get control of the schools,"
|
|
observed McTeague, suddenly remembering one of Marcus's
|
|
political tirades.
|
|
|
|
"That's what cousin Mark says. We are going to send the
|
|
twins to the kindergarten next month."
|
|
|
|
"What's the kindergarten?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, they teach them to make things out of straw and
|
|
toothpicks--kind of a play place to keep them off the
|
|
street."
|
|
|
|
"There's one up on Sacramento Street, not far from Polk
|
|
Street. I saw the sign."
|
|
|
|
"I know where. Why, Selina used to play the piano there."
|
|
|
|
"Does she play the piano?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you ought to hear her. She plays fine. Selina's very
|
|
accomplished. She paints, too."
|
|
|
|
"I can play on the concertina."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, can you? I wish you'd brought it along. Next time you
|
|
will. I hope you'll come often on our picnics. You'll see
|
|
what fun we'll have."
|
|
|
|
"Fine day for a picnic, ain't it? There ain't a cloud."
|
|
|
|
"That's so," exclaimed Trina, looking up, "not a single
|
|
cloud. Oh, yes; there is one, just over Telegraph Hill."
|
|
|
|
"That's smoke."
|
|
|
|
"No, it's a cloud. Smoke isn't white that way."
|
|
|
|
"'Tis a cloud."
|
|
|
|
"I knew I was right. I never say a thing unless I'm pretty
|
|
sure."
|
|
|
|
"It looks like a dog's head."
|
|
|
|
"Don't it? Isn't Marcus fond of dogs?"
|
|
|
|
"He got a new dog last week--a setter."
|
|
|
|
"Did he?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. He and I took a lot of dogs from his hospital out
|
|
for a walk to the Cliff House last Sunday, but we had to
|
|
walk all the way home, because they wouldn't follow. You've
|
|
been out to the Cliff House?"
|
|
|
|
"Not for a long time. We had a picnic there one Fourth of
|
|
July, but it rained. Don't you love the ocean?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes--yes, I like it pretty well."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I'd like to go off in one of those big sailing ships.
|
|
Just away, and away, and away, anywhere. They're different
|
|
from a little yacht. I'd love to travel."
|
|
|
|
"Sure; so would I."
|
|
|
|
"Papa and mamma came over in a sailing ship. They were
|
|
twenty-one days. Mamma's uncle used to be a sailor. He was
|
|
captain of a steamer on Lake Geneva, in Switzerland."
|
|
|
|
"Halt!" shouted Mr. Sieppe, brandishing his rifle. They had
|
|
arrived at the gates of the park. All at once McTeague
|
|
turned cold. He had only a quarter in his pocket. What was
|
|
he expected to do--pay for the whole party, or for Trina and
|
|
himself, or merely buy his own ticket? And even in this
|
|
latter case would a quarter be enough? He lost his wits,
|
|
rolling his eyes helplessly. Then it occurred to him to
|
|
feign a great abstraction, pretending not to know that the
|
|
time was come to pay. He looked intently up and down the
|
|
tracks; perhaps a train was coming. "Here we are," cried
|
|
Trina, as they came up to the rest of the party, crowded
|
|
about the entrance. "Yes, yes," observed McTeague, his head
|
|
in the air.
|
|
|
|
"Gi' me four bits, Mac," said Marcus, coming up. "Here's
|
|
where we shell out."
|
|
|
|
"I--I--I only got a quarter," mumbled the dentist,
|
|
miserably. He felt that he had ruined himself forever with
|
|
Trina. What was the use of trying to win her? Destiny was
|
|
against him. "I only got a quarter," he stammered. He was
|
|
on the point of adding that he would not go in the park.
|
|
That seemed to be the only alternative.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, all right!" said Marcus, easily. "I'll pay for you,
|
|
and you can square with me when we go home."
|
|
|
|
They filed into the park, Mr. Sieppe counting them off
|
|
as they entered.
|
|
|
|
"Ah," said Trina, with a long breath, as she and McTeague
|
|
pushed through the wicket, "here we are once more, Doctor."
|
|
She had not appeared to notice McTeague's embarrassment.
|
|
The difficulty had been tided over somehow. Once more
|
|
McTeague felt himself saved.
|
|
|
|
"To der beach!" shouted Mr. Sieppe. They had checked their
|
|
baskets at the peanut stand. The whole party trooped down
|
|
to the seashore. The greyhound was turned loose. The
|
|
children raced on ahead.
|
|
|
|
From one of the larger parcels Mrs. Sieppe had drawn forth a
|
|
small tin steamboat--August's birthday present--a gaudy
|
|
little toy which could be steamed up and navigated by means
|
|
of an alcohol lamp. Her trial trip was to be made this
|
|
morning.
|
|
|
|
"Gi' me it, gi' me it," shouted August, dancing around his
|
|
father.
|
|
|
|
"Not soh, not soh," cried Mr. Sieppe, bearing it aloft. "I
|
|
must first der eggsperimunt make."
|
|
|
|
"No, no!" wailed August. "I want to play with ut."
|
|
|
|
"Obey!" thundered Mr. Sieppe. August subsided. A little
|
|
jetty ran part of the way into the water. Here, after a
|
|
careful study of the directions printed on the cover of the
|
|
box, Mr. Sieppe began to fire the little boat.
|
|
|
|
"I want to put ut in the wa-ater," cried August.
|
|
|
|
"Stand back!" shouted his parent. "You do not know so well
|
|
as me; dere is dandger. Mitout attention he will
|
|
eggsplode."
|
|
|
|
"I want to play with ut," protested August, beginning to
|
|
cry.
|
|
|
|
"Ach, soh; you cry, bube!" vociferated Mr. Sieppe. "Mommer,"
|
|
addressing Mrs. Sieppe, "he will soh soon be ge-whipt, eh?"
|
|
|
|
"I want my boa-wut," screamed August, dancing.
|
|
|
|
"Silence!" roared Mr. Sieppe. The little boat began to hiss
|
|
and smoke.
|
|
|
|
"Soh," observed the father, "he gommence. Attention! I put
|
|
him in der water." He was very excited. The perspiration
|
|
dripped from the back of his neck. The little boat was
|
|
launched. It hissed more furiously than ever. Clouds
|
|
of steam rolled from it, but it refused to move.
|
|
|
|
"You don't know how she wo-rks," sobbed August.
|
|
|
|
"I know more soh mudge as der grossest liddle fool as you,"
|
|
cried Mr. Sieppe, fiercely, his face purple.
|
|
|
|
"You must give it sh--shove!" exclaimed the boy.
|
|
|
|
"Den he eggsplode, idiot!" shouted his father. All at once
|
|
the boiler of the steamer blew up with a sharp crack. The
|
|
little tin toy turned over and sank out of sight before any
|
|
one could interfere.
|
|
|
|
"Ah--h! Yah! Yah!" yelled August. "It's go-one!"
|
|
|
|
Instantly Mr. Sieppe boxed his ears. There was a lamentable
|
|
scene. August rent the air with his outcries; his father
|
|
shook him till his boots danced on the jetty, shouting into
|
|
his face:
|
|
|
|
"Ach, idiot! Ach, imbecile! Ach, miserable! I tol' you he
|
|
eggsplode. Stop your cry. Stop! It is an order. Do you
|
|
wish I drow you in der water, eh? Speak. Silence, bube!
|
|
Mommer, where ist mein stick? He will der grossest whippun
|
|
ever of his life receive."
|
|
|
|
Little by little the boy subsided, swallowing his sobs,
|
|
knuckling his eyes, gazing ruefully at the spot where the
|
|
boat had sunk. "Dot is better soh," commented Mr. Sieppe,
|
|
finally releasing him. "Next dime berhaps you will your
|
|
fat'er better pelief. Now, no more. We will der glams ge-
|
|
dig, Mommer, a fire. Ach, himmel! we have der pfeffer
|
|
forgotten."
|
|
|
|
The work of clam digging began at once, the little boys
|
|
taking off their shoes and stockings. At first August
|
|
refused to be comforted, and it was not until his father
|
|
drove him into the water with his gold-headed cane that he
|
|
consented to join the others.
|
|
|
|
What a day that was for McTeague! What a never-to-be-
|
|
forgotten day! He was with Trina constantly. They laughed
|
|
together--she demurely, her lips closed tight, her little
|
|
chin thrust out, her small pale nose, with its adorable
|
|
little freckles, wrinkling; he roared with all the force of
|
|
his lungs, his enormous mouth distended, striking sledge-
|
|
hammer blows upon his knee with his clenched fist.
|
|
|
|
The lunch was delicious. Trina and her mother made a
|
|
clam chowder that melted in one's mouth. The lunch baskets
|
|
were emptied. The party were fully two hours eating. There
|
|
were huge loaves of rye bread full of grains of chickweed.
|
|
There were weiner-wurst and frankfurter sausages. There was
|
|
unsalted butter. There were pretzels. There was cold
|
|
underdone chicken, which one ate in slices, plastered with a
|
|
wonderful kind of mustard that did not sting. There were
|
|
dried apples, that gave Mr. Sieppe the hiccoughs. There
|
|
were a dozen bottles of beer, and, last of all, a crowning
|
|
achievement, a marvellous Gotha truffle. After lunch came
|
|
tobacco. Stuffed to the eyes, McTeague drowsed over his
|
|
pipe, prone on his back in the sun, while Trina, Mrs.
|
|
Sieppe, and Selina washed the dishes. In the afternoon Mr.
|
|
Sieppe disappeared. They heard the reports of his rifle on
|
|
the range. The others swarmed over the park, now around the
|
|
swings, now in the Casino, now in the museum, now invading
|
|
the merry-go-round.
|
|
|
|
At half-past five o'clock Mr. Sieppe marshalled the party
|
|
together. It was time to return home.
|
|
|
|
The family insisted that Marcus and McTeague should take
|
|
supper with them at their home and should stay over night.
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe argued they could get no decent supper if they
|
|
went back to the city at that hour; that they could catch an
|
|
early morning boat and reach their business in good time.
|
|
The two friends accepted.
|
|
|
|
The Sieppes lived in a little box of a house at the foot of
|
|
B Street, the first house to the right as one went up from
|
|
the station. It was two stories high, with a funny red
|
|
mansard roof of oval slates. The interior was cut up into
|
|
innumerable tiny rooms, some of them so small as to be
|
|
hardly better than sleeping closets. In the back yard was a
|
|
contrivance for pumping water from the cistern that
|
|
interested McTeague at once. It was a dog-wheel, a huge
|
|
revolving box in which the unhappy black greyhound spent
|
|
most of his waking hours. It was his kennel; he slept in
|
|
it. From time to time during the day Mrs. Sieppe appeared
|
|
on the back doorstep, crying shrilly, "Hoop, hoop!" She
|
|
threw lumps of coal at him, waking him to his work.
|
|
|
|
They were all very tired, and went to bed early. After
|
|
great discussion it was decided that Marcus would sleep upon
|
|
the lounge in the front parlor. Trina would sleep with
|
|
August, giving up her room to McTeague. Selina went to her
|
|
home, a block or so above the Sieppes's. At nine o'clock
|
|
Mr. Sieppe showed McTeague to his room and left him to
|
|
himself with a newly lighted candle.
|
|
|
|
For a long time after Mr. Sieppe had gone McTeague stood
|
|
motionless in the middle of the room, his elbows pressed
|
|
close to his sides, looking obliquely from the corners of
|
|
his eyes. He hardly dared to move. He was in Trina's room.
|
|
|
|
It was an ordinary little room. A clean white matting was
|
|
on the floor; gray paper, spotted with pink and green
|
|
flowers, covered the walls. In one corner, under a white
|
|
netting, was a little bed, the woodwork gayly painted with
|
|
knots of bright flowers. Near it, against the wall, was a
|
|
black walnut bureau. A work-table with spiral legs stood by
|
|
the window, which was hung with a green and gold window
|
|
curtain. Opposite the window the closet door stood ajar,
|
|
while in the corner across from the bed was a tiny washstand
|
|
with two clean towels.
|
|
|
|
And that was all. But it was Trina's room. McTeague was in
|
|
his lady's bower; it seemed to him a little nest, intimate,
|
|
discreet. He felt hideously out of place. He was an
|
|
intruder; he, with his enormous feet, his colossal bones,
|
|
his crude, brutal gestures. The mere weight of his limbs,
|
|
he was sure, would crush the little bed-stead like an
|
|
eggshell.
|
|
|
|
Then, as this first sensation wore off, he began to feel the
|
|
charm of the little chamber. It was as though Trina were
|
|
close by, but invisible. McTeague felt all the delight of
|
|
her presence without the embarrassment that usually
|
|
accompanied it. He was near to her--nearer than he had ever
|
|
been before. He saw into her daily life, her little ways
|
|
and manners, her habits, her very thoughts. And was there
|
|
not in the air of that room a certain faint perfume that he
|
|
knew, that recalled her to his mind with marvellous
|
|
vividness?
|
|
|
|
As he put the candle down upon the bureau he saw her hair-
|
|
brush lying there. Instantly he picked it up, and, without
|
|
knowing why, held it to his face. With what a delicious
|
|
odor was it redolent! That heavy, enervating odor of her
|
|
hair--her wonderful, royal hair! The smell of that little
|
|
hairbrush was talismanic. He had but to close his eyes to
|
|
see her as distinctly as in a mirror. He saw her tiny,
|
|
round figure, dressed all in black--for, curiously enough,
|
|
it was his very first impression of Trina that came back to
|
|
him now--not the Trina of the later occasions, not the Trina
|
|
of the blue cloth skirt and white sailor. He saw her as he
|
|
had seen her the day that Marcus had introduced them: saw
|
|
her pale, round face; her narrow, half-open eyes, blue like
|
|
the eyes of a baby; her tiny, pale ears, suggestive of
|
|
anaemia; the freckles across the bridge of her nose; her
|
|
pale lips; the tiara of royal black hair; and, above all,
|
|
the delicious poise of the head, tipped back as though by
|
|
the weight of all that hair--the poise that thrust out her
|
|
chin a little, with the movement that was so confiding, so
|
|
innocent, so nearly infantile.
|
|
|
|
McTeague went softly about the room from one object to
|
|
another, beholding Trina in everything he touched or looked
|
|
at. He came at last to the closet door. It was ajar. He
|
|
opened it wide, and paused upon the threshold.
|
|
|
|
Trina's clothes were hanging there--skirts and waists,
|
|
jackets, and stiff white petticoats. What a vision! For an
|
|
instant McTeague caught his breath, spellbound. If he had
|
|
suddenly discovered Trina herself there, smiling at him,
|
|
holding out her hands, he could hardly have been more
|
|
overcome. Instantly he recognized the black dress she had
|
|
worn on that famous first day. There it was, the little
|
|
jacket she had carried over her arm the day he had terrified
|
|
her with his blundering declaration, and still others, and
|
|
others--a whole group of Trinas faced him there. He went
|
|
farther into the closet, touching the clothes gingerly,
|
|
stroking them softly with his huge leathern palms. As he
|
|
stirred them a delicate perfume disengaged itself from the
|
|
folds. Ah, that exquisite feminine odor! It was not only
|
|
her hair now, it was Trina herself--her mouth, her hands,
|
|
her neck; the indescribably sweet, fleshly aroma that was a
|
|
part of her, pure and clean, and redolent of youth and
|
|
freshness. All at once, seized with an unreasoned impulse,
|
|
McTeague opened his huge arms and gathered the little
|
|
garments close to him, plunging his face deep amongst them,
|
|
savoring their delicious odor with long breaths of luxury
|
|
and supreme content.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
The picnic at Schuetzen Park decided matters. McTeague
|
|
began to call on Trina regularly Sunday and Wednesday
|
|
afternoons. He took Marcus Schouler's place. Sometimes
|
|
Marcus accompanied him, but it was generally to meet Selina
|
|
by appointment at the Sieppes's house.
|
|
|
|
But Marcus made the most of his renunciation of his cousin.
|
|
He remembered his pose from time to time. He made McTeague
|
|
unhappy and bewildered by wringing his hand, by venting
|
|
sighs that seemed to tear his heart out, or by giving
|
|
evidences of an infinite melancholy. "What is my life!" he
|
|
would exclaim. "What is left for me? Nothing, by damn!"
|
|
And when McTeague would attempt remonstrance, he would cry:
|
|
"Never mind, old man. Never mind me. Go, be happy. I
|
|
forgive you."
|
|
|
|
Forgive what? McTeague was all at sea, was harassed with
|
|
the thought of some shadowy, irreparable injury he had done
|
|
his friend.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, don't think of me!" Marcus would exclaim at other
|
|
times, even when Trina was by. "Don't think of me; I don't
|
|
count any more. I ain't in it." Marcus seemed to take
|
|
great pleasure in contemplating the wreck of his life.
|
|
There is no doubt he enjoyed himself hugely during these
|
|
days.
|
|
|
|
The Sieppes were at first puzzled as well over this change
|
|
of front.
|
|
|
|
"Trina has den a new younge man," cried Mr. Sieppe. "First
|
|
Schouler, now der doktor, eh? What die tevil, I say!"
|
|
|
|
Weeks passed, February went, March came in very rainy,
|
|
putting a stop to all their picnics and Sunday excursions.
|
|
|
|
One Wednesday afternoon in the second week in March
|
|
McTeague came over to call on Trina, bringing his
|
|
concertina with him, as was his custom nowadays. As he got
|
|
off the train at the station he was surprised to find Trina
|
|
waiting for him.
|
|
|
|
"This is the first day it hasn't rained in weeks," she
|
|
explained, "an' I thought it would be nice to walk."
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," assented McTeague.
|
|
|
|
B Street station was nothing more than a little shed. There
|
|
was no ticket office, nothing but a couple of whittled and
|
|
carven benches. It was built close to the railroad tracks,
|
|
just across which was the dirty, muddy shore of San
|
|
Francisco Bay. About a quarter of a mile back from the
|
|
station was the edge of the town of Oakland. Between the
|
|
station and the first houses of the town lay immense salt
|
|
flats, here and there broken by winding streams of black
|
|
water. They were covered with a growth of wiry grass,
|
|
strangely discolored in places by enormous stains of orange
|
|
yellow.
|
|
|
|
Near the station a bit of fence painted with a cigar
|
|
advertisement reeled over into the mud, while under its lee
|
|
lay an abandoned gravel wagon with dished wheels. The
|
|
station was connected with the town by the extension of B
|
|
Street, which struck across the flats geometrically
|
|
straight, a file of tall poles with intervening wires
|
|
marching along with it. At the station these were headed by
|
|
an iron electric-light pole that, with its supports and
|
|
outriggers, looked for all the world like an immense
|
|
grasshopper on its hind legs.
|
|
|
|
Across the flats, at the fringe of the town, were the dump
|
|
heaps, the figures of a few Chinese rag-pickers moving over
|
|
them. Far to the left the view was shut off by the immense
|
|
red-brown drum of the gas-works; to the right it was bounded
|
|
by the chimneys and workshops of an iron foundry.
|
|
|
|
Across the railroad tracks, to seaward, one saw the long
|
|
stretch of black mud bank left bare by the tide, which was
|
|
far out, nearly half a mile. Clouds of sea-gulls were
|
|
forever rising and settling upon this mud bank; a wrecked
|
|
and abandoned wharf crawled over it on tottering legs; close
|
|
in an old sailboat lay canted on her bilge.
|
|
|
|
But farther on, across the yellow waters of the bay,
|
|
beyond Goat Island, lay San Francisco, a blue line of hills,
|
|
rugged with roofs and spires. Far to the westward opened
|
|
the Golden Gate, a bleak cutting in the sand-hills, through
|
|
which one caught a glimpse of the open Pacific.
|
|
|
|
The station at B Street was solitary; no trains passed at
|
|
this hour; except the distant rag-pickers, not a soul was in
|
|
sight. The wind blew strong, carrying with it the mingled
|
|
smell of salt, of tar, of dead seaweed, and of bilge. The
|
|
sky hung low and brown; at long intervals a few drops of
|
|
rain fell.
|
|
|
|
Near the station Trina and McTeague sat on the roadbed of
|
|
the tracks, at the edge of the mud bank, making the most out
|
|
of the landscape, enjoying the open air, the salt marshes,
|
|
and the sight of the distant water. From time to time
|
|
McTeague played his six mournful airs upon his concertina.
|
|
|
|
After a while they began walking up and down the tracks,
|
|
McTeague talking about his profession, Trina listening, very
|
|
interested and absorbed, trying to understand.
|
|
|
|
"For pulling the roots of the upper molars we use the cow-
|
|
horn forceps," continued the dentist, monotonously. "We get
|
|
the inside beak over the palatal roots and the cow-horn beak
|
|
over the buccal roots--that's the roots on the outside, you
|
|
see. Then we close the forceps, and that breaks right
|
|
through the alveolus--that's the part of the socket in the
|
|
jaw, you understand."
|
|
|
|
At another moment he told her of his one unsatisfied desire.
|
|
"Some day I'm going to have a big gilded tooth outside my
|
|
window for a sign. Those big gold teeth are beautiful,
|
|
beautiful--only they cost so much, I can't afford one just
|
|
now."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it's raining," suddenly exclaimed Trina, holding out
|
|
her palm. They turned back and reached the station in a
|
|
drizzle. The afternoon was closing in dark and rainy. The
|
|
tide was coming back, talking and lapping for miles along
|
|
the mud bank. Far off across the flats, at the edge of the
|
|
town, an electric car went by, stringing out a long row of
|
|
diamond sparks on the overhead wires.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Miss Trina," said McTeague, after a while, "what's the
|
|
good of waiting any longer? Why can't us two get married?"
|
|
|
|
Trina still shook her head, saying "No" instinctively,
|
|
in spite of herself.
|
|
|
|
"Why not?" persisted McTeague. "Don't you like me well
|
|
enough?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Then why not?"
|
|
|
|
"Because."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, come on," he said, but Trina still shook her head.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, come on," urged McTeague. He could think of nothing
|
|
else to say, repeating the same phrase over and over again
|
|
to all her refusals.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, come on! Ah, come on!"
|
|
|
|
Suddenly he took her in his enormous arms, crushing down her
|
|
struggle with his immense strength. Then Trina gave up, all
|
|
in an instant, turning her head to his. They kissed each
|
|
other, grossly, full in the mouth.
|
|
|
|
A roar and a jarring of the earth suddenly grew near and
|
|
passed them in a reek of steam and hot air. It was the
|
|
Overland, with its flaming headlight, on its way across the
|
|
continent.
|
|
|
|
The passage of the train startled them both. Trina
|
|
struggled to free herself from McTeague. "Oh, please!
|
|
please!" she pleaded, on the point of tears. McTeague
|
|
released her, but in that moment a slight, a barely
|
|
perceptible, revulsion of feeling had taken place in him.
|
|
The instant that Trina gave up, the instant she allowed him
|
|
to kiss her, he thought less of her. She was not so
|
|
desirable, after all. But this reaction was so faint, so
|
|
subtle, so intangible, that in another moment he had doubted
|
|
its occurrence. Yet afterward it returned. Was there not
|
|
something gone from Trina now? Was he not disappointed in
|
|
her for doing that very thing for which he had longed? Was
|
|
Trina the submissive, the compliant, the attainable just the
|
|
same, just as delicate and adorable as Trina the
|
|
inaccessible? Perhaps he dimly saw that this must be so,
|
|
that it belonged to the changeless order of things--the man
|
|
desiring the woman only for what she withholds; the woman
|
|
worshipping the man for that which she yields up to him.
|
|
With each concession gained the man's desire cools; with
|
|
every surrender made the woman's adoration increases. But
|
|
why should it be so?
|
|
|
|
Trina wrenched herself free and drew back from McTeague, her
|
|
little chin quivering; her face, even to the lobes of her
|
|
pale ears, flushed scarlet; her narrow blue eyes brimming.
|
|
Suddenly she put her head between her hands and began to
|
|
sob.
|
|
|
|
"Say, say, Miss Trina, listen--listen here, Miss Trina,"
|
|
cried McTeague, coming forward a step.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, don't!" she gasped, shrinking. "I must go home," she
|
|
cried, springing to her feet. "It's late. I must. I must.
|
|
Don't come with me, please. Oh, I'm so--so,"--she could not
|
|
find any words. "Let me go alone," she went on. "You may--
|
|
you come Sunday. Good-by."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by," said McTeague, his head in a whirl at this
|
|
sudden, unaccountable change. "Can't I kiss you again?"
|
|
But Trina was firm now. When it came to his pleading--a
|
|
mere matter of words--she was strong enough.
|
|
|
|
"No, no, you must not!" she exclaimed, with energy. She was
|
|
gone in another instant. The dentist, stunned, bewildered,
|
|
gazed stupidly after her as she ran up the extension of B
|
|
Street through the rain.
|
|
|
|
But suddenly a great joy took possession of him. He had won
|
|
her. Trina was to be for him, after all. An enormous smile
|
|
distended his thick lips; his eyes grew wide, and flashed;
|
|
and he drew his breath quickly, striking his mallet-like
|
|
fist upon his knee, and exclaiming under his breath:
|
|
|
|
"I got her, by God! I got her, by God!" At the same time
|
|
he thought better of himself; his self-respect increased
|
|
enormously. The man that could win Trina Sieppe was a man
|
|
of extraordinary ability.
|
|
|
|
Trina burst in upon her mother while the latter was setting
|
|
a mousetrap in the kitchen.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, mamma!"
|
|
|
|
"Eh? Trina? Ach, what has happun?"
|
|
|
|
Trina told her in a breath.
|
|
|
|
"Soh soon?" was Mrs. Sieppe's first comment. "Eh, well,
|
|
what you cry for, then?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know," wailed Trina, plucking at the end of her
|
|
handkerchief.
|
|
|
|
"You loaf der younge doktor?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know."
|
|
|
|
"Well, what for you kiss him?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know."
|
|
|
|
"You don' know, you don' know? Where haf your sensus gone,
|
|
Trina? You kiss der doktor. You cry, and you don' know.
|
|
Is ut Marcus den?"
|
|
|
|
"No, it's not Cousin Mark."
|
|
|
|
"Den ut must be der doktor."
|
|
|
|
Trina made no answer.
|
|
|
|
"Eh?"
|
|
|
|
"I--I guess so."
|
|
|
|
"You loaf him?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe set down the mousetrap with such violence that
|
|
it sprung with a sharp snap.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 6
|
|
|
|
|
|
No, Trina did not know. "Do I love him? Do I love him?" A
|
|
thousand times she put the question to herself during the
|
|
next two or three days. At night she hardly slept, but lay
|
|
broad awake for hours in her little, gayly painted bed, with
|
|
its white netting, torturing herself with doubts and
|
|
questions. At times she remembered the scene in the
|
|
station with a veritable agony of shame, and at other times
|
|
she was ashamed to recall it with a thrill of joy. Nothing
|
|
could have been more sudden, more unexpected, than that
|
|
surrender of herself. For over a year she had thought that
|
|
Marcus would some day be her husband. They would be
|
|
married, she supposed, some time in the future, she did not
|
|
know exactly when; the matter did not take definite shape in
|
|
her mind. She liked Cousin Mark very well. And then
|
|
suddenly this cross-current had set in; this blond giant had
|
|
appeared, this huge, stolid fellow, with his immense, crude
|
|
strength. She had not loved him at first, that was certain.
|
|
The day he had spoken to her in his "Parlors" she had only
|
|
been terrified. If he had confined himself to merely
|
|
speaking, as did Marcus, to pleading with her, to wooing her
|
|
at a distance, forestalling her wishes, showing her little
|
|
attentions, sending her boxes of candy, she could have
|
|
easily withstood him. But he had only to take her in his
|
|
arms, to crush down her struggle with his enormous strength,
|
|
to subdue her, conquer her by sheer brute force, and she
|
|
gave up in an instant.
|
|
|
|
But why--why had she done so? Why did she feel the desire,
|
|
the necessity of being conquered by a superior strength?
|
|
Why did it please her? Why had it suddenly thrilled her
|
|
from head to foot with a quick, terrifying gust of passion,
|
|
the like of which she had never known? Never at his best
|
|
had Marcus made her feel like that, and yet she had always
|
|
thought she cared for Cousin Mark more than for any one
|
|
else.
|
|
|
|
When McTeague had all at once caught her in his huge arms,
|
|
something had leaped to life in her--something that had
|
|
hitherto lain dormant, something strong and overpowering.
|
|
It frightened her now as she thought of it, this second self
|
|
that had wakened within her, and that shouted and clamored
|
|
for recognition. And yet, was it to be feared? Was it
|
|
something to be ashamed of? Was it not, after all, natural,
|
|
clean, spontaneous? Trina knew that she was a pure girl;
|
|
knew that this sudden commotion within her carried with it
|
|
no suggestion of vice.
|
|
|
|
Dimly, as figures seen in a waking dream, these ideas
|
|
floated through Trina's mind. It was quite beyond her
|
|
to realize them clearly; she could not know what they meant.
|
|
Until that rainy day by the shore of the bay Trina had lived
|
|
her life with as little self-consciousness as a tree. She
|
|
was frank, straightforward, a healthy, natural human being,
|
|
without sex as yet. She was almost like a boy. At once
|
|
there had been a mysterious disturbance. The woman within
|
|
her suddenly awoke.
|
|
|
|
Did she love McTeague? Difficult question. Did she choose
|
|
him for better or for worse, deliberately, of her own free
|
|
will, or was Trina herself allowed even a choice in the
|
|
taking of that step that was to make or mar her life? The
|
|
Woman is awakened, and, starting from her sleep, catches
|
|
blindly at what first her newly opened eyes light upon. It
|
|
is a spell, a witchery, ruled by chance alone, inexplicable
|
|
--a fairy queen enamored of a clown with ass's ears.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had awakened the Woman, and, whether she would or
|
|
no, she was his now irrevocably; struggle against it as she
|
|
would, she belonged to him, body and soul, for life or for
|
|
death. She had not sought it, she had not desired it. The
|
|
spell was laid upon her. Was it a blessing? Was it a
|
|
curse? It was all one; she was his, indissolubly, for evil
|
|
or for good.
|
|
|
|
And he? The very act of submission that bound the woman to
|
|
him forever had made her seem less desirable in his eyes.
|
|
Their undoing had already begun. Yet neither of them was to
|
|
blame. From the first they had not sought each other.
|
|
Chance had brought them face to face, and mysterious
|
|
instincts as ungovernable as the winds of heaven were at
|
|
work knitting their lives together. Neither of them had
|
|
asked that this thing should be--that their destinies, their
|
|
very souls, should be the sport of chance. If they could
|
|
have known, they would have shunned the fearful risk. But
|
|
they were allowed no voice in the matter. Why should it all
|
|
be?
|
|
|
|
It had been on a Wednesday that the scene in the B Street
|
|
station had taken place. Throughout the rest of the week,
|
|
at every hour of the day, Trina asked herself the same
|
|
question: "Do I love him? Do I really love him? Is this
|
|
what love is like?" As she recalled McTeague--recalled
|
|
his huge, square-cut head, his salient jaw, his shock of
|
|
yellow hair, his heavy, lumbering body, his slow wits--she
|
|
found little to admire in him beyond his physical strength,
|
|
and at such moments she shook her head decisively. "No,
|
|
surely she did not love him." Sunday afternoon, however,
|
|
McTeague called. Trina had prepared a little speech for
|
|
him. She was to tell him that she did not know what had
|
|
been the matter with her that Wednesday afternoon; that she
|
|
had acted like a bad girl; that she did not love him well
|
|
enough to marry him; that she had told him as much once
|
|
before.
|
|
|
|
McTeague saw her alone in the little front parlor. The
|
|
instant she appeared he came straight towards her. She saw
|
|
what he was bent upon doing. "Wait a minute," she cried,
|
|
putting out her hands. "Wait. You don't understand. I
|
|
have got something to say to you." She might as well have
|
|
talked to the wind. McTeague put aside her hands with a
|
|
single gesture, and gripped her to him in a bearlike embrace
|
|
that all but smothered her. Trina was but a reed before that
|
|
giant strength. McTeague turned her face to his and kissed
|
|
her again upon the mouth. Where was all Trina's resolve
|
|
then? Where was her carefully prepared little speech?
|
|
Where was all her hesitation and torturing doubts of the
|
|
last few days? She clasped McTeague's huge red neck with
|
|
both her slender arms; she raised her adorable little chin
|
|
and kissed him in return, exclaiming: "Oh, I do love you! I
|
|
do love you!" Never afterward were the two so happy as at
|
|
that moment.
|
|
|
|
A little later in that same week, when Marcus and McTeague
|
|
were taking lunch at the car conductors' coffee-joint, the
|
|
former suddenly exclaimed:
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mac, now that you've got Trina, you ought to do more
|
|
for her. By damn! you ought to, for a fact. Why don't you
|
|
take her out somewhere--to the theatre, or somewhere? You
|
|
ain't on to your job."
|
|
|
|
Naturally, McTeague had told Marcus of his success with
|
|
Trina. Marcus had taken on a grand air.
|
|
|
|
"You've got her, have you? Well, I'm glad of it, old man. I
|
|
am, for a fact. I know you'll be happy with her. I
|
|
know how I would have been. I forgive you; yes, I forgive
|
|
you, freely."
|
|
|
|
McTeague had not thought of taking Trina to the theatre.
|
|
|
|
"You think I ought to, Mark?" he inquired, hesitating.
|
|
Marcus answered, with his mouth full of suet pudding:
|
|
|
|
"Why, of course. That's the proper caper."
|
|
|
|
"Well--well, that's so. The theatre--that's the word."
|
|
|
|
"Take her to the variety show at the Orpheum. There's a
|
|
good show there this week; you'll have to take Mrs. Sieppe,
|
|
too, of course," he added. Marcus was not sure of himself
|
|
as regarded certain proprieties, nor, for that matter, were
|
|
any of the people of the little world of Polk Street. The
|
|
shop girls, the plumbers' apprentices, the small
|
|
tradespeople, and their like, whose social position was not
|
|
clearly defined, could never be sure how far they could go
|
|
and yet preserve their "respectability." When they wished
|
|
to be "proper," they invariably overdid the thing. It was
|
|
not as if they belonged to the "tough" element, who had no
|
|
appearances to keep up. Polk Street rubbed elbows with the
|
|
"avenue" one block above. There were certain limits which
|
|
its dwellers could not overstep; but unfortunately for them,
|
|
these limits were poorly defined. They could never be sure
|
|
of themselves. At an unguarded moment they might be taken
|
|
for "toughs," so they generally erred in the other
|
|
direction, and were absurdly formal. No people have a
|
|
keener eye for the amenities than those whose social
|
|
position is not assured.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, sure, you'll have to take her mother," insisted Marcus.
|
|
"It wouldn't be the proper racket if you didn't."
|
|
|
|
McTeague undertook the affair. It was an ordeal. Never in
|
|
his life had he been so perturbed, so horribly anxious. He
|
|
called upon Trina the following Wednesday and made
|
|
arrangements. Mrs. Sieppe asked if little August might be
|
|
included. It would console him for the loss of his
|
|
steamboat.
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," said McTeague. "August too--everybody," he
|
|
added, vaguely.
|
|
|
|
"We always have to leave so early," complained Trina, "in
|
|
order to catch the last boat. Just when it's becoming
|
|
interesting."
|
|
|
|
At this McTeague, acting upon a suggestion of Marcus
|
|
Schouler's, insisted they should stay at the flat over
|
|
night. Marcus and the dentist would give up their rooms to
|
|
them and sleep at the dog hospital. There was a bed there
|
|
in the sick ward that old Grannis sometimes occupied when a
|
|
bad case needed watching. All at once McTeague had an idea,
|
|
a veritable inspiration.
|
|
|
|
"And we'll--we'll--we'll have--what's the matter with having
|
|
something to eat afterward in my "Parlors?"
|
|
|
|
"Vairy goot," commented Mrs. Sieppe. "Bier, eh? And some
|
|
damales."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I love tamales!" exclaimed Trina, clasping her
|
|
hands.
|
|
|
|
McTeague returned to the city, rehearsing his instructions
|
|
over and over. The theatre party began to assume tremendous
|
|
proportions. First of all, he was to get the seats, the
|
|
third or fourth row from the front, on the left-hand side,
|
|
so as to be out of the hearing of the drums in the
|
|
orchestra; he must make arrangements about the rooms with
|
|
Marcus, must get in the beer, but not the tamales; must buy
|
|
for himself a white lawn tie--so Marcus directed; must look
|
|
to it that Maria Macapa put his room in perfect order; and,
|
|
finally, must meet the Sieppes at the ferry slip at half-
|
|
past seven the following Monday night.
|
|
|
|
The real labor of the affair began with the buying of the
|
|
tickets. At the theatre McTeague got into wrong entrances;
|
|
was sent from one wicket to another; was bewildered,
|
|
confused; misunderstood directions; was at one moment
|
|
suddenly convinced that he had not enough money with him,
|
|
and started to return home. Finally he found himself at the
|
|
box-office wicket.
|
|
|
|
"Is it here you buy your seats?"
|
|
|
|
"How many?"
|
|
|
|
"Is it here--"
|
|
|
|
"What night do you want 'em? Yes, sir, here's the place."
|
|
|
|
McTeague gravely delivered himself of the formula he had
|
|
been reciting for the last dozen hours.
|
|
|
|
"I want four seats for Monday night in the fourth row from
|
|
the front, and on the right-hand side."
|
|
|
|
"Right hand as you face the house or as you face the
|
|
stage?" McTeague was dumfounded.
|
|
|
|
"I want to be on the right-hand side," he insisted,
|
|
stolidly; adding, "in order to be away from the drums."
|
|
|
|
"Well, the drums are on the right of the orchestra as you
|
|
face the stage," shouted the other impatiently; "you want to
|
|
the left, then, as you face the house."
|
|
|
|
"I want to be on the right-hand side," persisted the
|
|
dentist.
|
|
|
|
Without a word the seller threw out four tickets with a
|
|
magnificent, supercilious gesture.
|
|
|
|
"There's four seats on the right-hand side, then, and you're
|
|
right up against the drums."
|
|
|
|
"But I don't want to be near the drums," protested McTeague,
|
|
beginning to perspire.
|
|
|
|
"Do you know what you want at all?" said the ticket seller
|
|
with calmness, thrusting his head at McTeague. The dentist
|
|
knew that he had hurt this young man's feelings.
|
|
|
|
"I want--I want," he stammered. The seller slammed down a
|
|
plan of the house in front of him and began to explain
|
|
excitedly. It was the one thing lacking to complete
|
|
McTeague's confusion.
|
|
|
|
"There are your seats," finished the seller, shoving the
|
|
tickets into McTeague's hands. "They are the fourth row
|
|
from the front, and away from the drums. Now are you
|
|
satisfied?"
|
|
|
|
"Are they on the right-hand side? I want on the right--no,
|
|
I want on the left. I want--I don' know, I don' know."
|
|
|
|
The seller roared. McTeague moved slowly away, gazing
|
|
stupidly at the blue slips of pasteboard. Two girls took
|
|
his place at the wicket. In another moment McTeague came
|
|
back, peering over the girls' shoulders and calling to the
|
|
seller:
|
|
|
|
"Are these for Monday night?"
|
|
|
|
The other disdained reply. McTeague retreated again
|
|
timidly, thrusting the tickets into his immense wallet. For
|
|
a moment he stood thoughtful on the steps of the entrance.
|
|
Then all at once he became enraged, he did not know exactly
|
|
why; somehow he felt himself slighted. Once more he came
|
|
back to the wicket.
|
|
|
|
"You can't make small of me," he shouted over the girls'
|
|
shoulders; "you--you can't make small of me. I'll thump you
|
|
in the head, you little--you little--you little--little--
|
|
little pup." The ticket seller shrugged his shoulders
|
|
wearily. "A dollar and a half," he said to the two girls.
|
|
|
|
McTeague glared at him and breathed loudly. Finally he
|
|
decided to let the matter drop. He moved away, but on the
|
|
steps was once more seized with a sense of injury and
|
|
outraged dignity.
|
|
|
|
"You can't make small of me," he called back a last time,
|
|
wagging his head and shaking his fist. "I will--I will--I
|
|
will--yes, I will." He went off muttering.
|
|
|
|
At last Monday night came. McTeague met the Sieppes at the
|
|
ferry, dressed in a black Prince Albert coat and his best
|
|
slate-blue trousers, and wearing the made-up lawn necktie
|
|
that Marcus had selected for him. Trina was very pretty in
|
|
the black dress that McTeague knew so well. She wore a pair
|
|
of new gloves. Mrs. Sieppe had on lisle-thread mits, and
|
|
carried two bananas and an orange in a net reticule. "For
|
|
Owgooste," she confided to him. Owgooste was in a
|
|
Fauntleroy "costume" very much too small for him. Already
|
|
he had been crying.
|
|
|
|
"Woult you pelief, Doktor, dot bube has torn his stockun
|
|
alreatty? Walk in der front, you; stop cryun. Where is dot
|
|
berliceman?"
|
|
|
|
At the door of the theatre McTeague was suddenly seized with
|
|
a panic terror. He had lost the tickets. He tore through
|
|
his pockets, ransacked his wallet. They were nowhere to be
|
|
found. All at once he remembered, and with a gasp of relief
|
|
removed his hat and took them out from beneath the
|
|
sweatband.
|
|
|
|
The party entered and took their places. It was absurdly
|
|
early. The lights were all darkened, the ushers stood under
|
|
the galleries in groups, the empty auditorium echoing with
|
|
their noisy talk. Occasionally a waiter with his tray and
|
|
clean white apron sauntered up and doun the aisle. Directly
|
|
in front of them was the great iron curtain of the stage,
|
|
painted with all manner of advertisements. From behind this
|
|
came a noise of hammering and of occasional loud voices.
|
|
|
|
While waiting they studied their programmes. First was
|
|
an overture by the orchestra, after which came "The
|
|
Gleasons, in their mirth-moving musical farce, entitled
|
|
'McMonnigal's Court-ship.'" This was to be followed by "The
|
|
Lamont Sisters, Winnie and Violet, serio-comiques and skirt
|
|
dancers." And after this came a great array of other
|
|
"artists" and "specialty performers," musical wonders,
|
|
acrobats, lightning artists, ventriloquists, and last of
|
|
all, "The feature of the evening, the crowning scientific
|
|
achievement of the nineteenth century, the kinetoscope."
|
|
McTeague was excited, dazzled. In five years he had not
|
|
been twice to the theatre. Now he beheld himself inviting
|
|
his "girl" and her mother to accompany him. He began to
|
|
feel that he was a man of the world. He ordered a cigar.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile the house was filling up. A few side brackets
|
|
were turned on. The ushers ran up and down the aisles,
|
|
stubs of tickets between their thumb and finger, and from
|
|
every part of the auditorium could be heard the sharp clap-
|
|
clapping of the seats as the ushers flipped them down. A
|
|
buzz of talk arose. In the gallery a street gamin whistled
|
|
shrilly, and called to some friends on the other side of the
|
|
house.
|
|
|
|
"Are they go-wun to begin pretty soon, ma?" whined Owgooste
|
|
for the fifth or sixth time; adding, "Say, ma, can't I have
|
|
some candy?" A cadaverous little boy had appeared in their
|
|
aisle, chanting, "Candies, French mixed candies, popcorn,
|
|
peanuts and candy." The orchestra entered, each man
|
|
crawling out from an opening under the stage, hardly larger
|
|
than the gate of a rabbit hutch. At every instant now the
|
|
crowd increased; there were but few seats that were not
|
|
taken. The waiters hurried up and down the aisles, their
|
|
trays laden with beer glasses. A smell of cigar-smoke
|
|
filled the air, and soon a faint blue haze rose from all
|
|
corners of the house.
|
|
|
|
"Ma, when are they go-wun to begin?" cried Owgooste. As he
|
|
spoke the iron advertisement curtain rose, disclosing the
|
|
curtain proper underneath. This latter curtain was quite an
|
|
affair. Upon it was painted a wonderful picture. A flight
|
|
of marble steps led down to a stream of water; two white
|
|
swans, their necks arched like the capital letter S,
|
|
floated about. At the head of the marble steps were two
|
|
vases filled with red and yellow flowers, while at the foot
|
|
was moored a gondola. This gondola was full of red velvet
|
|
rugs that hung over the side and trailed in the water. In
|
|
the prow of the gondola a young man in vermilion tights held
|
|
a mandolin in his left hand, and gave his right to a girl in
|
|
white satin. A King Charles spaniel, dragging a leading-
|
|
string in the shape of a huge pink sash, followed the girl.
|
|
Seven scarlet roses were scattered upon the two lowest
|
|
steps, and eight floated in the water.
|
|
|
|
"Ain't that pretty, Mac?" exclaimed Trina, turning to the
|
|
dentist.
|
|
|
|
"Ma, ain't they go-wun to begin now-wow?" whined Owgooste.
|
|
Suddenly the lights all over the house blazed up. "Ah!"
|
|
said everybody all at once.
|
|
|
|
"Ain't ut crowdut?" murmured Mr. Sieppe. Every seat was
|
|
taken; many were even standing up.
|
|
|
|
"I always like it better when there is a crowd," said Trina.
|
|
She was in great spirits that evening. Her round, pale face
|
|
was positively pink.
|
|
|
|
The orchestra banged away at the overture, suddenly
|
|
finishing with a great flourish of violins. A short pause
|
|
followed. Then the orchestra played a quick-step strain,
|
|
and the curtain rose on an interior furnished with two red
|
|
chairs and a green sofa. A girl in a short blue dress and
|
|
black stockings entered in a hurry and began to dust the two
|
|
chairs. She was in a great temper, talking very fast,
|
|
disclaiming against the "new lodger." It appeared that this
|
|
latter never paid his rent; that he was given to late hours.
|
|
Then she came down to the footlights and began to sing in a
|
|
tremendous voice, hoarse and flat, almost like a man's. The
|
|
chorus, of a feeble originality, ran:
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Oh, how happy I will be,
|
|
When my darling's face I'll see;
|
|
Oh, tell him for to meet me in the moonlight,
|
|
Down where the golden lilies bloom."
|
|
|
|
|
|
The orchestra played the tune of this chorus a second
|
|
time, with certain variations, while the girl danced to it.
|
|
She sidled to one side of the stage and kicked, then sidled
|
|
to the other and kicked again. As she finished with the
|
|
song, a man, evidently the lodger in question, came in.
|
|
Instantly McTeague exploded in a roar of laughter. The man
|
|
was intoxicated, his hat was knocked in, one end of his
|
|
collar was unfastened and stuck up into his face, his watch-
|
|
chain dangled from his pocket, and a yellow satin slipper
|
|
was tied to a button-hole of his vest; his nose was
|
|
vermilion, one eye was black and blue. After a short
|
|
dialogue with the girl, a third actor appeared. He was
|
|
dressed like a little boy, the girl's younger brother. He
|
|
wore an immense turned-down collar, and was continually
|
|
doing hand-springs and wonderful back somersaults. The
|
|
"act" devolved upon these three people; the lodger making
|
|
love to the girl in the short blue dress, the boy playing
|
|
all manner of tricks upon him, giving him tremendous digs in
|
|
the ribs or slaps upon the back that made him cough, pulling
|
|
chairs from under him, running on all fours between his legs
|
|
and upsetting him, knocking him over at inopportune moments.
|
|
Every one of his falls was accentuated by a bang upon the
|
|
bass drum. The whole humor of the "act" seemed to consist
|
|
in the tripping up of the intoxicated lodger.
|
|
|
|
This horse-play delighted McTeague beyond measure. He
|
|
roared and shouted every time the lodger went down, slapping
|
|
his knee, wagging his head. Owgooste crowed shrilly,
|
|
clapping his hands and continually asking, "What did he say,
|
|
ma? What did he say?" Mrs. Sieppe laughed immoderately, her
|
|
huge fat body shaking like a mountain of jelly. She
|
|
exclaimed from time to time, "Ach, Gott, dot fool!" Even
|
|
Trina was moved, laughing demurely, her lips closed, putting
|
|
one hand with its new glove to her mouth.
|
|
|
|
The performance went on. Now it was the "musical marvels,"
|
|
two men extravagantly made up as negro minstrels, with
|
|
immense shoes and plaid vests. They seemed to be able to
|
|
wrestle a tune out of almost anything--glass bottles, cigar-
|
|
box fiddles, strings of sleigh-bells, even graduated brass
|
|
tubes, which they rubbed with resined fingers. McTeague
|
|
was stupefied with admiration .
|
|
|
|
"That's what you call musicians," he announced gravely.
|
|
"Home, Sweet Home," played upon a trombone. Think of that!
|
|
Art could go no farther.
|
|
|
|
The acrobats left him breathless. They were dazzling young
|
|
men with beautifully parted hair, continually making
|
|
graceful gestures to the audience. In one of them the
|
|
dentist fancied he saw a strong resemblance to the boy who
|
|
had tormented the intoxicated lodger and who had turned such
|
|
marvellous somersaults. Trina could not bear to watch their
|
|
antics. She turned away her head with a little shudder.
|
|
"It always makes me sick," she explained.
|
|
|
|
The beautiful young lady, "The Society Contralto," in
|
|
evening dress, who sang the sentimental songs, and carried
|
|
the sheets of music at which she never looked, pleased
|
|
McTeague less. Trina, however, was captivated. She grew
|
|
pensive over
|
|
|
|
|
|
"You do not love me--no;
|
|
Bid me good-by and go;"
|
|
|
|
|
|
and split her new gloves in her enthusiasm when it was
|
|
finished.
|
|
|
|
"Don't you love sad music, Mac?" she murmured.
|
|
|
|
Then came the two comedians. They talked with fearful
|
|
rapidity; their wit and repartee seemed inexhaustible.
|
|
|
|
"As I was going down the street yesterday--"
|
|
|
|
"Ah! as YOU were going down the street--all right."
|
|
|
|
"I saw a girl at a window----"
|
|
|
|
"YOU saw a girl at a window."
|
|
|
|
"And this girl she was a corker----"
|
|
|
|
"Ah! as YOU were going down the street yesterday YOU
|
|
saw a girl at a window, and this girl she was a corker. All
|
|
right, go on."
|
|
|
|
The other comedian went on. The joke was suddenly evolved.
|
|
A certain phrase led to a song, which was sung with
|
|
lightning rapidity, each performer making precisely the same
|
|
gestures at precisely the same instant. They were
|
|
irresistible. McTeague, though he caught but a third of the
|
|
jokes, could have listened all night.
|
|
|
|
After the comedians had gone out, the iron advertisement
|
|
curtain was let down.
|
|
|
|
"What comes now?" said McTeague, bewildered.
|
|
|
|
"It's the intermission of fifteen minutes now."
|
|
|
|
The musicians disappeared through the rabbit hutch, and the
|
|
audience stirred and stretched itself. Most of the young
|
|
men left their seats.
|
|
|
|
During this intermission McTeague and his party had
|
|
"refreshments." Mrs. Sieppe and Trina had Queen Charlottes,
|
|
McTeague drank a glass of beer, Owgooste ate the orange and
|
|
one of the bananas. He begged for a glass of lemonade,
|
|
which was finally given him.
|
|
|
|
"Joost to geep um quiet," observed Mrs. Sieppe.
|
|
|
|
But almost immediately after drinking his lemonade Owgooste
|
|
was seized with a sudden restlessness. He twisted and
|
|
wriggled in his seat, swinging his legs violently, looking
|
|
about him with eyes full of a vague distress. At length,
|
|
just as the musicians were returning, he stood up and
|
|
whispered energetically in his mother's ear. Mrs. Sieppe
|
|
was exasperated at once.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," she cried, reseating him brusquely.
|
|
|
|
The performance was resumed. A lightning artist appeared,
|
|
drawing caricatures and portraits with incredible swiftness.
|
|
He even went so far as to ask for subjects from the
|
|
audience, and the names of prominent men were shouted to him
|
|
from the gallery. He drew portraits of the President, of
|
|
Grant, of Washington, of Napoleon Bonaparte, of Bismarck, of
|
|
Garibaldi, of P. T. Barnum.
|
|
|
|
And so the evening passed. The hall grew very hot, and the
|
|
smoke of innumerable cigars made the eyes smart. A thick
|
|
blue mist hung low over the heads of the audience. The air
|
|
was full of varied smells--the smell of stale cigars, of
|
|
flat beer, of orange peel, of gas, of sachet powders, and of
|
|
cheap perfumery.
|
|
|
|
One "artist" after another came upon the stage. McTeague's
|
|
attention never wandered for a minute. Trina and her
|
|
mother enjoyed themselves hugely. At every moment they made
|
|
comments to one another, their eyes never leaving the stage.
|
|
|
|
"Ain't dot fool joost too funny?"
|
|
|
|
"That's a pretty song. Don't you like that kind of a song?"
|
|
|
|
"Wonderful! It's wonderful! Yes, yes, wonderful! That's
|
|
the word."
|
|
|
|
Owgooste, however, lost interest. He stood up in his place,
|
|
his back to the stage, chewing a piece of orange peel and
|
|
watching a little girl in her father's lap across the aisle,
|
|
his eyes fixed in a glassy, ox-like stare. But he was
|
|
uneasy. He danced from one foot to the other, and at
|
|
intervals appealed in hoarse whispers to his mother, who
|
|
disdained an answer.
|
|
|
|
"Ma, say, ma-ah," he whined, abstractedly chewing his orange
|
|
peel, staring at the little girl.
|
|
|
|
"Ma-ah, say, ma." At times his monotonous plaint reached
|
|
his mother's consciousness. She suddenly realized what this
|
|
was that was annoying her.
|
|
|
|
"Owgooste, will you sit down?" She caught him up all at
|
|
once, and jammed him down into his place. "Be quiet, den;
|
|
loog; listun at der yunge girls."
|
|
|
|
Three young women and a young man who played a zither
|
|
occupied the stage. They were dressed in Tyrolese costume;
|
|
they were yodlers, and sang in German about "mountain tops"
|
|
and "bold hunters" and the like. The yodling chorus was a
|
|
marvel of flute-like modulations. The girls were really
|
|
pretty, and were not made up in the least. Their "turn" had
|
|
a great success. Mrs. Sieppe was entranced. Instantly she
|
|
remembered her girlhood and her native Swiss village.
|
|
|
|
"Ach, dot is heavunly; joost like der old country. Mein
|
|
gran'mutter used to be one of der mos' famous yodlers. When
|
|
I was leedle, I haf seen dem joost like dat."
|
|
|
|
"Ma-ah," began Owgooste fretfully, as soon as the yodlers
|
|
had departed. He could not keep still an instant; he
|
|
twisted from side to side, swinging his legs with incredible
|
|
swiftness.
|
|
|
|
"Ma-ah, I want to go ho-ome."
|
|
|
|
"Pehave!" exclaimed his mother, shaking him by the arm;
|
|
"loog, der leedle girl is watchun you. Dis is der last dime
|
|
I take you to der blay, you see."
|
|
|
|
"I don't ca-are; I'm sleepy." At length, to their great
|
|
relief, he went to sleep, his head against his mother's arm.
|
|
|
|
The kinetoscope fairly took their breaths away.
|
|
|
|
"What will they do next?" observed Trina, in amazement.
|
|
"Ain't that wonderful, Mac?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague was awe-struck.
|
|
|
|
"Look at that horse move his head," he cried excitedly,
|
|
quite carried away. "Look at that cable car coming--and the
|
|
man going across the street. See, here comes a truck.
|
|
Well, I never in all my life! What would Marcus say to
|
|
this?"
|
|
|
|
"It's all a drick!" exclaimed Mrs. Sieppe, with sudden
|
|
conviction. "I ain't no fool; dot's nothun but a drick."
|
|
|
|
"Well, of course, mamma," exclaimed Trina, "it's----"
|
|
|
|
But Mrs. Sieppe put her head in the air.
|
|
|
|
"I'm too old to be fooled," she persisted. "It's a drick."
|
|
Nothing more could be got out of her than this.
|
|
|
|
The party stayed to the very end of the show, though the
|
|
kinetoscope was the last number but one on the programme,
|
|
and fully half the audience left immediately afterward.
|
|
However, while the unfortunate Irish comedian went through
|
|
his "act" to the backs of the departing people, Mrs. Sieppe
|
|
woke Owgooste, very cross and sleepy, and began getting her
|
|
"things together." As soon as he was awake Owgooste began
|
|
fidgeting again.
|
|
|
|
"Save der brogramme, Trina," whispered Mrs. Sieppe. "Take
|
|
ut home to popper. Where is der hat of Owgooste? Haf you
|
|
got mein handkerchief, Trina?"
|
|
|
|
But at this moment a dreadful accident happened to Owgooste;
|
|
his distress reached its climax; his fortitude collapsed.
|
|
What a misery! It was a veritable catastrophe, deplorable,
|
|
lamentable, a thing beyond words! For a moment he gazed
|
|
wildly about him, helpless and petrified with astonishment
|
|
and terror. Then his grief found utterance, and the closing
|
|
strains of the orchestra were mingled with a prolonged wail
|
|
of infinite sadness.
|
|
|
|
"Owgooste, what is ut?" cried his mother eyeing him with
|
|
dawning suspicion; then suddenly, "What haf you done? You
|
|
haf ruin your new Vauntleroy gostume!" Her face blazed;
|
|
without more ado she smacked him soundly. Then it was that
|
|
Owgooste touched the limit of his misery, his unhappiness,
|
|
his horrible discomfort; his utter wretchedness was
|
|
complete. He filled the air with his doleful outcries. The
|
|
more he was smacked and shaken, the louder he wept.
|
|
|
|
"What--what is the matter?" inquired McTeague.
|
|
|
|
Trina's face was scarlet. "Nothing, nothing," she exclaimed
|
|
hastily, looking away. "Come, we must be going. It's about
|
|
over." The end of the show and the breaking up of the
|
|
audience tided over the embarrassment of the moment.
|
|
|
|
The party filed out at the tail end of the audience.
|
|
Already the lights were being extinguished and the ushers
|
|
spreading druggeting over the upholstered seats.
|
|
|
|
McTeague and the Sieppes took an uptown car that would bring
|
|
them near Polk Street. The car was crowded; McTeague and
|
|
Owgooste were obliged to stand. The little boy fretted to
|
|
be taken in his mother's lap, but Mrs. Sieppe emphatically
|
|
refused.
|
|
|
|
On their way home they discussed the performance.
|
|
|
|
"I--I like best der yodlers."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, the soloist was the best--the lady who sang those sad
|
|
songs."
|
|
|
|
"Wasn't--wasn't that magic lantern wonderful, where the
|
|
figures moved? Wonderful--ah, wonderful! And wasn't that
|
|
first act funny, where the fellow fell down all the time?
|
|
And that musical act, and the fellow with the burnt-cork
|
|
face who played 'Nearer, My God, to Thee' on the beer
|
|
bottles."
|
|
|
|
They got off at Polk Street and walked up a block to the
|
|
flat. The street was dark and empty; opposite the flat, in
|
|
the back of the deserted market, the ducks and geese were
|
|
calling persistently.
|
|
|
|
As they were buying their tamales from the half-breed
|
|
Mexican at the street corner, McTeague observed:
|
|
|
|
"Marcus ain't gone to bed yet. See, there's a light in his
|
|
window. There!" he exclaimed at once, "I forgot the
|
|
doorkey. Well, Marcus can let us in."
|
|
|
|
Hardly had he rung the bell at the street door of the flat
|
|
when the bolt was shot back. In the hall at the top of the
|
|
long, narrow staircase there was the sound of a great
|
|
scurrying. Maria Macapa stood there, her hand upon the rope
|
|
that drew the bolt; Marcus was at her side; Old Grannis was
|
|
in the background, looking over their shoulders; while
|
|
little Miss Baker leant over the banisters, a strange man in
|
|
a drab overcoat at her side. As McTeague's party stepped
|
|
into the doorway a half-dozen voices cried:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, it's them."
|
|
|
|
"Is that you, Mac?"
|
|
|
|
"Is that you, Miss Sieppe?"
|
|
|
|
"Is your name Trina Sieppe?"
|
|
|
|
Then, shriller than all the rest, Maria Macapa screamed:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Miss Sieppe, come up here quick. Your lottery ticket
|
|
has won five thousand dollars!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 7
|
|
|
|
|
|
"What nonsense!" answered Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Ach Gott! What is ut?" cried Mrs. Sieppe,
|
|
misunderstanding, supposing a calamity.
|
|
|
|
"What--what--what," stammered the dentist, confused by the
|
|
lights, the crowded stairway, the medley of voices. The
|
|
party reached the landing. The others surrounded them.
|
|
Marcus alone seemed to rise to the occasion.
|
|
|
|
"Le' me be the first to congratulate you," he cried,
|
|
catching Trina's hand. Every one was talking at once.
|
|
|
|
"Miss Sieppe, Miss Sieppe, your ticket has won five thousand
|
|
dollars," cried Maria. "Don't you remember the lottery
|
|
ticket I sold you in Doctor McTeague's office?"
|
|
|
|
"Trina!" almost screamed her mother. "Five tausend thalers!
|
|
five tausend thalers! If popper were only here!"
|
|
|
|
"What is it--what is it?" exclaimed McTeague, rolling his
|
|
eyes.
|
|
|
|
"What are you going to do with it, Trina?" inquired Marcus.
|
|
|
|
"You're a rich woman, my dear," said Miss Baker, her little
|
|
false curls quivering with excitement, "and I'm glad for
|
|
your sake. Let me kiss you. To think I was in the room
|
|
when you bought the ticket!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, oh!" interrupted Trina, shaking her head, "there is a
|
|
mistake. There must be. Why--why should I win five
|
|
thousand dollars? It's nonsense!"
|
|
|
|
"No mistake, no mistake," screamed Maria. "Your number was
|
|
400,012. Here it is in the paper this evening. I remember
|
|
it well, because I keep an account."
|
|
|
|
"But I know you're wrong," answered Trina, beginning to
|
|
tremble in spite of herself. "Why should I win?"
|
|
|
|
"Eh? Why shouldn't you?" cried her mother.
|
|
|
|
In fact, why shouldn't she? The idea suddenly occurred to
|
|
Trina. After all, it was not a question of effort or merit
|
|
on her part. Why should she suppose a mistake? What if it
|
|
were true, this wonderful fillip of fortune striking in
|
|
there like some chance-driven bolt?
|
|
|
|
"Oh, do you think so?" she gasped.
|
|
|
|
The stranger in the drab overcoat came forward.
|
|
|
|
"It's the agent," cried two or three voices, simultaneously.
|
|
|
|
"I guess you're one of the lucky ones, Miss Sieppe," he
|
|
said. I suppose you have kept your ticket."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes; four three oughts twelve--I remember."
|
|
|
|
"That's right," admitted the other. "Present your ticket at
|
|
the local branch office as soon as possible--the address is
|
|
printed on the back of the ticket--and you'll receive a
|
|
check on our bank for five thousand dollars. Your number
|
|
will have to be verified on our official list, but there's
|
|
hardly a chance of a mistake. I congratulate you."
|
|
|
|
All at once a great shrill of gladness surged up in Trina.
|
|
She was to possess five thousand dollars. She was carried
|
|
away with the joy of her good fortune, a natural,
|
|
spontaneous joy--the gaiety of a child with a new and
|
|
wonderful toy.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I've won, I've won, I've won!" she cried, clapping her
|
|
hands. "Mamma, think of it. I've won five thousand
|
|
dollars, just by buying a ticket. Mac, what do you say to
|
|
that? I've got five thousand dollars. August, do you hear
|
|
what's happened to sister?"
|
|
|
|
"Kiss your mommer, Trina," suddenly commanded Mrs. Sieppe.
|
|
"What efer will you do mit all dose money, eh, Trina?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh!" exclaimed Marcus. "Get married on it for one thing.
|
|
Thereat they all shouted with laughter. McTeague grinned,
|
|
and looked about sheepishly. "Talk about luck," muttered
|
|
Marcus, shaking his head at the dentist; then suddenly he
|
|
added:
|
|
|
|
"Well, are we going to stay talking out here in the hall all
|
|
night? Can't we all come into your 'Parlors,' Mac?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," exclaimed McTeague, hastily unlocking his
|
|
door.
|
|
|
|
"Efery botty gome," cried Mrs. Sieppe, genially. "Ain't ut
|
|
so, Doktor?"
|
|
|
|
"Everybody," repeated the dentist. "There's--there's some
|
|
beer."
|
|
|
|
"We'll celebrate, by damn!" exclaimed Marcus. "It ain't
|
|
every day you win five thousand dollars. It's only Sundays
|
|
and legal holidays." Again he set the company off into a
|
|
gale of laughter. Anything was funny at a time like this.
|
|
In some way every one of them felt elated. The wheel of
|
|
fortune had come spinning close to them. They were near to
|
|
this great sum of money. It was as though they too had won.
|
|
|
|
"Here's right where I sat when I bought that ticket," cried
|
|
Trina, after they had come into the "Parlors," and Marcus
|
|
had lit the gas. "Right here in this chair." She sat down
|
|
in one of the rigid chairs under the steel engraving.
|
|
"And, Marcus, you sat here----"
|
|
|
|
"And I was just getting out of the operating chair,"
|
|
interposed Miss Baker.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes. That's so; and you," continued Trina, pointing
|
|
to Maria, "came up and said, 'Buy a ticket in the lottery;
|
|
just a dollar.' Oh, I remember it just as plain as though
|
|
it was yesterday, and I wasn't going to at first----"
|
|
|
|
"And don't you know I told Maria it was against the law?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I remember, and then I gave her a dollar and put the
|
|
ticket in my pocketbook. It's in my pocketbook now at home
|
|
in the top drawer of my bureau--oh, suppose it should be
|
|
stolen now," she suddenly exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"It's worth big money now," asserted Marcus.
|
|
|
|
"Five thousand dollars. Who would have thought it? It's
|
|
wonderful." Everybody started and turned. It was McTeague.
|
|
He stood in the middle of the floor, wagging his huge head.
|
|
He seemed to have just realized what had happened.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sir, five thousand dollars!" exclaimed Marcus, with a
|
|
sudden unaccountable mirthlessness. "Five thousand dollars!
|
|
Do you get on to that? Cousin Trina and you will be rich
|
|
people."
|
|
|
|
"At six per cent, that's twenty-five dollars a month,"
|
|
hazarded the agent.
|
|
|
|
"Think of it. Think of it," muttered McTeague. He went
|
|
aimlessly about the room, his eyes wide, his enormous hands
|
|
dangling.
|
|
|
|
"A cousin of mine won forty dollars once," observed Miss
|
|
Baker. "But he spent every cent of it buying more tickets,
|
|
and never won anything."
|
|
|
|
Then the reminiscences began. Maria told about the butcher
|
|
on the next block who had won twenty dollars the last
|
|
drawing. Mrs. Sieppe knew a gasfitter in Oakland who had won
|
|
several times; once a hundred dollars. Little Miss Baker
|
|
announced that she had always believed that lotteries were
|
|
wrong; but, just the same, five thousand was five thousand.
|
|
|
|
"It's all right when you win, ain't it, Miss Baker?"
|
|
observed Marcus, with a certain sarcasm. What was the
|
|
matter with Marcus? At moments he seemed singularly out of
|
|
temper.
|
|
|
|
But the agent was full of stories. He told his experiences,
|
|
the legends and myths that had grown up around the history
|
|
of the lottery; he told of the poor newsboy with a dying
|
|
mother to support who had drawn a prize of fifteen thousand;
|
|
of the man who was driven to suicide through want, but who
|
|
held (had he but known it) the number that two days after
|
|
his death drew the capital prize of thirty thousand dollars;
|
|
of the little milliner who for ten years had played the
|
|
lottery without success, and who had one day declared that
|
|
she would buy but one more ticket and then give up trying,
|
|
and of how this last ticket had brought her a fortune upon
|
|
which she could retire; of tickets that had been lost or
|
|
destroyed, and whose numbers had won fabulous sums at the
|
|
drawing; of criminals, driven to vice by poverty, and who
|
|
had reformed after winning competencies; of gamblers who
|
|
played the lottery as they would play a faro bank, turning
|
|
in their winnings again as soon as made, buying thousands of
|
|
tickets all over the country; of superstitions as to
|
|
terminal and initial numbers, and as to lucky days of
|
|
purchase; of marvellous coincidences--three capital prizes
|
|
drawn consecutively by the same town; a ticket bought by a
|
|
millionaire and given to his boot-black, who won a thousand
|
|
dollars upon it; the same number winning the same amount an
|
|
indefinite number of times; and so on to infinity.
|
|
Invariably it was the needy who won, the destitute and
|
|
starving woke to wealth and plenty, the virtuous toiler
|
|
suddenly found his reward in a ticket bought at a hazard;
|
|
the lottery was a great charity, the friend of the people, a
|
|
vast beneficent machine that recognized neither rank nor
|
|
wealth nor station.
|
|
|
|
The company began to be very gay. Chairs and tables were
|
|
brought in from the adjoining rooms, and Maria was sent out
|
|
for more beer and tamales, and also commissioned to buy a
|
|
bottle of wine and some cake for Miss Baker, who abhorred
|
|
beer.
|
|
|
|
The "Dental Parlors" were in great confusion. Empty beer
|
|
bottles stood on the movable rack where the instruments were
|
|
kept; plates and napkins were upon the seat of the
|
|
operating chair and upon the stand of shelves in the corner,
|
|
side by side with the concertina and the volumes of "Allen's
|
|
Practical Dentist." The canary woke and chittered crossly,
|
|
his feathers puffed out; the husks of tamales littered the
|
|
floor; the stone pug dog sitting before the little stove
|
|
stared at the unusual scene, his glass eyes starting from
|
|
their sockets.
|
|
|
|
They drank and feasted in impromptu fashion. Marcus
|
|
Schouler assumed the office of master of ceremonies; he was
|
|
in a lather of excitement, rushing about here and there,
|
|
opening beer bottles, serving the tamales, slapping McTeague
|
|
upon the back, laughing and joking continually. He made
|
|
McTeague sit at the head of the table, with Trina at his
|
|
right and the agent at his left; he--when he sat down at
|
|
all--occupied the foot, Maria Macapa at his left, while next
|
|
to her was Mrs. Sieppe, opposite Miss Baker. Owgooste had
|
|
been put to bed upon the bed-lounge.
|
|
|
|
"Where's Old Grannis?" suddenly exclaimed Marcus. Sure
|
|
enough, where had the old Englishman gone? He had been
|
|
there at first.
|
|
|
|
"I called him down with everybody else," cried Maria Macapa,
|
|
"as soon as I saw in the paper that Miss Sieppe had won. We
|
|
all came down to Mr. Schouler's room and waited for you to
|
|
come home. I think he must have gone back to his room.
|
|
I'll bet you'll find him sewing up his books."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," observed Miss Baker, "not at this hour."
|
|
|
|
Evidently the timid old gentleman had taken advantage of the
|
|
confusion to slip unobtrusively away.
|
|
|
|
"I'll go bring him down," shouted Marcus; "he's got to join
|
|
us."
|
|
|
|
Miss Baker was in great agitation.
|
|
|
|
"I--I hardly think you'd better," she murmured; "he--he--I
|
|
don't think he drinks beer."
|
|
|
|
"He takes his amusement in sewin' up books," cried Maria.
|
|
|
|
Marcus brought him down, nevertheless, having found him just
|
|
preparing for bed.
|
|
|
|
"I--I must apologize," stammered Old Grannis, as he stood
|
|
in the doorway. "I had not quite expected--I--find--
|
|
find myself a little unprepared." He was without collar and
|
|
cravat, owing to Marcus Schouler's precipitate haste. He
|
|
was annoyed beyond words that Miss Baker saw him thus.
|
|
Could anything be more embarrassing?
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis was introduced to Mrs. Sieppe and to Trina as
|
|
Marcus's employer. They shook hands solemnly.
|
|
|
|
"I don't believe that he an' Miss Baker have ever been
|
|
introduced," cried Maria Macapa, shrilly, "an' they've been
|
|
livin' side by side for years."
|
|
|
|
The two old people were speechless, avoiding each other's
|
|
gaze. It had come at last; they were to know each other, to
|
|
talk together, to touch each other's hands.
|
|
|
|
Marcus brought Old Grannis around the table to little Miss
|
|
Baker, dragging him by the coat sleeve, exclaiming: "Well, I
|
|
thought you two people knew each other long ago. Miss
|
|
Baker, this is Mr. Grannis; Mr. Grannis, this is Miss
|
|
Baker." Neither spoke. Like two little children they faced
|
|
each other, awkward, constrained, tongue-tied with
|
|
embarrassment. Then Miss Baker put out her hand shyly. Old
|
|
Grannis touched it for an instant and let it fall.
|
|
|
|
"Now you know each other," cried Marcus, "and it's about
|
|
time." For the first time their eyes met; Old Grannis
|
|
trembled a little, putting his hand uncertainly to his chin.
|
|
Miss Baker flushed ever so slightly, but Maria Macapa passed
|
|
suddenly between them, carrying a half empty beer bottle.
|
|
The two old people fell back from one another, Miss Baker
|
|
resuming her seat.
|
|
|
|
"Here's a place for you over here, Mr. Grannis," cried
|
|
Marcus, making room for him at his side. Old Grannis
|
|
slipped into the chair, withdrawing at once from the
|
|
company's notice. He stared fixedly at his plate and did
|
|
not speak again. Old Miss Baker began to talk volubly
|
|
across the table to Mrs. Sieppe about hot-house flowers and
|
|
medicated flannels.
|
|
|
|
It was in the midst of this little impromptu supper that the
|
|
engagement of Trina and the dentist was announced. In a
|
|
pause in the chatter of conversation Mrs. Sieppe leaned
|
|
forward and, speaking to the agent, said:
|
|
|
|
"Vell, you know also my daughter Trina get married bretty
|
|
soon. She and der dentist, Doktor McTeague, eh, yes?"
|
|
|
|
There was a general exclamation.
|
|
|
|
"I thought so all along," cried Miss Baker, excitedly. "The
|
|
first time I saw them together I said, 'What a pair!'"
|
|
|
|
"Delightful!" exclaimed the agent, "to be married and win a
|
|
snug little fortune at the same time."
|
|
|
|
"So--So," murmured Old Grannis, nodding at his plate.
|
|
|
|
"Good luck to you," cried Maria.
|
|
|
|
"He's lucky enough already," growled Marcus under his
|
|
breath, relapsing for a moment into one of those strange
|
|
moods of sullenness which had marked him throughout the
|
|
evening.
|
|
|
|
Trina flushed crimson, drawing shyly nearer her mother.
|
|
McTeague grinned from ear to ear, looking around from one to
|
|
another, exclaiming "Huh! Huh!"
|
|
|
|
But the agent rose to his feet, a newly filled beer glass in
|
|
his hand. He was a man of the world, this agent. He knew
|
|
life. He was suave and easy. A diamond was on his little
|
|
finger.
|
|
|
|
"Ladies and gentlemen," he began. There was an instant
|
|
silence. "This is indeed a happy occasion. I--I am glad to
|
|
be here to-night; to be a witness to such good fortune; to
|
|
partake in these--in this celebration. Why, I feel almost as
|
|
glad as if I had held four three oughts twelve myself; as if
|
|
the five thousand were mine instead of belonging to our
|
|
charming hostess. The good wishes of my humble self go out
|
|
to Miss Sieppe in this moment of her good fortune, and I
|
|
think--in fact, I am sure I can speak for the great
|
|
institution, the great company I represent. The company
|
|
congratulates Miss Sieppe. We--they--ah--They wish her every
|
|
happiness her new fortune can procure her. It has been my
|
|
duty, my--ah--cheerful duty to call upon the winners of
|
|
large prizes and to offer the felicitation of the company.
|
|
I have, in my experience, called upon many such; but never
|
|
have I seen fortune so happily bestowed as in this case.
|
|
The company have dowered the prospective bride. I am
|
|
sure I but echo the sentiments of this assembly when I wish
|
|
all joy and happiness to this happy pair, happy in the
|
|
possession of a snug little fortune, and happy--happy in--"
|
|
he finished with a sudden inspiration--"in the possession of
|
|
each other; I drink to the health, wealth, and happiness of
|
|
the future bride and groom. Let us drink standing up."
|
|
They drank with enthusiasm. Marcus was carried away with
|
|
the excitement of the moment.
|
|
|
|
"Outa sight, outa sight," he vociferated, clapping his
|
|
hands. "Very well said. To the health of the bride.
|
|
McTeague, McTeague, speech, speech!"
|
|
|
|
In an instant the whole table was clamoring for the dentist
|
|
to speak. McTeague was terrified; he gripped the table with
|
|
both hands, looking wildly about him.
|
|
|
|
"Speech, speech!" shouted Marcus, running around the table
|
|
and endeavoring to drag McTeague up.
|
|
|
|
"No--no--no," muttered the other. "No speech." The company
|
|
rattled upon the table with their beer glasses, insisting
|
|
upon a speech. McTeague settled obstinately into his chair,
|
|
very red in the face, shaking his head energetically.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, go on!" he exclaimed; "no speech."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, get up and say somethun, anyhow," persisted Marcus;
|
|
"you ought to do it. It's the proper caper."
|
|
|
|
McTeague heaved himself up; there was a burst of applause;
|
|
he looked slowly about him, then suddenly sat down again,
|
|
shaking his head hopelessly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, go on, Mac," cried Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Get up, say somethun, anyhow, cried Marcus, tugging at his
|
|
arm; "you GOT to."
|
|
|
|
Once more McTeague rose to his feet.
|
|
|
|
"Huh!" he exclaimed, looking steadily at the table. Then he
|
|
began:
|
|
|
|
"I don' know what to say--I--I--I ain't never made a speech
|
|
before; I--I ain't never made a speech before. But I'm glad
|
|
Trina's won the prize--"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I'll bet you are," muttered Marcus.
|
|
|
|
"I--I--I'm glad Trina's won, and I--I want to--I want
|
|
to--I want to--want to say that--you're--all--welcome, an'
|
|
drink hearty, an' I'm much obliged to the agent. Trina and
|
|
I are goin' to be married, an' I'm glad everybody's here to-
|
|
night, an' you're--all--welcome, an' drink hearty, an' I
|
|
hope you'll come again, an' you're always welcome--an'--I--
|
|
an'--an'--That's--about--all--I--gotta say." He sat down,
|
|
wiping his forehead, amidst tremendous applause.
|
|
|
|
Soon after that the company pushed back from the table and
|
|
relaxed into couples and groups. The men, with the
|
|
exception of Old Grannis, began to smoke, the smell of their
|
|
tobacco mingling with the odors of ether, creosote, and
|
|
stale bedding, which pervaded the "Parlors." Soon the
|
|
windows had to be lowered from the top. Mrs. Sieppe and
|
|
old Miss Baker sat together in the bay window exchanging
|
|
confidences. Miss Baker had turned back the overskirt of
|
|
her dress; a plate of cake was in her lap; from time to time
|
|
she sipped her wine with the delicacy of a white cat. The
|
|
two women were much interested in each other. Miss Baker
|
|
told Mrs. Sieppe all about Old Grannis, not forgetting the
|
|
fiction of the title and the unjust stepfather.
|
|
|
|
"He's quite a personage really," said Miss Baker.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe led the conversation around to her children.
|
|
"Ach, Trina is sudge a goote girl," she said; "always gay,
|
|
yes, und sing from morgen to night. Und Owgooste, he is soh
|
|
smart also, yes, eh? He has der genius for machines, always
|
|
making somethun mit wheels und sbrings."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, if--if--I had children," murmured the little old maid a
|
|
trifle wistfully, "one would have been a sailor; he would
|
|
have begun as a midshipman on my brother's ship; in time he
|
|
would have been an officer. The other would have been a
|
|
landscape gardener."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac!" exclaimed Trina, looking up into the dentist's
|
|
face, "think of all this money coming to us just at this
|
|
very moment. Isn't it wonderful? Don't it kind of scare
|
|
you?"
|
|
|
|
"Wonderful, wonderful!" muttered McTeague, shaking his head.
|
|
"Let's buy a lot of tickets," he added, struck with an idea.
|
|
|
|
"Now, that's how you can always tell a good cigar,"
|
|
observed the agent to Marcus as the two sat smoking at the
|
|
end of the table. "The light end should be rolled to a
|
|
point."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, the Chinese cigar-makers," cried Marcus, in a passion,
|
|
brandishing his fist. "It's them as is ruining the cause of
|
|
white labor. They are, they are for a FACT. Ah, the
|
|
rat-eaters! Ah, the white-livered curs!"
|
|
|
|
Over in the corner, by the stand of shelves, Old Grannis was
|
|
listening to Maria Macapa. The Mexican woman had been
|
|
violently stirred over Trina's sudden wealth; Maria's mind
|
|
had gone back to her younger days. She leaned forward, her
|
|
elbows on her knees, her chin in her hands, her eyes wide
|
|
and fixed. Old Grannis listened to her attentively.
|
|
|
|
"There wa'n't a piece that was so much as scratched," Maria
|
|
was saying. "Every piece was just like a mirror, smooth and
|
|
bright; oh, bright as a little sun. Such a service as that
|
|
was--platters and soup tureens and an immense big punch-
|
|
bowl. Five thousand dollars, what does that amount to? Why,
|
|
that punch-bowl alone was worth a fortune."
|
|
|
|
"What a wonderful story!" exclaimed Old Grannis, never for
|
|
an instant doubting its truth. "And it's all lost now, you
|
|
say?"
|
|
|
|
"Lost, lost," repeated Maria.
|
|
|
|
"Tut, tut! What a pity! What a pity!"
|
|
|
|
Suddenly the agent rose and broke out with:
|
|
|
|
"Well, I must be going, if I'm to get any car."
|
|
|
|
He shook hands with everybody, offered a parting cigar to
|
|
Marcus, congratulated McTeague and Trina a last time, and
|
|
bowed himself out.
|
|
|
|
"What an elegant gentleman," commented Miss Baker.
|
|
|
|
"Ah," said Marcus, nodding his head, "there's a man of the
|
|
world for you. Right on to himself, by damn!"
|
|
|
|
The company broke up.
|
|
|
|
"Come along, Mac," cried Marcus; "we're to sleep with the
|
|
dogs to-night, you know."
|
|
|
|
The two friends said "Good-night" all around and departed
|
|
for the little dog hospital.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis hurried to his room furtively, terrified
|
|
lest he should again be brought face to face with Miss
|
|
Baker. He bolted himself in and listened until he heard her
|
|
foot in the hall and the soft closing of her door. She was
|
|
there close beside him; as one might say, in the same room;
|
|
for he, too, had made the discovery as to the similarity of
|
|
the wallpaper. At long intervals he could hear a faint
|
|
rustling as she moved about. What an evening that had been
|
|
for him! He had met her, had spoken to her, had touched her
|
|
hand; he was in a tremor of excitement. In a like manner
|
|
the little old dressmaker listened and quivered. HE was
|
|
there in that same room which they shared in common,
|
|
separated only by the thinnest board partition. He was
|
|
thinking of her, she was almost sure of it. They were
|
|
strangers no longer; they were acquaintances, friends. What
|
|
an event that evening had been in their lives!
|
|
|
|
Late as it was, Miss Baker brewed a cup of tea and sat down
|
|
in her rocking chair close to the partition; she rocked
|
|
gently, sipping her tea, calming herself after the emotions
|
|
of that wonderful evening.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis heard the clinking of the tea things and smelt
|
|
the faint odor of the tea. It seemed to him a signal, an
|
|
invitation. He drew his chair close to his side of the
|
|
partition, before his work-table. A pile of half-bound
|
|
"Nations" was in the little binding apparatus; he threaded
|
|
his huge upholsterer's needle with stout twine and set to
|
|
work.
|
|
|
|
It was their tete-a-tete. Instinctively they felt each
|
|
other's presence, felt each other's thought coming to them
|
|
through the thin partition. It was charming; they were
|
|
perfectly happy. There in the stillness that settled over
|
|
the flat in the half hour after midnight the two old people
|
|
"kept company," enjoying after their fashion their little
|
|
romance that had come so late into the lives of each.
|
|
|
|
On the way to her room in the garret Maria Macapa paused
|
|
under the single gas-jet that burned at the top of the well
|
|
of the staircase; she assured herself that she was alone,
|
|
and then drew from her pocket one of McTeague's "tapes" of
|
|
non-cohesive gold. It was the most valuable steal she
|
|
had ever yet made in the dentist's "Parlors." She told
|
|
herself that it was worth at least a couple of dollars.
|
|
Suddenly an idea occurred to her, and she went hastily to a
|
|
window at the end of the hall, and, shading her face with
|
|
both hands, looked down into the little alley just back of
|
|
the flat. On some nights Zerkow, the red-headed Polish Jew,
|
|
sat up late, taking account of the week's ragpicking. There
|
|
was a dim light in his window now.
|
|
|
|
Maria went to her room, threw a shawl around her head, and
|
|
descended into the little back yard of the flat by the back
|
|
stairs. As she let herself out of the back gate into the
|
|
alley, Alexander, Marcus's Irish setter, woke suddenly with
|
|
a gruff bark. The collie who lived on the other side of the
|
|
fence, in the back yard of the branch post-office, answered
|
|
with a snarl. Then in an instant the endless feud between
|
|
the two dogs was resumed. They dragged their respective
|
|
kennels to the fence, and through the cracks raged at each
|
|
other in a frenzy of hate; their teeth snapped and gleamed;
|
|
the hackles on their backs rose and stiffened. Their
|
|
hideous clamor could have been heard for blocks around. What
|
|
a massacre should the two ever meet!
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, Maria was knocking at Zerkow's miserable hovel.
|
|
|
|
"Who is it? Who is it?" cried the rag-picker from within,
|
|
in his hoarse voice, that was half whisper, starting
|
|
nervously, and sweeping a handful of silver into his drawer.
|
|
|
|
"It's me, Maria Macapa;" then in a lower voice, and as if
|
|
speaking to herself, "had a flying squirrel an' let him go."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, Maria," cried Zerkow, obsequiously opening the door.
|
|
"Come in, come in, my girl; you're always welcome, even as
|
|
late as this. No junk, hey? But you're welcome for all
|
|
that. You'll have a drink, won't you?" He led her into his
|
|
back room and got down the whiskey bottle and the broken red
|
|
tumbler.
|
|
|
|
After the two had drunk together Maria produced the gold
|
|
"tape." Zerkow's eyes glittered on the instant. The sight
|
|
of gold invariably sent a qualm all through him; try as he
|
|
would, he could not repress it. His fingers trembled and
|
|
clawed at his mouth; his breath grew short.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, ah, ah!" he exclaimed, "give it here, give it here;
|
|
give it to me, Maria. That's a good girl, come give it to
|
|
me."
|
|
|
|
They haggled as usual over the price, but to-night Maria was
|
|
too excited over other matters to spend much time in
|
|
bickering over a few cents.
|
|
|
|
"Look here, Zerkow," she said as soon as the transfer was
|
|
made, "I got something to tell you. A little while ago I
|
|
sold a lottery ticket to a girl at the flat; the drawing was
|
|
in this evening's papers. How much do you suppose that girl
|
|
has won?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know. How much? How much?"
|
|
|
|
"Five thousand dollars."
|
|
|
|
It was as though a knife had been run through the Jew; a
|
|
spasm of an almost physical pain twisted his face--his
|
|
entire body. He raised his clenched fists into the air, his
|
|
eyes shut, his teeth gnawing his lip.
|
|
|
|
"Five thousand dollars," he whispered; "five thousand
|
|
dollars. For what? For nothing, for simply buying a ticket;
|
|
and I have worked so hard for it, so hard, so hard. Five
|
|
thousand dollars, five thousand dollars. Oh, why couldn't
|
|
it have come to me?" he cried, his voice choking, the tears
|
|
starting to his eyes; "why couldn't it have come to me? To
|
|
come so close, so close, and yet to miss me--me who have
|
|
worked for it, fought for it, starved for it, am dying for
|
|
it every day. Think of it, Maria, five thousand dollars,
|
|
all bright, heavy pieces----"
|
|
|
|
"Bright as a sunset," interrupted Maria, her chin propped on
|
|
her hands. "Such a glory, and heavy. Yes, every piece was
|
|
heavy, and it was all you could do to lift the punch-bowl.
|
|
Why, that punch-bowl was worth a fortune alone----"
|
|
|
|
"And it rang when you hit it with your knuckles, didn't it?"
|
|
prompted Zerkow, eagerly, his lips trembling, his fingers
|
|
hooking themselves into claws.
|
|
|
|
"Sweeter'n any church bell," continued Maria.
|
|
|
|
"Go on, go on, go on," cried Zerkow, drawing his chair
|
|
closer, and shutting his eyes in ecstasy.
|
|
|
|
"There were more than a hundred pieces, and every one of
|
|
them gold----"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, every one of them gold."
|
|
|
|
"You should have seen the sight when the leather trunk was
|
|
opened. There wa'n't a piece that was so much as scratched;
|
|
every one was like a mirror, smooth and bright, polished so
|
|
that it looked black--you know how I mean."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I know, I know," cried Zerkow, moistening his lips.
|
|
|
|
Then he plied her with questions--questions that covered
|
|
every detail of that service of plate. It was soft, wasn't
|
|
it? You could bite into a plate and leave a dent? The
|
|
handles of the knives, now, were they gold, too? All the
|
|
knife was made from one piece of gold, was it? And the
|
|
forks the same? The interior of the trunk was quilted, of
|
|
course? Did Maria ever polish the plates herself? When the
|
|
company ate off this service, it must have made a fine
|
|
noise--these gold knives and forks clinking together upon
|
|
these gold plates.
|
|
|
|
"Now, let's have it all over again, Maria," pleaded Zerkow.
|
|
"Begin now with 'There were more than a hundred pieces, and
|
|
every one of them gold.' Go on, begin, begin, begin!"
|
|
|
|
The red-headed Pole was in a fever of excitement. Maria's
|
|
recital had become a veritable mania with him. As he
|
|
listened, with closed eyes and trembling lips, he fancied he
|
|
could see that wonderful plate before him, there on the
|
|
table, under his eyes, under his hand, ponderous, massive,
|
|
gleaming. He tormented Maria into a second repetition of
|
|
the story--into a third. The more his mind dwelt upon it,
|
|
the sharper grew his desire. Then, with Maria's refusal to
|
|
continue the tale, came the reaction. Zerkow awoke as from
|
|
some ravishing dream. The plate was gone, was irretrievably
|
|
lost. There was nothing in that miserable room but grimy
|
|
rags and rust-corroded iron. What torment! what agony! to
|
|
be so near--so near, to see it in one's distorted fancy as
|
|
plain as in a mirror. To know every individual piece as an
|
|
old friend; to feel its weight; to be dazzled by its
|
|
glitter; to call it one's own, own; to have it to oneself,
|
|
hugged to the breast; and then to start, to wake, to come
|
|
down to the horrible reality.
|
|
|
|
"And you, YOU had it once," gasped Zerkow, clawing at
|
|
her arm; "you had it once, all your own. Think of it,
|
|
and now it's gone."
|
|
|
|
"Gone for good and all."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps it's buried near your old place somewhere."
|
|
|
|
"It's gone--gone--gone," chanted Maria in a monotone.
|
|
|
|
Zerkow dug his nails into his scalp, tearing at his red
|
|
hair.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, it's gone, it's gone--lost forever! Lost
|
|
forever!"
|
|
|
|
Marcus and the dentist walked up the silent street and
|
|
reached the little dog hospital. They had hardly spoken on
|
|
the way. McTeague's brain was in a whirl; speech failed him.
|
|
He was busy thinking of the great thing that had happened
|
|
that night, and was trying to realize what its effect would
|
|
be upon his life--his life and Trina's. As soon as they had
|
|
found themselves in the street, Marcus had relapsed at once
|
|
to a sullen silence, which McTeague was too abstracted to
|
|
notice.
|
|
|
|
They entered the tiny office of the hospital with its red
|
|
carpet, its gas stove, and its colored prints of famous dogs
|
|
hanging against the walls. In one corner stood the iron bed
|
|
which they were to occupy.
|
|
|
|
"You go on an' get to bed, Mac," observed Marcus. "I'll take
|
|
a look at the dogs before I turn in."
|
|
|
|
He went outside and passed along into the yard, that was
|
|
bounded on three sides by pens where the dogs were kept. A
|
|
bull terrier dying of gastritis recognized him and began to
|
|
whimper feebly.
|
|
|
|
Marcus paid no attention to the dogs. For the first time
|
|
that evening he was alone and could give vent to his
|
|
thoughts. He took a couple of turns up and down the yard,
|
|
then suddenly in a low voice exclaimed:
|
|
|
|
"You fool, you fool, Marcus Schouler! If you'd kept Trina
|
|
you'd have had that money. You might have had it yourself.
|
|
You've thrown away your chance in life--to give up the girl,
|
|
yes--but this," he stamped his foot with rage--"to throw
|
|
five thousand dollars out of the window--to stuff it into
|
|
the pockets of someone else, when it might have been
|
|
yours, when you might have had Trina AND the money--and
|
|
all for what? Because we were pals . Oh, 'pals' is all
|
|
right--but five thousand dollars--to have played it right
|
|
into his hands--God DAMN the luck!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 8
|
|
|
|
|
|
The next two months were delightful. Trina and McTeague saw
|
|
each other regularly, three times a week. The dentist went
|
|
over to B Street Sunday and Wednesday afternoons as usual;
|
|
but on Fridays it was Trina who came to the city. She spent
|
|
the morning between nine and twelve o'clock down town, for
|
|
the most part in the cheap department stores, doing the
|
|
weekly shopping for herself and the family. At noon she
|
|
took an uptown car and met McTeague at the corner of Polk
|
|
Street. The two lunched together at a small uptown hotel
|
|
just around the corner on Sutter Street. They were given a
|
|
little room to themselves. Nothing could have been more
|
|
delicious. They had but to close the sliding door to shut
|
|
themselves off from the whole world.
|
|
|
|
Trina would arrive breathless from her raids upon the
|
|
bargain counters, her pale cheeks flushed, her hair blown
|
|
about her face and into the corners of her lips, her
|
|
mother's net reticule stuffed to bursting. Once in their
|
|
tiny private room, she would drop into her chair with a
|
|
little groan.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, MAC, I am so tired; I've just been all OVER
|
|
town. Oh, it's good to sit down. Just think, I had to stand
|
|
up in the car all the way, after being on my feet the whole
|
|
blessed morning. Look here what I've bought. Just things
|
|
and things. Look, there's some dotted veiling I got for
|
|
myself; see now, do you think it looks pretty?"--she spread
|
|
it over her face--"and I got a box of writing paper, and a
|
|
roll of crepe paper to make a lamp shade for the front
|
|
parlor; and--what do you suppose--I saw a pair of Nottingham
|
|
lace curtains for FORTY-NINE CENTS; isn't that cheap?
|
|
and some chenille portieres for two and a half. Now what
|
|
have YOU been doing since I last saw you? Did Mr. Heise
|
|
finally get up enough courage to have his tooth pulled yet?"
|
|
Trina took off her hat and veil and rearranged her hair
|
|
before the looking-glass.
|
|
|
|
"No, no--not yet. I went down to the sign painter's
|
|
yesterday afternoon to see about that big gold tooth for a
|
|
sign. It costs too much; I can't get it yet a while.
|
|
There's two kinds, one German gilt and the other French
|
|
gilt; but the German gilt is no good."
|
|
|
|
McTeague sighed, and wagged his head. Even Trina and the
|
|
five thousand dollars could not make him forget this one
|
|
unsatisfied longing.
|
|
|
|
At other times they would talk at length over their plans,
|
|
while Trina sipped her chocolate and McTeague devoured huge
|
|
chunks of butterless bread. They were to be married at the
|
|
end of May, and the dentist already had his eye on a couple
|
|
of rooms, part of the suite of a bankrupt photographer.
|
|
They were situated in the flat, just back of his "Parlors,"
|
|
and he believed the photographer would sublet them
|
|
furnished.
|
|
|
|
McTeague and Trina had no apprehensions as to their
|
|
finances. They could be sure, in fact, of a tidy little
|
|
income. The dentist's practice was fairly good, and they
|
|
could count upon the interest of Trina's five thousand
|
|
dollars. To McTeague's mind this interest seemed woefully
|
|
small. He had had uncertain ideas about that five thousand
|
|
dollars; had imagined that they would spend it in some
|
|
lavish fashion; would buy a house, perhaps, or would furnish
|
|
their new rooms with overwhelming luxury--luxury that
|
|
implied red velvet carpets and continued feasting. The old-
|
|
time miner's idea of wealth easily gained and quickly spent
|
|
persisted in his mind. But when Trina had begun to talk of
|
|
investments and interests and per cents, he was troubled and
|
|
not a little disappointed. The lump sum of five
|
|
thousand dollars was one thing, a miserable little twenty or
|
|
twenty-five a month was quite another; and then someone else
|
|
had the money.
|
|
|
|
"But don't you see, Mac," explained Trina, "it's ours just
|
|
the same. We could get it back whenever we wanted it; and
|
|
then it's the reasonable way to do. We mustn't let it turn
|
|
our heads, Mac, dear, like that man that spent all he won in
|
|
buying more tickets. How foolish we'd feel after we'd spent
|
|
it all! We ought to go on just the same as before; as if we
|
|
hadn't won. We must be sensible about it, mustn't we?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, I guess perhaps that's right," the dentist
|
|
would answer, looking slowly about on the floor.
|
|
|
|
Just what should ultimately be done with the money was the
|
|
subject of endless discussion in the Sieppe family. The
|
|
savings bank would allow only three per cent., but Trina's
|
|
parents believed that something better could be got.
|
|
|
|
"There's Uncle Oelbermann," Trina had suggested, remembering
|
|
the rich relative who had the wholesale toy store in the
|
|
Mission.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Sieppe struck his hand to his forehead. "Ah, an idea,"
|
|
he cried. In the end an agreement was made. The money was
|
|
invested in Mr. Oelbermann's business. He gave Trina six per
|
|
cent.
|
|
|
|
Invested in this fashion, Trina's winning would bring in
|
|
twenty-five dollars a month. But, besides this, Trina had
|
|
her own little trade. She made Noah's ark animals for Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann's store. Trina's ancestors on both sides were
|
|
German-Swiss, and some long-forgotten forefather of the
|
|
sixteenth century, some worsted-leggined wood-carver of the
|
|
Tyrol, had handed down the talent of the national industry,
|
|
to reappear in this strangely distorted guise.
|
|
|
|
She made Noah's ark animals, whittling them out of a block
|
|
of soft wood with a sharp jack-knife, the only instrument
|
|
she used. Trina was very proud to explain her work to
|
|
McTeague as he had already explained his own to her.
|
|
|
|
"You see, I take a block of straight-grained pine and cut
|
|
out the shape, roughly at first, with the big blade; then I
|
|
go over it a second time with the little blade, more
|
|
carefully; then I put in the ears and tail with a drop of
|
|
glue, and paint it with a 'non-poisonous' paint--Vandyke
|
|
brown for the horses, foxes, and cows; slate gray for the
|
|
elephants and camels; burnt umber for the chickens, zebras,
|
|
and so on; then, last, a dot of Chinese white for the eyes,
|
|
and there you are, all finished. They sell for nine cents a
|
|
dozen. Only I can't make the manikins."
|
|
|
|
"The manikins?"
|
|
|
|
"The little figures, you know--Noah and his wife, and Shem,
|
|
and all the others."
|
|
|
|
It was true. Trina could not whittle them fast enough and
|
|
cheap enough to compete with the turning lathe, that could
|
|
throw off whole tribes and peoples of manikins while she was
|
|
fashioning one family. Everything else, however, she made--
|
|
the ark itself, all windows and no door; the box in which
|
|
the whole was packed; even down to pasting on the label,
|
|
which read, "Made in France." She earned from three to four
|
|
dollars a week.
|
|
|
|
The income from these three sources, McTeague's profession,
|
|
the interest of the five thousand dollars, and Trina's
|
|
whittling, made a respectable little sum taken altogether.
|
|
Trina declared they could even lay by something, adding to
|
|
the five thousand dollars little by little.
|
|
|
|
It soon became apparent that Trina would be an
|
|
extraordinarily good housekeeper. Economy was her strong
|
|
point. A good deal of peasant blood still ran undiluted in
|
|
her veins, and she had all the instinct of a hardy and
|
|
penurious mountain race--the instinct which saves without
|
|
any thought, without idea of consequence--saving for the
|
|
sake of saving, hoarding without knowing why. Even McTeague
|
|
did not know how closely Trina held to her new-found wealth.
|
|
|
|
But they did not always pass their luncheon hour in this
|
|
discussion of incomes and economies. As the dentist came to
|
|
know his little woman better she grew to be more and more of
|
|
a puzzle and a joy to him. She would suddenly interrupt a
|
|
grave discourse upon the rents of rooms and the cost of
|
|
light and fuel with a brusque outburst of affection that set
|
|
him all a-tremble with delight. All at once she would
|
|
set down her chocolate, and, leaning across the narrow
|
|
table, would exclaim:
|
|
|
|
"Never mind all that! Oh, Mac, do you truly, really love
|
|
me--love me BIG?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague would stammer something, gasping, and wagging his
|
|
head, beside himself for the lack of words.
|
|
|
|
"Old bear," Trina would answer, grasping him by both huge
|
|
ears and swaying his head from side to side. "Kiss me,
|
|
then. Tell me, Mac, did you think any less of me that first
|
|
time I let you kiss me there in the station? Oh, Mac, dear,
|
|
what a funny nose you've got, all full of hairs inside; and,
|
|
Mac, do you know you've got a bald spot--" she dragged his
|
|
head down towards her--"right on the top of your head."
|
|
Then she would seriously kiss the bald spot in question,
|
|
declaring:
|
|
|
|
"That'll make the hair grow."
|
|
|
|
Trina took an infinite enjoyment in playing with McTeague's
|
|
great square-cut head, rumpling his hair till it stood on
|
|
end, putting her fingers in his eyes, or stretching his ears
|
|
out straight, and watching the effect with her head on one
|
|
side. It was like a little child playing with some
|
|
gigantic, good-natured Saint Bernard.
|
|
|
|
One particular amusement they never wearied of. The two
|
|
would lean across the table towards each other, McTeague
|
|
folding his arms under his breast. Then Trina, resting on
|
|
her elbows, would part his mustache-the great blond mustache
|
|
of a viking--with her two hands, pushing it up from his
|
|
lips, causing his face to assume the appearance of a Greek
|
|
mask. She would curl it around either forefinger, drawing
|
|
it to a fine end. Then all at once McTeague would make a
|
|
fearful snorting noise through his nose. Invariably--though
|
|
she was expecting this, though it was part of the game--
|
|
Trina would jump with a stifled shriek. McTeague would
|
|
bellow with laughter till his eyes watered. Then they would
|
|
recommence upon the instant, Trina protesting with a nervous
|
|
tremulousness:
|
|
|
|
"Now--now--now, Mac, DON'T; you SCARE me so."
|
|
|
|
But these delicious tete-a-tetes with Trina were offset
|
|
by a certain coolness that Marcus Schouler began to
|
|
affect towards the dentist. At first McTeague was unaware
|
|
of it; but by this time even his slow wits began to perceive
|
|
that his best friend--his "pal"--was not the same to him as
|
|
formerly. They continued to meet at lunch nearly every day
|
|
but Friday at the car conductors' coffee-joint. But Marcus
|
|
was sulky; there could be no doubt about that. He avoided
|
|
talking to McTeague, read the paper continually, answering
|
|
the dentist's timid efforts at conversation in gruff
|
|
monosyllables. Sometimes, even, he turned sideways to the
|
|
table and talked at great length to Heise the harness-maker,
|
|
whose table was next to theirs. They took no more long
|
|
walks together when Marcus went out to exercise the dogs.
|
|
Nor did Marcus ever again recur to his generosity in
|
|
renouncing Trina.
|
|
|
|
One Tuesday, as McTeague took his place at the table in the
|
|
coffee-joint, he found Marcus already there.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, Mark," said the dentist, "you here already?"
|
|
|
|
"Hello," returned the other, indifferently, helping himself
|
|
to tomato catsup. There was a silence. After a long while
|
|
Marcus suddenly looked up.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mac," he exclaimed, "when you going to pay me that
|
|
money you owe me?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague was astonished.
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What? I don't--do I owe you any money, Mark?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, you owe me four bits," returned Marcus, doggedly. "I
|
|
paid for you and Trina that day at the picnic, and you never
|
|
gave it back."
|
|
|
|
"Oh--oh!" answered McTeague, in distress. "That's so,
|
|
that's so. I--you ought to have told me before. Here's
|
|
your money, and I'm obliged to you."
|
|
|
|
"It ain't much," observed Marcus, sullenly. "But I need all
|
|
I can get now-a-days."
|
|
|
|
"Are you--are you broke?" inquired McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"And I ain't saying anything about your sleeping at the
|
|
hospital that night, either," muttered Marcus, as he
|
|
pocketed the coin.
|
|
|
|
"Well--well--do you mean--should I have paid for that?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, you'd 'a' had to sleep SOMEWHERES, wouldn't
|
|
you?" flashed out Marcus. "You 'a' had to pay half a dollar
|
|
for a bed at the flat."
|
|
|
|
"All right, all right," cried the dentist, hastily, feeling
|
|
in his pockets. "I don't want you should be out anything on
|
|
my account, old man. Here, will four bits do?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't WANT your damn money," shouted Marcus in a
|
|
sudden rage, throwing back the coin. "I ain't no beggar."
|
|
|
|
McTeague was miserable. How had he offended his pal?
|
|
|
|
"Well, I want you should take it, Mark," he said, pushing it
|
|
towards him.
|
|
|
|
"I tell you I won't touch your money," exclaimed the other
|
|
through his clenched teeth, white with passion. "I've been
|
|
played for a sucker long enough."
|
|
|
|
"What's the matter with you lately, Mark?" remonstrated
|
|
McTeague. "You've got a grouch about something. Is there
|
|
anything I've done?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, that's all right, that's all right," returned Marcus
|
|
as he rose from the table. "That's all right. I've been
|
|
played for a sucker long enough, that's all. I've been
|
|
played for a sucker long enough." He went away with a
|
|
parting malevolent glance.
|
|
|
|
At the corner of Polk Street, between the flat and the car
|
|
conductors' coffee-joint, was Frenna's. It was a corner
|
|
grocery; advertisements for cheap butter and eggs, painted
|
|
in green marking-ink upon wrapping paper, stood about on the
|
|
sidewalk outside. The doorway was decorated with a huge
|
|
Milwaukee beer sign. Back of the store proper was a bar
|
|
where white sand covered the floor. A few tables and chairs
|
|
were scattered here and there. The walls were hung with
|
|
gorgeously-colored tobacco advertisements and colored
|
|
lithographs of trotting horses. On the wall behind the bar
|
|
was a model of a full-rigged ship enclosed in a bottle.
|
|
|
|
It was at this place that the dentist used to leave his
|
|
pitcher to be filled on Sunday afternoons. Since his
|
|
engagement to Trina he had discontinued this habit.
|
|
However, he still dropped into Frenna's one or two
|
|
nights in the week. He spent a pleasant hour there, smoking
|
|
his huge porcelain pipe and drinking his beer. He never
|
|
joined any of the groups of piquet players around the
|
|
tables. In fact, he hardly spoke to anyone but the
|
|
bartender and Marcus.
|
|
|
|
For Frenna's was one of Marcus Schouler's haunts; a great
|
|
deal of his time was spent there. He involved himself in
|
|
fearful political and social discussions with Heise the
|
|
harness-maker, and with one or two old German, habitues
|
|
of the place. These discussions Marcus carried on, as was
|
|
his custom, at the top of his voice, gesticulating fiercely,
|
|
banging the table with his fists, brandishing the plates and
|
|
glasses, exciting himself with his own clamor.
|
|
|
|
On a certain Saturday evening, a few days after the scene at
|
|
the coffee-joint, the dentist bethought him to spend a quiet
|
|
evening at Frenna's. He had not been there for some time,
|
|
and, besides that, it occurred to him that the day was his
|
|
birthday. He would permit himself an extra pipe and a few
|
|
glasses of beer. When McTeague entered Frenna's back room by
|
|
the street door, he found Marcus and Heise already installed
|
|
at one of the tables. Two or three of the old Germans sat
|
|
opposite them, gulping their beer from time to time. Heise
|
|
was smoking a cigar, but Marcus had before him his fourth
|
|
whiskey cocktail. At the moment of McTeague's entrance
|
|
Marcus had the floor.
|
|
|
|
"It can't be proven," he was yelling. "I defy any sane
|
|
politician whose eyes are not blinded by party prejudices,
|
|
whose opinions are not warped by a personal bias, to
|
|
substantiate such a statement. Look at your facts, look at
|
|
your figures. I am a free American citizen, ain't I? I pay
|
|
my taxes to support a good government, don't I? It's a
|
|
contract between me and the government, ain't it? Well,
|
|
then, by damn! if the authorities do not or will not afford
|
|
me protection for life, liberty, and the pursuit of
|
|
happiness, then my obligations are at an end; I withhold my
|
|
taxes. I do--I do--I say I do. What?" He glared about
|
|
him, seeking opposition.
|
|
|
|
"That's nonsense," observed Heise, quietly. "Try it
|
|
once; you'll get jugged." But this observation of the
|
|
harness-maker's roused Marcus to the last pitch of frenzy.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, ah, yes!" he shouted, rising to his feet, shaking his
|
|
finger in the other's face. "Yes, I'd go to jail; but
|
|
because I--I am crushed by a tyranny, does that make the
|
|
tyranny right? Does might make right?"
|
|
|
|
"You must make less noise in here, Mister Schouler," said
|
|
Frenna, from behind the bar.
|
|
|
|
"Well, it makes me mad," answered Marcus, subsiding into a
|
|
growl and resuming his chair. "Hullo, Mac."
|
|
|
|
"Hullo, Mark."
|
|
|
|
But McTeague's presence made Marcus uneasy, rousing in him
|
|
at once a sense of wrong. He twisted to and fro in his
|
|
chair, shrugging first one shoulder and then another.
|
|
Quarrelsome at all times, the heat of the previous
|
|
discussion had awakened within him all his natural
|
|
combativeness. Besides this, he was drinking his fourth
|
|
cocktail.
|
|
|
|
McTeague began filling his big porcelain pipe. He lit it,
|
|
blew a great cloud of smoke into the room, and settled
|
|
himself comfortably in his chair. The smoke of his cheap
|
|
tobacco drifted into the faces of the group at the adjoining
|
|
table, and Marcus strangled and coughed. Instantly his eyes
|
|
flamed.
|
|
|
|
"Say, for God's sake," he vociferated, "choke off on that
|
|
pipe! If you've got to smoke rope like that, smoke it in a
|
|
crowd of muckers; don't come here amongst gentlemen."
|
|
|
|
"Shut up, Schouler!" observed Heise in a low voice.
|
|
|
|
McTeague was stunned by the suddenness of the attack. He
|
|
took his pipe from his mouth, and stared blankly at Marcus;
|
|
his lips moved, but he said no word. Marcus turned his back
|
|
on him, and the dentist resumed his pipe.
|
|
|
|
But Marcus was far from being appeased. McTeague could not
|
|
hear the talk that followed between him and the harness-
|
|
maker, but it seemed to him that Marcus was telling Heise of
|
|
some injury, some grievance, and that the latter was trying
|
|
to pacify him. All at once their talk grew louder. Heise
|
|
laid a retaining hand upon his companion's coat sleeve,
|
|
but Marcus swung himself around in his chair, and, fixing
|
|
his eyes on McTeague, cried as if in answer to some
|
|
protestation on the part of Heise:
|
|
|
|
"All I know is that I've been soldiered out of five thousand
|
|
dollars."
|
|
|
|
McTeague gaped at him, bewildered. He removed his pipe from
|
|
his mouth a second time, and stared at Marcus with eyes full
|
|
of trouble and perplexity.
|
|
|
|
"If I had my rights," cried Marcus, bitterly, "I'd have part
|
|
of that money. It's my due--it's only justice." The
|
|
dentist still kept silence.
|
|
|
|
"If it hadn't been for me," Marcus continued, addressing
|
|
himself directly to McTeague, "you wouldn't have had a cent
|
|
of it--no, not a cent. Where's my share, I'd like to know?
|
|
Where do I come in? No, I ain't in it any more. I've been
|
|
played for a sucker, an' now that you've got all you can out
|
|
of me, now that you've done me out of my girl and out of my
|
|
money, you give me the go-by. Why, where would you have
|
|
been TO-DAY if it hadn't been for me?" Marcus shouted
|
|
in a sudden exasperation, "You'd a been plugging teeth at
|
|
two bits an hour. Ain't you got any gratitude? Ain't you
|
|
got any sense of decency?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, hold up, Schouler," grumbled Heise. "You don't want to
|
|
get into a row."
|
|
|
|
"No, I don't, Heise," returned Marcus, with a plaintive,
|
|
aggrieved air. "But it's too much sometimes when you think
|
|
of it. He stole away my girl's affections, and now that
|
|
he's rich and prosperous, and has got five thousand dollars
|
|
that I might have had, he gives me the go-by; he's played me
|
|
for a sucker. Look here," he cried, turning again to
|
|
McTeague, "do I get any of that money?"
|
|
|
|
"It ain't mine to give," answered McTeague. "You're drunk,
|
|
that's what you are."
|
|
|
|
"Do I get any of that money?" cried Marcus, persistently.
|
|
|
|
The dentist shook his head. "No, you don't get any of it."
|
|
|
|
"Now--NOW," clamored the other, turning to the harness-
|
|
maker, as though this explained everything. "Look at that,
|
|
look at that. Well, I've done with you from now on."
|
|
Marcus had risen to his feet by this time and made as if to
|
|
leave, but at every instant he came back, shouting his
|
|
phrases into McTeague's face, moving off again as he spoke
|
|
the last words, in order to give them better effect.
|
|
|
|
"This settles it right here. I've done with you. Don't you
|
|
ever dare speak to me again"--his voice was shaking with
|
|
fury--"and don't you sit at my table in the restaurant
|
|
again. I'm sorry I ever lowered myself to keep company with
|
|
such dirt. Ah, one-horse dentist! Ah, ten-cent zinc-
|
|
plugger--hoodlum--MUCKER! Get your damn smoke outa my
|
|
face."
|
|
|
|
Then matters reached a sudden climax. In his agitation the
|
|
dentist had been pulling hard on his pipe, and as Marcus for
|
|
the last time thrust his face close to his own, McTeague, in
|
|
opening his lips to reply, blew a stifling, acrid cloud
|
|
directly in Marcus Schouler's eyes. Marcus knocked the pipe
|
|
from his fingers with a sudden flash of his hand; it spun
|
|
across the room and broke into a dozen fragments in a far
|
|
corner.
|
|
|
|
McTeague rose to his feet, his eyes wide. But as yet he was
|
|
not angry, only surprised, taken all aback by the suddenness
|
|
of Marcus Schouler's outbreak as well as by its
|
|
unreasonableness. Why had Marcus broken his pipe? What did
|
|
it all mean, anyway? As he rose the dentist made a vague
|
|
motion with his right hand. Did Marcus misinterpret it as a
|
|
gesture of menace? He sprang back as though avoiding a
|
|
blow. All at once there was a cry. Marcus had made a quick,
|
|
peculiar motion, swinging his arm upward with a wide and
|
|
sweeping gesture; his jack-knife lay open in his palm; it
|
|
shot forward as he flung it, glinted sharply by McTeague's
|
|
head, and struck quivering into the wall behind.
|
|
|
|
A sudden chill ran through the room; the others stood
|
|
transfixed, as at the swift passage of some cold and deadly
|
|
wind. Death had stooped there for an instant, had stooped
|
|
and past, leaving a trail of terror and confusion. Then the
|
|
door leading to the street slammed; Marcus had disappeared.
|
|
|
|
Thereon a great babel of exclamation arose. The tension
|
|
of that all but fatal instant snapped, and speech
|
|
became once more possible.
|
|
|
|
"He would have knifed you."
|
|
|
|
"Narrow escape."
|
|
|
|
"What kind of a man do you call THAT?"
|
|
|
|
"'Tain't his fault he ain't a murderer."
|
|
|
|
"I'd have him up for it."
|
|
|
|
"And they two have been the greatest kind of friends."
|
|
|
|
"He didn't touch you, did he?"
|
|
|
|
"No--no--no."
|
|
|
|
"What a--what a devil! What treachery! A regular greaser
|
|
trick!"
|
|
|
|
"Look out he don't stab you in the back. If that's the kind
|
|
of man he is, you never can tell."
|
|
|
|
Frenna drew the knife from the wall.
|
|
|
|
"Guess I'll keep this toad-stabber," he observed. "That
|
|
fellow won't come round for it in a hurry; goodsized blade,
|
|
too." The group examined it with intense interest.
|
|
|
|
"Big enough to let the life out of any man," observed Heise.
|
|
|
|
"What--what--what did he do it for?" stammered McTeague. "I
|
|
got no quarrel with him."
|
|
|
|
He was puzzled and harassed by the strangeness of it all.
|
|
Marcus would have killed him; had thrown his knife at him in
|
|
the true, uncanny "greaser" style. It was inexplicable.
|
|
McTeague sat down again, looking stupidly about on the
|
|
floor. In a corner of the room his eye encountered his
|
|
broken pipe, a dozen little fragments of painted porcelain
|
|
and the stem of cherry wood and amber.
|
|
|
|
At that sight his tardy wrath, ever lagging behind the
|
|
original affront, suddenly blazed up. Instantly his huge
|
|
jaws clicked together.
|
|
|
|
"He can't make small of ME," he exclaimed, suddenly.
|
|
"I'll show Marcus Schouler--I'll show him--I'll----"
|
|
|
|
He got up and clapped on his hat.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Doctor," remonstrated Heise, standing between him and
|
|
the door, "don't go make a fool of yourself."
|
|
|
|
"Let 'um alone," joined in Frenna, catching the dentist
|
|
by the arm; "he's full, anyhow."
|
|
|
|
"He broke my pipe," answered McTeague.
|
|
|
|
It was this that had roused him. The thrown knife, the
|
|
attempt on his life, was beyond his solution; but the
|
|
breaking of his pipe he understood clearly enough.
|
|
|
|
"I'll show him," he exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
As though they had been little children, McTeague set Frenna
|
|
and the harness-maker aside, and strode out at the door like
|
|
a raging elephant. Heise stood rubbing his shoulder.
|
|
|
|
"Might as well try to stop a locomotive," he muttered. "The
|
|
man's made of iron."
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, McTeague went storming up the street toward the
|
|
flat, wagging his head and grumbling to himself. Ah, Marcus
|
|
would break his pipe, would he? Ah, he was a zinc-plugger,
|
|
was he? He'd show Marcus Schouler. No one should make small
|
|
of him. He tramped up the stairs to Marcus's room. The
|
|
door was locked. The dentist put one enormous hand on the
|
|
knob and pushed the door in, snapping the wood-work, tearing
|
|
off the lock. Nobody--the room was dark and empty. Never
|
|
mind, Marcus would have to come home some time that night.
|
|
McTeague would go down and wait for him in his "Parlors."
|
|
He was bound to hear him as he came up the stairs.
|
|
|
|
As McTeague reached his room he stumbled over, in the
|
|
darkness, a big packing-box that stood in the hallway just
|
|
outside his door. Puzzled, he stepped over it, and lighting
|
|
the gas in his room, dragged it inside and examined it.
|
|
|
|
It was addressed to him. What could it mean? He was
|
|
expecting nothing. Never since he had first furnished his
|
|
room had packing-cases been left for him in this fashion.
|
|
No mistake was possible. There were his name and address
|
|
unmistakably. "Dr. McTeague, dentist--Polk Street, San
|
|
Francisco, Cal.," and the red Wells Fargo tag.
|
|
|
|
Seized with the joyful curiosity of an overgrown boy, he
|
|
pried off the boards with the corner of his fireshovel. The
|
|
case was stuffed full of excelsior. On the top lay an
|
|
envelope addressed to him in Trina's handwriting. He
|
|
opened it and read, "For my dear Mac's birthday, from
|
|
Trina;" and below, in a kind of post-script, "The man will
|
|
be round to-morrow to put it in place." McTeague tore away
|
|
the excelsior. Suddenly he uttered an exclamation.
|
|
|
|
It was the Tooth--the famous golden molar with its huge
|
|
prongs--his sign, his ambition, the one unrealized dream of
|
|
his life; and it was French gilt, too, not the cheap German
|
|
gilt that was no good. Ah, what a dear little woman was
|
|
this Trina, to keep so quiet, to remember his birthday!
|
|
|
|
"Ain't she--ain't she just a--just a JEWEL," exclaimed
|
|
McTeague under his breath, "a JEWEL--yes, just a
|
|
JEWEL; that's the word."
|
|
|
|
Very carefully he removed the rest of the excelsior, and
|
|
lifting the ponderous Tooth from its box, set it upon the
|
|
marble-top centre table. How immense it looked in that
|
|
little room! The thing was tremendous, overpowering--the
|
|
tooth of a gigantic fossil, golden and dazzling. Beside it
|
|
everything seemed dwarfed. Even McTeague himself, big boned
|
|
and enormous as he was, shrank and dwindled in the presence
|
|
of the monster. As for an instant he bore it in his hands,
|
|
it was like a puny Gulliver struggling with the molar of
|
|
some vast Brobdingnag.
|
|
|
|
The dentist circled about that golden wonder, gasping with
|
|
delight and stupefaction, touching it gingerly with his
|
|
hands as if it were something sacred. At every moment his
|
|
thought returned to Trina. No, never was there such a
|
|
little woman as his--the very thing he wanted--how had she
|
|
remembered? And the money, where had that come from? No
|
|
one knew better than he how expensive were these signs; not
|
|
another dentist on Polk Street could afford one. Where,
|
|
then, had Trina found the money? It came out of her five
|
|
thousand dollars, no doubt.
|
|
|
|
But what a wonderful, beautiful tooth it was, to be sure,
|
|
bright as a mirror, shining there in its coat of French
|
|
gilt, as if with a light of its own! No danger of that
|
|
tooth turning black with the weather, as did the cheap
|
|
German gilt impostures. What would that other dentist, that
|
|
poser, that rider of bicycles, that courser of
|
|
greyhounds, say when he should see this marvellous molar run
|
|
out from McTeague's bay window like a flag of defiance? No
|
|
doubt he would suffer veritable convulsions of envy; would
|
|
be positively sick with jealousy. If McTeague could only
|
|
see his face at the moment!
|
|
|
|
For a whole hour the dentist sat there in his little
|
|
"Parlor," gazing ecstatically at his treasure, dazzled,
|
|
supremely content. The whole room took on a different
|
|
aspect because of it. The stone pug dog before the little
|
|
stove reflected it in his protruding eyes; the canary woke
|
|
and chittered feebly at this new gilt, so much brighter than
|
|
the bars of its little prison. Lorenzo de' Medici, in the
|
|
steel engraving, sitting in the heart of his court, seemed
|
|
to ogle the thing out of the corner of one eye, while the
|
|
brilliant colors of the unused rifle manufacturer's calendar
|
|
seemed to fade and pale in the brilliance of this greater
|
|
glory.
|
|
|
|
At length, long after midnight, the dentist started to go to
|
|
bed, undressing himself with his eyes still fixed on the
|
|
great tooth. All at once he heard Marcus Schouler's foot on
|
|
the stairs; he started up with his fists clenched, but
|
|
immediately dropped back upon the bed-lounge with a gesture
|
|
of indifference.
|
|
|
|
He was in no truculent state of mind now. He could not
|
|
reinstate himself in that mood of wrath wherein he had left
|
|
the corner grocery. The tooth had changed all that. What
|
|
was Marcus Schouler's hatred to him, who had Trina's
|
|
affection? What did he care about a broken pipe now that he
|
|
had the tooth? Let him go. As Frenna said, he was not worth
|
|
it. He heard Marcus come out into the hall, shouting
|
|
aggrievedly to anyone within sound of his voice:
|
|
|
|
"An' now he breaks into my room--into my room, by damn! How
|
|
do I know how many things he's stolen? It's come to stealing
|
|
from me, now, has it?" He went into his room, banging his
|
|
splintered door.
|
|
|
|
McTeague looked upward at the ceiling, in the direction of
|
|
the voice, muttering:
|
|
|
|
"Ah, go to bed, you."
|
|
|
|
He went to bed himself, turning out the gas, but leaving the
|
|
window-curtains up so that he could see the tooth the
|
|
last thing before he went to sleep and the first thing as he
|
|
arose in the morning.
|
|
|
|
But he was restless during the night. Every now and then he
|
|
was awakened by noises to which he had long since become
|
|
accustomed. Now it was the cackling of the geese in the
|
|
deserted market across the street; now it was the stoppage
|
|
of the cable, the sudden silence coming almost like a shock;
|
|
and now it was the infuriated barking of the dogs in the
|
|
back yard--Alec, the Irish setter, and the collie that
|
|
belonged to the branch post-office raging at each other
|
|
through the fence, snarling their endless hatred into each
|
|
other's faces. As often as he woke, McTeague turned and
|
|
looked for the tooth, with a sudden suspicion that he had
|
|
only that moment dreamed the whole business. But he always
|
|
found it--Trina's gift, his birthday from his little woman--
|
|
a huge, vague bulk, looming there through the half darkness
|
|
in the centre of the room, shining dimly out as if with some
|
|
mysterious light of its own.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 9
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trina and McTeague were married on the first day of June, in
|
|
the photographer's rooms that the dentist had rented. All
|
|
through May the Sieppe household had been turned upside
|
|
down. The little box of a house vibrated with excitement
|
|
and confusion, for not only were the preparations for
|
|
Trina's marriage to be made, but also the preliminaries were
|
|
to be arranged for the hegira of the entire Sieppe family.
|
|
|
|
They were to move to the southern part of the State the
|
|
day after Trina's marriage, Mr. Sieppe having bought a third
|
|
interest in an upholstering business in the suburbs of Los
|
|
Angeles. It was possible that Marcus Schouler would go with
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
Not Stanley penetrating for the first time into the Dark
|
|
Continent, not Napoleon leading his army across the Alps,
|
|
was more weighted with responsibility, more burdened with
|
|
care, more overcome with the sense of the importance of his
|
|
undertaking, than was Mr. Sieppe during this period of
|
|
preparation. From dawn to dark, from dark to early dawn, he
|
|
toiled and planned and fretted, organizing and reorganizing,
|
|
projecting and devising. The trunks were lettered, A, B, and
|
|
C, the packages and smaller bundles numbered. Each member
|
|
of the family had his especial duty to perform, his
|
|
particular bundles to oversee. Not a detail was forgotten--
|
|
fares, prices, and tips were calculated to two places of
|
|
decimals. Even the amount of food that it would be
|
|
necessary to carry for the black greyhound was determined.
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe was to look after the lunch, "der gomisariat."
|
|
Mr. Sieppe would assume charge of the checks, the money, the
|
|
tickets, and, of course, general supervision. The twins
|
|
would be under the command of Owgooste, who, in turn, would
|
|
report for orders to his father.
|
|
|
|
Day in and day out these minutiae were rehearsed. The
|
|
children were drilled in their parts with a military
|
|
exactitude; obedience and punctuality became cardinal
|
|
virtues. The vast importance of the undertaking was
|
|
insisted upon with scrupulous iteration. It was a
|
|
manoeuvre, an army changing its base of operations, a
|
|
veritable tribal migration.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, Trina's little room was the centre around
|
|
which revolved another and different order of things. The
|
|
dressmaker came and went, congratulatory visitors invaded
|
|
the little front parlor, the chatter of unfamiliar voices
|
|
resounded from the front steps; bonnet-boxes and yards of
|
|
dress-goods littered the beds and chairs; wrapping paper,
|
|
tissue paper, and bits of string strewed the floor; a pair
|
|
of white satin slippers stood on a corner of the toilet
|
|
table; lengths of white veiling, like a snow-flurry,
|
|
buried the little work-table; and a mislaid box of
|
|
artificial orange blossoms was finally discovered behind the
|
|
bureau.
|
|
|
|
The two systems of operation often clashed and tangled. Mrs.
|
|
Sieppe was found by her harassed husband helping Trina with
|
|
the waist of her gown when she should have been slicing cold
|
|
chicken in the kitchen. Mr. Sieppe packed his frock coat,
|
|
which he would have to wear at the wedding, at the very
|
|
bottom of "Trunk C." The minister, who called to offer his
|
|
congratulations and to make arrangements, was mistaken for
|
|
the expressman.
|
|
|
|
McTeague came and went furtively, dizzied and made uneasy by
|
|
all this bustle. He got in the way; he trod upon and tore
|
|
breadths of silk; he tried to help carry the packing-boxes,
|
|
and broke the hall gas fixture; he came in upon Trina and
|
|
the dress-maker at an ill-timed moment, and retiring
|
|
precipitately, overturned the piles of pictures stacked in
|
|
the hall.
|
|
|
|
There was an incessant going and coming at every moment of
|
|
the day, a great calling up and down stairs, a shouting from
|
|
room to room, an opening and shutting of doors, and an
|
|
intermittent sound of hammering from the laundry, where Mr.
|
|
Sieppe in his shirt sleeves labored among the packing-boxes.
|
|
The twins clattered about on the carpetless floors of the
|
|
denuded rooms. Owgooste was smacked from hour to hour, and
|
|
wept upon the front stairs; the dressmaker called over the
|
|
banisters for a hot flatiron; expressmen tramped up and down
|
|
the stairway. Mrs. Sieppe stopped in the preparation of the
|
|
lunches to call "Hoop, Hoop" to the greyhound, throwing
|
|
lumps of coal. The dog-wheel creaked, the front door bell
|
|
rang, delivery wagons rumbled away, windows rattled--the
|
|
little house was in a positive uproar.
|
|
|
|
Almost every day of the week now Trina was obliged to run
|
|
over to town and meet McTeague. No more philandering over
|
|
their lunch now-a-days. It was business now. They haunted
|
|
the house-furnishing floors of the great department houses,
|
|
inspecting and pricing ranges, hardware, china, and the
|
|
like. They rented the photographer's rooms furnished, and
|
|
fortunately only the kitchen and dining-room utensils had to
|
|
be bought.
|
|
|
|
The money for this as well as for her trousseau came
|
|
out of Trina's five thousand dollars. For it had been
|
|
finally decided that two hundred dollars of this amount
|
|
should be devoted to the establishment of the new household.
|
|
Now that Trina had made her great winning, Mr. Sieppe no
|
|
longer saw the necessity of dowering her further, especially
|
|
when he considered the enormous expense to which he would be
|
|
put by the voyage of his own family.
|
|
|
|
It had been a dreadful wrench for Trina to break in upon her
|
|
precious five thousand. She clung to this sum with a
|
|
tenacity that was surprising; it had become for her a thing
|
|
miraculous, a god-from-the-machine, suddenly descending upon
|
|
the stage of her humble little life; she regarded it as
|
|
something almost sacred and inviolable. Never, never should
|
|
a penny of it be spent. Before she could be induced to part
|
|
with two hundred dollars of it, more than one scene had been
|
|
enacted between her and her parents.
|
|
|
|
Did Trina pay for the golden tooth out of this two hundred?
|
|
Later on, the dentist often asked her about it, but Trina
|
|
invariably laughed in his face, declaring that it was her
|
|
secret. McTeague never found out.
|
|
|
|
One day during this period McTeague told Trina about his
|
|
affair with Marcus. Instantly she was aroused.
|
|
|
|
"He threw his knife at you! The coward! He wouldn't of dared
|
|
stand up to you like a man. Oh, Mac, suppose he HAD hit
|
|
you?"
|
|
|
|
"Came within an inch of my head," put in McTeague, proudly.
|
|
|
|
"Think of it!" she gasped; "and he wanted part of my money.
|
|
Well, I do like his cheek; part of my five thousand! Why,
|
|
it's mine, every single penny of it. Marcus hasn't the least
|
|
bit of right to it. It's mine, mine.--I mean, it's ours,
|
|
Mac, dear."
|
|
|
|
The elder Sieppes, however, made excuses for Marcus. He had
|
|
probably been drinking a good deal and didn't know what he
|
|
was about. He had a dreadful temper, anyhow. Maybe he only
|
|
wanted to scare McTeague.
|
|
|
|
The week before the marriage the two men were reconciled.
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe brought them together in the front parlor
|
|
of the B Street house.
|
|
|
|
"Now, you two fellers, don't be dot foolish. Schake hands
|
|
und maig ut oop, soh."
|
|
|
|
Marcus muttered an apology. McTeague, miserably
|
|
embarrassed, rolled his eyes about the room, murmuring,
|
|
"That's all right--that's all right--that's all right."
|
|
|
|
However, when it was proposed that Marcus should be
|
|
McTeague's best man, he flashed out again with renewed
|
|
violence. Ah, no! ah, NO! He'd make up with the
|
|
dentist now that he was going away, but he'd be damned--yes,
|
|
he would--before he'd be his best man. That was rubbing it
|
|
in. Let him get Old Grannis.
|
|
|
|
"I'm friends with um all right," vociferated Marcus, "but
|
|
I'll not stand up with um. I'll not be ANYBODY'S best
|
|
man, I won't."
|
|
|
|
The wedding was to be very quiet; Trina preferred it that
|
|
way. McTeague would invite only Miss Baker and Heise the
|
|
harness-maker. The Sieppes sent cards to Selina, who was
|
|
counted on to furnish the music; to Marcus, of course; and
|
|
to Uncle Oelbermann.
|
|
|
|
At last the great day, the first of June, arrived. The
|
|
Sieppes had packed their last box and had strapped the last
|
|
trunk. Trina's two trunks had already been sent to her new
|
|
home--the remodelled photographer's rooms. The B Street
|
|
house was deserted; the whole family came over to the city
|
|
on the last day of May and stopped over night at one of the
|
|
cheap downtown hotels. Trina would be married the following
|
|
evening, and immediately after the wedding supper the
|
|
Sieppes would leave for the South.
|
|
|
|
McTeague spent the day in a fever of agitation, frightened
|
|
out of his wits each time that Old Grannis left his elbow.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis was delighted beyond measure at the prospect of
|
|
acting the part of best man in the ceremony. This wedding
|
|
in which he was to figure filled his mind with vague ideas
|
|
and half-formed thoughts. He found himself continually
|
|
wondering what Miss Baker would think of it. During all
|
|
that day he was in a reflective mood.
|
|
|
|
"Marriage is a--a noble institution, is it not, Doctor?" he
|
|
observed to McTeague. "The--the foundation of society.
|
|
It is not good that man should be alone. No, no," he added,
|
|
pensively, "it is not good."
|
|
|
|
"Huh? Yes, yes," McTeague answered, his eyes in the air,
|
|
hardly hearing him. "Do you think the rooms are all right?
|
|
Let's go in and look at them again."
|
|
|
|
They went down the hall to where the new rooms were
|
|
situated, and the dentist inspected them for the twentieth
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
The rooms were three in number--first, the sitting-room,
|
|
which was also the dining-room; then the bedroom, and back
|
|
of this the tiny kitchen.
|
|
|
|
The sitting-room was particularly charming. Clean matting
|
|
covered the floor, and two or three bright colored rugs were
|
|
scattered here and there. The backs of the chairs were hung
|
|
with knitted worsted tidies, very gay. The bay window
|
|
should have been occupied by Trina's sewing machine, but
|
|
this had been moved to the other side of the room to give
|
|
place to a little black walnut table with spiral legs,
|
|
before which the pair were to be married. In one corner
|
|
stood the parlor melodeon, a family possession of the
|
|
Sieppes, but given now to Trina as one of her parents'
|
|
wedding presents. Three pictures hung upon the walls. Two
|
|
were companion pieces. One of these represented a little
|
|
boy wearing huge spectacles and trying to smoke an enormous
|
|
pipe. This was called "I'm Grandpa," the title being
|
|
printed in large black letters; the companion picture was
|
|
entitled "I'm Grandma," a little girl in cap and "specs,"
|
|
wearing mitts, and knitting. These pictures were hung on
|
|
either side of the mantelpiece. The other picture was quite
|
|
an affair, very large and striking. It was a colored
|
|
lithograph of two little golden-haired girls in their night-
|
|
gowns. They were kneeling down and saying their prayers;
|
|
their eyes--very large and very blue--rolled upward. This
|
|
picture had for name, "Faith," and was bordered with a red
|
|
plush mat and a frame of imitation beaten brass.
|
|
|
|
A door hung with chenille portieres--a bargain at two
|
|
dollars and a half--admitted one to the bedroom. The
|
|
bedroom could boast a carpet, three-ply ingrain, the design
|
|
being bunches of red and green flowers in yellow
|
|
baskets on a white ground. The wall-paper was admirable--
|
|
hundreds and hundreds of tiny Japanese mandarins, all
|
|
identically alike, helping hundreds of almond-eyed ladies
|
|
into hundreds of impossible junks, while hundreds of bamboo
|
|
palms overshadowed the pair, and hundreds of long-legged
|
|
storks trailed contemptuously away from the scene. This room
|
|
was prolific in pictures. Most of them were framed colored
|
|
prints from Christmas editions of the London "Graphic" and
|
|
"Illustrated News," the subject of each picture inevitably
|
|
involving very alert fox terriers and very pretty moon-faced
|
|
little girls.
|
|
|
|
Back of the bedroom was the kitchen, a creation of Trina's,
|
|
a dream of a kitchen, with its range, its porcelain-lined
|
|
sink, its copper boiler, and its overpowering array of
|
|
flashing tinware. Everything was new; everything was
|
|
complete.
|
|
|
|
Maria Macapa and a waiter from one of the restaurants in the
|
|
street were to prepare the wedding supper here. Maria had
|
|
already put in an appearance. The fire was crackling in the
|
|
new stove, that smoked badly; a smell of cooking was in the
|
|
air. She drove McTeague and Old Grannis from the room with
|
|
great gestures of her bare arms.
|
|
|
|
This kitchen was the only one of the three rooms they had
|
|
been obliged to furnish throughout. Most of the sitting-
|
|
room and bedroom furniture went with the suite; a few pieces
|
|
they had bought; the remainder Trina had brought over from
|
|
the B Street house.
|
|
|
|
The presents had been set out on the extension table in the
|
|
sitting-room. Besides the parlor melodeon, Trina's parents
|
|
had given her an ice-water set, and a carving knife and fork
|
|
with elk-horn handles. Selina had painted a view of the
|
|
Golden Gate upon a polished slice of redwood that answered
|
|
the purposes of a paper weight. Marcus Schouler--after
|
|
impressing upon Trina that his gift was to HER, and not
|
|
to McTeague--had sent a chatelaine watch of German silver;
|
|
Uncle Oelbermann's present, however, had been awaited with a
|
|
good deal of curiosity. What would he send? He was very
|
|
rich; in a sense Trina was his protege. A couple of
|
|
days before that upon which the wedding was to take
|
|
place, two boxes arrived with his card. Trina and
|
|
McTeague, assisted by Old Grannis, had opened them. The
|
|
first was a box of all sorts of toys.
|
|
|
|
"But what--what--I don't make it out," McTeague had
|
|
exclaimed. "Why should he send us toys? We have no need of
|
|
toys." Scarlet to her hair, Trina dropped into a chair and
|
|
laughed till she cried behind her handkerchief.
|
|
|
|
"We've no use of toys," muttered McTeague, looking at her in
|
|
perplexity. Old Grannis smiled discreetly, raising a
|
|
tremulous hand to his chin.
|
|
|
|
The other box was heavy, bound with withes at the edges, the
|
|
letters and stamps burnt in.
|
|
|
|
"I think--I really think it's champagne," said Old Grannis
|
|
in a whisper. So it was. A full case of Monopole. What a
|
|
wonder! None of them had seen the like before. Ah, this
|
|
Uncle Oelbermann! That's what it was to be rich. Not one
|
|
of the other presents produced so deep an impression as
|
|
this.
|
|
|
|
After Old Grannis and the dentist had gone through the
|
|
rooms, giving a last look around to see that everything was
|
|
ready, they returned to McTeague's "Parlors." At the door
|
|
Old Grannis excused himself.
|
|
|
|
At four o'clock McTeague began to dress, shaving himself
|
|
first before the hand-glass that was hung against the
|
|
woodwork of the bay window. While he shaved he sang with
|
|
strange inappropriateness:
|
|
|
|
|
|
"No one to love, none to Caress,
|
|
Left all alone in this world's wilderness."
|
|
|
|
|
|
But as he stood before the mirror, intent upon his shaving,
|
|
there came a roll of wheels over the cobbles in front of the
|
|
house. He rushed to the window. Trina had arrived with her
|
|
father and mother. He saw her get out, and as she glanced
|
|
upward at his window, their eyes met.
|
|
|
|
Ah, there she was. There she was, his little woman, looking
|
|
up at him, her adorable little chin thrust upward with that
|
|
familiar movement of innocence and confidence. The
|
|
dentist saw again, as if for the first time, her small, pale
|
|
face looking out from beneath her royal tiara of black hair;
|
|
he saw again her long, narrow blue eyes; her lips, nose, and
|
|
tiny ears, pale and bloodless, and suggestive of anaemia, as
|
|
if all the vitality that should have lent them color had
|
|
been sucked up into the strands and coils of that wonderful
|
|
hair.
|
|
|
|
As their eyes met they waved their hands gayly to each
|
|
other; then McTeague heard Trina and her mother come up the
|
|
stairs and go into the bedroom of the photographer's suite,
|
|
where Trina was to dress.
|
|
|
|
No, no; surely there could be no longer any hesitation. He
|
|
knew that he loved her. What was the matter with him, that
|
|
he should have doubted it for an instant? The great
|
|
difficulty was that she was too good, too adorable, too
|
|
sweet, too delicate for him, who was so huge, so clumsy, so
|
|
brutal.
|
|
|
|
There was a knock at the door. It was Old Grannis. He was
|
|
dressed in his one black suit of broadcloth, much wrinkled;
|
|
his hair was carefully brushed over his bald forehead.
|
|
|
|
"Miss Trina has come," he announced, "and the minister. You
|
|
have an hour yet."
|
|
|
|
The dentist finished dressing. He wore a suit bought for
|
|
the occasion--a ready made "Prince Albert" coat too short in
|
|
the sleeves, striped "blue" trousers, and new patent leather
|
|
shoes--veritable instruments of torture. Around his collar
|
|
was a wonderful necktie that Trina had given him; it was of
|
|
salmon-pink satin; in its centre Selina had painted a knot
|
|
of blue forget-me-nots.
|
|
|
|
At length, after an interminable period of waiting, Mr.
|
|
Sieppe appeared at the door.
|
|
|
|
"Are you reatty?" he asked in a sepulchral whisper. "Gome,
|
|
den." It was like King Charles summoned to execution. Mr.
|
|
Sieppe preceded them into the hall, moving at a funereal
|
|
pace. He paused. Suddenly, in the direction of the sitting-
|
|
room, came the strains of the parlor melodeon. Mr. Sieppe
|
|
flung his arm in the air.
|
|
|
|
"Vowaarts!" he cried.
|
|
|
|
He left them at the door of the sitting-room, he
|
|
himself going into the bedroom where Trina was waiting,
|
|
entering by the hall door. He was in a tremendous state of
|
|
nervous tension, fearful lest something should go wrong. He
|
|
had employed the period of waiting in going through his part
|
|
for the fiftieth time, repeating what he had to say in a low
|
|
voice. He had even made chalk marks on the matting in the
|
|
places where he was to take positions.
|
|
|
|
The dentist and Old Grannis entered the sitting-room; the
|
|
minister stood behind the little table in the bay window,
|
|
holding a book, one finger marking the place; he was rigid,
|
|
erect, impassive. On either side of him, in a semi-circle,
|
|
stood the invited guests. A little pock-marked gentleman in
|
|
glasses, no doubt the famous Uncle Oelbermann; Miss Baker,
|
|
in her black grenadine, false curls, and coral brooch;
|
|
Marcus Schouler, his arms folded, his brows bent, grand and
|
|
gloomy; Heise the harness-maker, in yellow gloves, intently
|
|
studying the pattern of the matting; and Owgooste, in his
|
|
Fauntleroy "costume," stupefied and a little frightened,
|
|
rolling his eyes from face to face. Selina sat at the parlor
|
|
melodeon, fingering the keys, her glance wandering to the
|
|
chenille portieres. She stopped playing as McTeague and Old
|
|
Grannis entered and took their places. A profound silence
|
|
ensued. Uncle Oelbermann's shirt front could be heard
|
|
creaking as he breathed. The most solemn expression
|
|
pervaded every face.
|
|
|
|
All at once the portieres were shaken violently. It was a
|
|
signal. Selina pulled open the stops and swung into the
|
|
wedding march.
|
|
|
|
Trina entered. She was dressed in white silk, a crown of
|
|
orange blossoms was around her swarthy hair--dressed high
|
|
for the first time--her veil reached to the floor. Her face
|
|
was pink, but otherwise she was calm. She looked quietly
|
|
around the room as she crossed it, until her glance rested
|
|
on McTeague, smiling at him then very prettily and with
|
|
perfect self-possession.
|
|
|
|
She was on her father's arm. The twins, dressed exactly
|
|
alike, walked in front, each carrying an enormous bouquet of
|
|
cut flowers in a "lace-paper" holder. Mrs. Sieppe followed
|
|
in the rear. She was crying; her handkerchief was rolled
|
|
into a wad. From time to time she looked at the train
|
|
of Trina's dress through her tears. Mr. Sieppe marched his
|
|
daughter to the exact middle of the floor, wheeled at right
|
|
angles, and brought her up to the minister. He stepped back
|
|
three paces, and stood planted upon one of his chalk marks,
|
|
his face glistening with perspiration.
|
|
|
|
Then Trina and the dentist were married. The guests stood
|
|
in constrained attitudes, looking furtively out of the
|
|
corners of their eyes. Mr. Sieppe never moved a muscle;
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe cried into her handkerchief all the time. At
|
|
the melodeon Selina played "Call Me Thine Own," very softly,
|
|
the tremulo stop pulled out. She looked over her shoulder
|
|
from time to time. Between the pauses of the music one
|
|
could hear the low tones of the minister, the responses of
|
|
the participants, and the suppressed sounds of Mrs. Sieppe's
|
|
weeping. Outside the noises of the street rose to the
|
|
windows in muffled undertones, a cable car rumbled past, a
|
|
newsboy went by chanting the evening papers; from somewhere
|
|
in the building itself came a persistent noise of sawing.
|
|
|
|
Trina and McTeague knelt. The dentist's knees thudded on
|
|
the floor and he presented to view the soles of his shoes,
|
|
painfully new and unworn, the leather still yellow, the
|
|
brass nail heads still glittering. Trina sank at his side
|
|
very gracefully, setting her dress and train with a little
|
|
gesture of her free hand. The company bowed their heads,
|
|
Mr. Sieppe shutting his eyes tight. But Mrs. Sieppe took
|
|
advantage of the moment to stop crying and make furtive
|
|
gestures towards Owgooste, signing him to pull down his
|
|
coat. But Owgooste gave no heed; his eyes were starting
|
|
from their sockets, his chin had dropped upon his lace
|
|
collar, and his head turned vaguely from side to side with a
|
|
continued and maniacal motion.
|
|
|
|
All at once the ceremony was over before any one expected
|
|
it. The guests kept their positions for a moment, eyeing one
|
|
another, each fearing to make the first move, not quite
|
|
certain as to whether or not everything were finished. But
|
|
the couple faced the room, Trina throwing back her veil.
|
|
She--perhaps McTeague as well--felt that there was a certain
|
|
inadequateness about the ceremony. Was that all there was
|
|
to it? Did just those few muttered phrases make them
|
|
man and wife? It had been over in a few moments, but it had
|
|
bound them for life. Had not something been left out? Was
|
|
not the whole affair cursory, superficial? It was
|
|
disappointing.
|
|
|
|
But Trina had no time to dwell upon this. Marcus Schouler,
|
|
in the manner of a man of the world, who knew how to act in
|
|
every situation, stepped forward and, even before Mr. or
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe, took Trina's hand.
|
|
|
|
"Let me be the first to congratulate Mrs. McTeague," he
|
|
said, feeling very noble and heroic. The strain of the
|
|
previous moments was relaxed immediately, the guests crowded
|
|
around the pair, shaking hands--a babel of talk arose.
|
|
|
|
"Owgooste, WILL you pull down your goat, den?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, my dear, now you're married and happy. When I first
|
|
saw you two together, I said, 'What a pair!' We're to be
|
|
neighbors now; you must come up and see me very often and
|
|
we'll have tea together."
|
|
|
|
"Did you hear that sawing going on all the time? I declare
|
|
it regularly got on my nerves."
|
|
|
|
Trina kissed her father and mother, crying a little herself
|
|
as she saw the tears in Mrs. Sieppe's eyes.
|
|
|
|
Marcus came forward a second time, and, with an air of great
|
|
gravity, kissed his cousin upon the forehead. Heise was
|
|
introduced to Trina and Uncle Oelbermann to the dentist.
|
|
|
|
For upwards of half an hour the guests stood about in
|
|
groups, filling the little sitting-room with a great chatter
|
|
of talk. Then it was time to make ready for supper.
|
|
|
|
This was a tremendous task, in which nearly all the guests
|
|
were obliged to assist. The sitting-room was transformed
|
|
into a dining-room. The presents were removed from the
|
|
extension table and the table drawn out to its full length.
|
|
The cloth was laid, the chairs--rented from the dancing
|
|
academy hard by--drawn up, the dishes set out, and the two
|
|
bouquets of cut flowers taken from the twins under their
|
|
shrill protests, and "arranged" in vases at either end of
|
|
the table.
|
|
|
|
There was a great coming and going between the kitchen
|
|
and the sitting-room. Trina, who was allowed to do
|
|
nothing, sat in the bay window and fretted, calling to her
|
|
mother from time to time:
|
|
|
|
"The napkins are in the right-hand drawer of the pantry."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, I got um. Where do you geep der zoup blates?"
|
|
|
|
"The soup plates are here already."
|
|
|
|
"Say, Cousin Trina, is there a corkscrew? What is home
|
|
without a corkscrew?"
|
|
|
|
"In the kitchen-table drawer, in the left-hand corner."
|
|
|
|
"Are these the forks you want to use, Mrs. McTeague?"
|
|
|
|
"No, no, there's some silver forks. Mamma knows where."
|
|
|
|
They were all very gay, laughing over their mistakes,
|
|
getting in one another's way, rushing into the sitting-room,
|
|
their hands full of plates or knives or glasses, and darting
|
|
out again after more. Marcus and Mr. Sieppe took their
|
|
coats off. Old Grannis and Miss Baker passed each other in
|
|
the hall in a constrained silence, her grenadine brushing
|
|
against the elbow of his wrinkled frock coat. Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann superintended Heise opening the case of champagne
|
|
with the gravity of a magistrate. Owgooste was assigned the
|
|
task of filling the new salt and pepper canisters of red and
|
|
blue glass.
|
|
|
|
In a wonderfully short time everything was ready. Marcus
|
|
Schouler resumed his coat, wiping his forehead, and
|
|
remarking:
|
|
|
|
"I tell you, I've been doing CHORES for MY board."
|
|
|
|
"To der table!" commanded Mr. Sieppe.
|
|
|
|
The company sat down with a great clatter, Trina at the
|
|
foot, the dentist at the head, the others arranged
|
|
themselves in haphazard fashion. But it happened that
|
|
Marcus Schouler crowded into the seat beside Selina, towards
|
|
which Old Grannis was directing himself. There was but one
|
|
other chair vacant, and that at the side of Miss Baker. Old
|
|
Grannis hesitated, putting his hand to his chin. However,
|
|
there was no escape. In great trepidation he sat down
|
|
beside the retired dressmaker. Neither of them spoke. Old
|
|
Grannis dared not move, but sat rigid, his eyes riveted on
|
|
his empty soup plate.
|
|
|
|
All at once there was a report like a pistol. The men
|
|
started in their places. Mrs. Sieppe uttered a muffled
|
|
shriek. The waiter from the cheap restaurant, hired as
|
|
Maria's assistant, rose from a bending posture, a champagne
|
|
bottle frothing in his hand; he was grinning from ear to
|
|
ear.
|
|
|
|
"Don't get scairt," he said, reassuringly, "it ain't
|
|
loaded."
|
|
|
|
When all their glasses had been filled, Marcus proposed the
|
|
health of the bride, "standing up." The guests rose and
|
|
drank. Hardly one of them had ever tasted champagne before.
|
|
The moment's silence after the toast was broken by McTeague
|
|
exclaiming with a long breath of satisfaction: "That's the
|
|
best beer I ever drank."
|
|
|
|
There was a roar of laughter. Especially was Marcus tickled
|
|
over the dentist's blunder; he went off in a very spasm of
|
|
mirth, banging the table with his fist, laughing until his
|
|
eyes watered. All through the meal he kept breaking out
|
|
into cackling imitations of McTeague's words: "That's the
|
|
best BEER I ever drank. Oh, Lord, ain't that a break!"
|
|
|
|
What a wonderful supper that was! There was oyster soup;
|
|
there were sea bass and barracuda; there was a gigantic
|
|
roast goose stuffed with chestnuts; there were egg-plant and
|
|
sweet potatoes--Miss Baker called them "yams." There was
|
|
calf's head in oil, over which Mr. Sieppe went into
|
|
ecstasies; there was lobster salad; there were rice pudding,
|
|
and strawberry ice cream, and wine jelly, and stewed prunes,
|
|
and cocoanuts, and mixed nuts, and raisins, and fruit, and
|
|
tea, and coffee, and mineral waters, and lemonade.
|
|
|
|
For two hours the guests ate; their faces red, their elbows
|
|
wide, the perspiration beading their foreheads. All around
|
|
the table one saw the same incessant movement of jaws and
|
|
heard the same uninterrupted sound of chewing. Three times
|
|
Heise passed his plate for more roast goose. Mr. Sieppe
|
|
devoured the calf's head with long breaths of contentment;
|
|
McTeague ate for the sake of eating, without choice;
|
|
everything within reach of his hands found its way into his
|
|
enormous mouth.
|
|
|
|
There was but little conversation, and that only of the
|
|
food; one exchanged opinions with one's neighbor as to the
|
|
soup, the egg-plant, or the stewed prunes. Soon the
|
|
room became very warm, a faint moisture appeared upon the
|
|
windows, the air was heavy with the smell of cooked food.
|
|
At every moment Trina or Mrs. Sieppe urged some one of the
|
|
company to have his or her plate refilled. They were
|
|
constantly employed in dishing potatoes or carving the goose
|
|
or ladling gravy. The hired waiter circled around the
|
|
room, his limp napkin over his arm, his hands full of plates
|
|
and dishes. He was a great joker; he had names of his own
|
|
for different articles of food, that sent gales of laughter
|
|
around the table. When he spoke of a bunch of parsley as
|
|
"scenery," Heise all but strangled himself over a mouthful
|
|
of potato. Out in the kitchen Maria Macapa did the work of
|
|
three, her face scarlet, her sleeves rolled up; every now
|
|
and then she uttered shrill but unintelligible outcries,
|
|
supposedly addressed to the waiter.
|
|
|
|
"Uncle Oelbermann," said Trina, "let me give you another
|
|
helping of prunes."
|
|
|
|
The Sieppes paid great deference to Uncle Oelbermann, as
|
|
indeed did the whole company. Even Marcus Schouler lowered
|
|
his voice when he addressed him. At the beginning of the
|
|
meal he had nudged the harness-maker and had whispered
|
|
behind his hand, nodding his head toward the wholesale toy
|
|
dealer, "Got thirty thousand dollars in the bank; has, for a
|
|
fact."
|
|
|
|
"Don't have much to say," observed Heise.
|
|
|
|
"No, no. That's his way; never opens his face."
|
|
|
|
As the evening wore on, the gas and two lamps were lit. The
|
|
company were still eating. The men, gorged with food, had
|
|
unbuttoned their vests. McTeague's cheeks were distended,
|
|
his eyes wide, his huge, salient jaw moved with a machine-
|
|
like regularity; at intervals he drew a series of short
|
|
breaths through his nose. Mrs. Sieppe wiped her forehead
|
|
with her napkin.
|
|
|
|
"Hey, dere, poy, gif me some more oaf dat--what you call--
|
|
'bubble-water.'"
|
|
|
|
That was how the waiter had spoken of the champagne--
|
|
"bubble-water." The guests had shouted applause, "Outa
|
|
sight." He was a heavy josher was that waiter.
|
|
|
|
Bottle after bottle was opened, the women stopping
|
|
their ears as the corks were drawn. All of a sudden the
|
|
dentist uttered an exclamation, clapping his hand to his
|
|
nose, his face twisting sharply.
|
|
|
|
"Mac, what is it?" cried Trina in alarm.
|
|
|
|
"That champagne came to my nose," he cried, his eyes
|
|
watering. "It stings like everything."
|
|
|
|
"Great BEER, ain't ut?" shouted Marcus.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Mark," remonstrated Trina in a low voice. "Now, Mark,
|
|
you just shut up; that isn't funny any more. I don't want
|
|
you should make fun of Mac. He called it beer on purpose.
|
|
I guess HE knows."
|
|
|
|
Throughout the meal old Miss Baker had occupied herself
|
|
largely with Owgooste and the twins, who had been given a
|
|
table by themselves--the black walnut table before which the
|
|
ceremony had taken place. The little dressmaker was
|
|
continually turning about in her place, inquiring of the
|
|
children if they wanted for anything; inquiries they rarely
|
|
answered other than by stare, fixed, ox-like,
|
|
expressionless.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly the little dressmaker turned to Old Grannis and
|
|
exclaimed:
|
|
|
|
"I'm so very fond of little children."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, they're very interesting. I'm very fond of them,
|
|
too."
|
|
|
|
The next instant both of the old people were overwhelmed
|
|
with confusion. What! They had spoken to each other after
|
|
all these years of silence; they had for the first time
|
|
addressed remarks to each other.
|
|
|
|
The old dressmaker was in a torment of embarrassment. How
|
|
was it she had come to speak? She had neither planned nor
|
|
wished it. Suddenly the words had escaped her, he had
|
|
answered, and it was all over--over before they knew it.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis's fingers trembled on the table ledge, his heart
|
|
beat heavily, his breath fell short. He had actually talked
|
|
to the little dressmaker. That possibility to which he had
|
|
looked forward, it seemed to him for years--that
|
|
companionship, that intimacy with his fellow-lodger,
|
|
that delightful acquaintance which was only to ripen at some
|
|
far distant time, he could not exactly say when--behold, it
|
|
had suddenly come to a head, here in this over-crowded,
|
|
over-heated room, in the midst of all this feeding,
|
|
surrounded by odors of hot dishes, accompanied by the sounds
|
|
of incessant mastication. How different he had imagined it
|
|
would be! They were to be alone--he and Miss Baker--in the
|
|
evening somewhere, withdrawn from the world, very quiet,
|
|
very calm and peaceful. Their talk was to be of their
|
|
lives, their lost illusions, not of other people's children.
|
|
|
|
The two old people did not speak again. They sat there side
|
|
by side, nearer than they had ever been before, motionless,
|
|
abstracted; their thoughts far away from that scene of
|
|
feasting. They were thinking of each other and they were
|
|
conscious of it. Timid, with the timidity of their second
|
|
childhood, constrained and embarrassed by each other's
|
|
presence, they were, nevertheless, in a little Elysium of
|
|
their own creating. They walked hand in hand in a delicious
|
|
garden where it was always autumn; together and alone they
|
|
entered upon the long retarded romance of their commonplace
|
|
and uneventful lives.
|
|
|
|
At last that great supper was over, everything had been
|
|
eaten; the enormous roast goose had dwindled to a very
|
|
skeleton. Mr. Sieppe had reduced the calf's head to a mere
|
|
skull; a row of empty champagne bottles--"dead soldiers," as
|
|
the facetious waiter had called them--lined the mantelpiece.
|
|
Nothing of the stewed prunes remained but the juice, which
|
|
was given to Owgooste and the twins. The platters were as
|
|
clean as if they had been washed; crumbs of bread, potato
|
|
parings, nutshells, and bits of cake littered the table;
|
|
coffee and ice-cream stains and spots of congealed gravy
|
|
marked the position of each plate. It was a devastation, a
|
|
pillage; the table presented the appearance of an abandoned
|
|
battlefield.
|
|
|
|
"Ouf," cried Mrs. Sieppe, pushing back, "I haf eatun und
|
|
eatun, ach, Gott, how I haf eatun!"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, dot kaf's het," murmured her husband, passing his
|
|
tongue over his lips.
|
|
|
|
The facetious waiter had disappeared. He and Maria
|
|
Macapa foregathered in the kitchen. They drew up to the
|
|
washboard of the sink, feasting off the remnants of the
|
|
supper, slices of goose, the remains of the lobster salad,
|
|
and half a bottle of champagne. They were obliged to drink
|
|
the latter from teacups.
|
|
|
|
"Here's how," said the waiter gallantly, as he raised his
|
|
tea-cup, bowing to Maria across the sink. "Hark," he added,
|
|
"they're singing inside."
|
|
|
|
The company had left the table and had assembled about the
|
|
melodeon, where Selina was seated. At first they attempted
|
|
some of the popular songs of the day, but were obliged to
|
|
give over as none of them knew any of the words beyond the
|
|
first line of the chorus. Finally they pitched upon
|
|
"Nearer, My God, to Thee," as the only song which they all
|
|
knew. Selina sang the "alto," very much off the key; Marcus
|
|
intoned the bass, scowling fiercely, his chin drawn into his
|
|
collar. They sang in very slow time. The song became a
|
|
dirge, a lamentable, prolonged wail of distress:
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Nee-rah, my Gahd, to Thee,
|
|
Nee-rah to Thee-ah."
|
|
|
|
|
|
At the end of the song, Uncle Oelbermann put on his hat
|
|
without a word of warning. Instantly there was a hush. The
|
|
guests rose.
|
|
|
|
"Not going so soon, Uncle Oelbermann?" protested Trina,
|
|
politely. He only nodded. Marcus sprang forward to help
|
|
him with his overcoat. Mr. Sieppe came up and the two men
|
|
shook hands.
|
|
|
|
Then Uncle Oelbermann delivered himself of an oracular
|
|
phrase. No doubt he had been meditating it during the
|
|
supper. Addressing Mr. Sieppe, he said:
|
|
|
|
"You have not lost a daughter, but have gained a son."
|
|
|
|
These were the only words he had spoken the entire evening.
|
|
He departed; the company was profoundly impressed.
|
|
|
|
About twenty minutes later, when Marcus Schouler was
|
|
entertaining the guests by eating almonds, shells and
|
|
all, Mr. Sieppe started to his feet, watch in hand.
|
|
|
|
"Haf-bast elevun," he shouted. "Attention! Der dime haf
|
|
arrive, shtop eferyting. We depart."
|
|
|
|
This was a signal for tremendous confusion. Mr. Sieppe
|
|
immediately threw off his previous air of relaxation, the
|
|
calf's head was forgotten, he was once again the leader of
|
|
vast enterprises.
|
|
|
|
"To me, to me," he cried. "Mommer, der tervins, Owgooste."
|
|
He marshalled his tribe together, with tremendous commanding
|
|
gestures. The sleeping twins were suddenly shaken into a
|
|
dazed consciousness; Owgooste, whom the almond-eating of
|
|
Marcus Schouler had petrified with admiration, was smacked
|
|
to a realization of his surroundings.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis, with a certain delicacy that was one of his
|
|
characteristics, felt instinctively that the guests--the
|
|
mere outsiders--should depart before the family began its
|
|
leave-taking of Trina. He withdrew unobtrusively, after a
|
|
hasty good-night to the bride and groom. The rest followed
|
|
almost immediately.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Mr. Sieppe," exclaimed Marcus, "we won't see each
|
|
other for some time." Marcus had given up his first
|
|
intention of joining in the Sieppe migration. He spoke in a
|
|
large way of certain affairs that would keep him in San
|
|
Francisco till the fall. Of late he had entertained
|
|
ambitions of a ranch life, he would breed cattle, he had a
|
|
little money and was only looking for some one "to go in
|
|
with." He dreamed of a cowboy's life and saw himself in an
|
|
entrancing vision involving silver spurs and untamed
|
|
bronchos. He told himself that Trina had cast him off, that
|
|
his best friend had "played him for a sucker," that the
|
|
"proper caper" was to withdraw from the world entirely.
|
|
|
|
"If you hear of anybody down there," he went on, speaking to
|
|
Mr. Sieppe, "that wants to go in for ranching, why just let
|
|
me know."
|
|
|
|
"Soh, soh," answered Mr. Sieppe abstractedly, peering about
|
|
for Owgooste's cap.
|
|
|
|
Marcus bade the Sieppes farewell. He and Heise went out
|
|
together. One heard them, as they descended the
|
|
stairs, discussing the possibility of Frenna's place being
|
|
still open.
|
|
|
|
Then Miss Baker departed after kissing Trina on both cheeks.
|
|
Selina went with her. There was only the family left.
|
|
|
|
Trina watched them go, one by one, with an increasing
|
|
feeling of uneasiness and vague apprehension. Soon they
|
|
would all be gone.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Trina," exclaimed Mr. Sieppe, "goot-py; perhaps you
|
|
gome visit us somedime."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe began crying again.
|
|
|
|
"Ach, Trina, ven shall I efer see you again?"
|
|
|
|
Tears came to Trina's eyes in spite of herself. She put her
|
|
arms around her mother.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, sometime, sometime," she cried. The twins and Owgooste
|
|
clung to Trina's skirts, fretting and whimpering.
|
|
|
|
McTeague was miserable. He stood apart from the group, in a
|
|
corner. None of them seemed to think of him; he was not of
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
"Write to me very often, mamma, and tell me about
|
|
everything--about August and the twins."
|
|
|
|
"It is dime," cried Mr. Sieppe, nervously. "Goot-py, Trina.
|
|
Mommer, Owgooste, say goot-py, den we must go. Goot-py,
|
|
Trina." He kissed her. Owgooste and the twins were lifted
|
|
up. "Gome, gome," insisted Mr. Sieppe, moving toward the
|
|
door.
|
|
|
|
"Goot-py, Trina," exclaimed Mrs. Sieppe, crying harder than
|
|
ever. "Doktor--where is der doktor--Doktor, pe goot to her,
|
|
eh? pe vairy goot, eh, won't you? Zum day, Dokter, you vill
|
|
haf a daughter, den you know berhaps how I feel, yes."
|
|
|
|
They were standing at the door by this time. Mr. Sieppe,
|
|
half way down the stairs, kept calling "Gome, gome, we miss
|
|
der drain."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe released Trina and started down the hall, the
|
|
twins and Owgooste following. Trina stood in the doorway,
|
|
looking after them through her tears. They were going,
|
|
going. When would she ever see them again? She was to be
|
|
left alone with this man to whom she had just been married.
|
|
A sudden vague terror seized her; she left McTeague and
|
|
ran down the hall and caught her mother around the neck.
|
|
|
|
"I don't WANT you to go," she whispered in her mother's
|
|
ear, sobbing. "Oh, mamma, I--I'm 'fraid."
|
|
|
|
"Ach, Trina, you preak my heart. Don't gry, poor leetle
|
|
girl." She rocked Trina in her arms as though she were a
|
|
child again. "Poor leetle scairt girl, don' gry--soh--soh--
|
|
soh, dere's nuttun to pe 'fraid oaf. Dere, go to your
|
|
hoasban'. Listen, popper's galling again; go den; goot-by."
|
|
|
|
She loosened Trina's arms and started down the stairs. Trina
|
|
leaned over the banisters, straining her eyes after her
|
|
mother.
|
|
|
|
"What is ut, Trina?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, good-by, good-by."
|
|
|
|
"Gome, gome, we miss der drain."
|
|
|
|
"Mamma, oh, mamma!"
|
|
|
|
"What is ut, Trina?"
|
|
|
|
"Good-by."
|
|
|
|
"Goot-py, leetle daughter."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, good-by, good-by."
|
|
|
|
The street door closed. The silence was profound.
|
|
|
|
For another moment Trina stood leaning over the banisters,
|
|
looking down into the empty stairway. It was dark. There
|
|
was nobody. They--her father, her mother, the children--had
|
|
left her, left her alone. She faced about toward the rooms
|
|
--faced her husband, faced her new home, the new life that
|
|
was to begin now.
|
|
|
|
The hall was empty and deserted. The great flat around her
|
|
seemed new and huge and strange; she felt horribly alone.
|
|
Even Maria and the hired waiter were gone. On one of the
|
|
floors above she heard a baby crying. She stood there an
|
|
instant in the dark hall, in her wedding finery, looking
|
|
about her, listening. From the open door of the sitting-
|
|
room streamed a gold bar of light.
|
|
|
|
She went down the hall, by the open door of the sitting-
|
|
room, going on toward the hall door of the bedroom.
|
|
|
|
As she softly passed the sitting-room she glanced hastily
|
|
in. The lamps and the gas were burning brightly, the chairs
|
|
were pushed back from the table just as the guests had left
|
|
them, and the table itself, abandoned, deserted,
|
|
presented to view the vague confusion of its dishes, its
|
|
knives and forks, its empty platters and crumpled napkins.
|
|
The dentist sat there leaning on his elbows, his back toward
|
|
her; against the white blur of the table he looked colossal.
|
|
Above his giant shoulders rose his thick, red neck and mane
|
|
of yellow hair. The light shone pink through the gristle of
|
|
his enormous ears.
|
|
|
|
Trina entered the bedroom, closing the door after her. At
|
|
the sound, she heard McTeague start and rise.
|
|
|
|
"Is that you, Trina?"
|
|
|
|
She did not answer; but paused in the middle of the room,
|
|
holding her breath, trembling.
|
|
|
|
The dentist crossed the outside room, parted the chenille
|
|
portieres, and came in. He came toward her quickly, making
|
|
as if to take her in his arms. His eyes were alight.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," cried Trina, shrinking from him. Suddenly seized
|
|
with the fear of him--the intuitive feminine fear of the
|
|
male--her whole being quailed before him. She was terrified
|
|
at his huge, square-cut head; his powerful, salient jaw; his
|
|
huge, red hands; his enormous, resistless strength.
|
|
|
|
"No, no--I'm afraid," she cried, drawing back from him to
|
|
the other side of the room.
|
|
|
|
"Afraid?" answered the dentist in perplexity. "What are you
|
|
afraid of, Trina? I'm not going to hurt you. What are you
|
|
afraid of?"
|
|
|
|
What, indeed, was Trina afraid of? She could not tell. But
|
|
what did she know of McTeague, after all? Who was this man
|
|
that had come into her life, who had taken her from her home
|
|
and from her parents, and with whom she was now left alone
|
|
here in this strange, vast flat?
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I'm afraid. I'm afraid," she cried.
|
|
|
|
McTeague came nearer, sat down beside her and put one arm
|
|
around her.
|
|
|
|
"What are you afraid of, Trina?" he said, reassuringly. "I
|
|
don't want to frighten you."
|
|
|
|
She looked at him wildly, her adorable little chin
|
|
quivering, the tears brimming in her narrow blue eyes.
|
|
Then her glance took on a certain intentness, and she peered
|
|
curiously into his face, saying almost in a whisper:
|
|
|
|
"I'm afraid of YOU."
|
|
|
|
But the dentist did not heed her. An immense joy seized
|
|
upon him--the joy of possession. Trina was his very own
|
|
now. She lay there in the hollow of his arm, helpless and
|
|
very pretty.
|
|
|
|
Those instincts that in him were so close to the surface
|
|
suddenly leaped to life, shouting and clamoring, not to be
|
|
resisted. He loved her. Ah, did he not love her? The
|
|
smell of her hair, of her neck, rose to him.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly he caught her in both his huge arms, crushing down
|
|
her struggle with his immense strength, kissing her full
|
|
upon the mouth. Then her great love for McTeague suddenly
|
|
flashed up in Trina's breast; she gave up to him as she had
|
|
done before, yielding all at once to that strange desire of
|
|
being conquered and subdued. She clung to him, her hands
|
|
clasped behind his neck, whispering in his ear:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you must be good to me--very, very good to me, dear--
|
|
for you're all that I have in the world now."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 10
|
|
|
|
|
|
That summer passed, then the winter. The wet season began
|
|
in the last days of September and continued all through
|
|
October, November, and December. At long intervals would
|
|
come a week of perfect days, the sky without a cloud, the
|
|
air motionless, but touched with a certain nimbleness, a
|
|
faint effervescence that was exhilarating. Then,
|
|
without warning, during a night when a south wind blew, a
|
|
gray scroll of cloud would unroll and hang high over the
|
|
city, and the rain would come pattering down again, at first
|
|
in scattered showers, then in an uninterrupted drizzle.
|
|
|
|
All day long Trina sat in the bay window of the sitting-room
|
|
that commanded a view of a small section of Polk Street. As
|
|
often as she raised her head she could see the big market, a
|
|
confectionery store, a bell-hanger's shop, and, farther on,
|
|
above the roofs, the glass skylights and water tanks of the
|
|
big public baths. In the nearer foreground ran the street
|
|
itself; the cable cars trundled up and down, thumping
|
|
heavily over the joints of the rails; market carts by the
|
|
score came and went, driven at a great rate by preoccupied
|
|
young men in their shirt sleeves, with pencils behind their
|
|
ears, or by reckless boys in blood-stained butcher's aprons.
|
|
Upon the sidewalks the little world of Polk Street swarmed
|
|
and jostled through its daily round of life. On fine days
|
|
the great ladies from the avenue, one block above, invaded
|
|
the street, appearing before the butcher stalls, intent upon
|
|
their day's marketing. On rainy days their servants--the
|
|
Chinese cooks or the second girls--took their places. These
|
|
servants gave themselves great airs, carrying their big
|
|
cotton umbrellas as they had seen their mistresses carry
|
|
their parasols, and haggling in supercilious fashion with
|
|
the market men, their chins in the air.
|
|
|
|
The rain persisted. Everything in the range of Trina's
|
|
vision, from the tarpaulins on the market-cart horses to the
|
|
panes of glass in the roof of the public baths, looked
|
|
glazed and varnished. The asphalt of the sidewalks shone
|
|
like the surface of a patent leather boot; every hollow in
|
|
the street held its little puddle, that winked like an eye
|
|
each time a drop of rain struck into it.
|
|
|
|
Trina still continued to work for Uncle Oelbermann. In the
|
|
mornings she busied herself about the kitchen, the bedroom,
|
|
and the sitting-room; but in the afternoon, for two or three
|
|
hours after lunch, she was occupied with the Noah's ark
|
|
animals. She took her work to the bay window, spreading out
|
|
a great square of canvas underneath her chair, to catch the
|
|
chips and shavings, which she used afterwards for lighting
|
|
fires. One after another she caught up the little
|
|
blocks of straight-grained pine, the knife flashed between
|
|
her fingers, the little figure grew rapidly under her touch,
|
|
was finished and ready for painting in a wonderfully short
|
|
time, and was tossed into the basket that stood at her
|
|
elbow.
|
|
|
|
But very often during that rainy winter after her marriage
|
|
Trina would pause in her work, her hands falling idly into
|
|
her lap, her eyes--her narrow, pale blue eyes--growing wide
|
|
and thoughtful as she gazed, unseeing, out into the rain-
|
|
washed street.
|
|
|
|
She loved McTeague now with a blind, unreasoning love that
|
|
admitted of no doubt or hesitancy. Indeed, it seemed to her
|
|
that it was only AFTER her marriage with the dentist
|
|
that she had really begun to love him. With the absolute
|
|
final surrender of herself, the irrevocable, ultimate
|
|
submission, had come an affection the like of which she had
|
|
never dreamed in the old B Street days. But Trina loved her
|
|
husband, not because she fancied she saw in him any of those
|
|
noble and generous qualities that inspire affection. The
|
|
dentist might or might not possess them, it was all one with
|
|
Trina. She loved him because she had given herself to him
|
|
freely, unreservedly; had merged her individuality into his;
|
|
she was his, she belonged to him forever and forever.
|
|
Nothing that he could do (so she told herself), nothing that
|
|
she herself could do, could change her in this respect.
|
|
McTeague might cease to love her, might leave her, might
|
|
even die; it would be all the same, SHE WAS HIS.
|
|
|
|
But it had not been so at first. During those long, rainy
|
|
days of the fall, days when Trina was left alone for hours,
|
|
at that time when the excitement and novelty of the
|
|
honeymoon were dying down, when the new household was
|
|
settling into its grooves, she passed through many an hour
|
|
of misgiving, of doubt, and even of actual regret.
|
|
|
|
Never would she forget one Sunday afternoon in particular.
|
|
She had been married but three weeks. After dinner she and
|
|
little Miss Baker had gone for a bit of a walk to take
|
|
advantage of an hour's sunshine and to look at some
|
|
wonderful geraniums in a florist's window on Sutter Street.
|
|
They had been caught in a shower, and on returning to the
|
|
flat the little dressmaker had insisted on fetching
|
|
Trina up to her tiny room and brewing her a cup of strong
|
|
tea, "to take the chill off." The two women had chatted over
|
|
their teacups the better part of the afternoon, then Trina
|
|
had returned to her rooms. For nearly three hours McTeague
|
|
had been out of her thoughts, and as she came through their
|
|
little suite, singing softly to herself, she suddenly came
|
|
upon him quite unexpectedly. Her husband was in the "Dental
|
|
Parlors," lying back in his operating chair, fast asleep.
|
|
The little stove was crammed with coke, the room was
|
|
overheated, the air thick and foul with the odors of ether,
|
|
of coke gas, of stale beer and cheap tobacco. The dentist
|
|
sprawled his gigantic limbs over the worn velvet of the
|
|
operating chair; his coat and vest and shoes were off, and
|
|
his huge feet, in their thick gray socks, dangled over the
|
|
edge of the foot-rest; his pipe, fallen from his half-open
|
|
mouth, had spilled the ashes into his lap; while on the
|
|
floor, at his side stood the half-empty pitcher of steam
|
|
beer. His head had rolled limply upon one shoulder, his
|
|
face was red with sleep, and from his open mouth came a
|
|
terrific sound of snoring.
|
|
|
|
For a moment Trina stood looking at him as he lay thus,
|
|
prone, inert, half-dressed, and stupefied with the heat of
|
|
the room, the steam beer, and the fumes of the cheap
|
|
tobacco. Then her little chin quivered and a sob rose to
|
|
her throat; she fled from the "Parlors," and locking herself
|
|
in her bedroom, flung herself on the bed and burst into an
|
|
agony of weeping. Ah, no, ah, no, she could not love him.
|
|
It had all been a dreadful mistake, and now it was
|
|
irrevocable; she was bound to this man for life. If it was
|
|
as bad as this now, only three weeks after her marriage, how
|
|
would it be in the years to come? Year after year, month
|
|
after month, hour after hour, she was to see this same face,
|
|
with its salient jaw, was to feel the touch of those
|
|
enormous red hands, was to hear the heavy, elephantine tread
|
|
of those huge feet--in thick gray socks. Year after year,
|
|
day after day, there would be no change, and it would last
|
|
all her life. Either it would be one long continued
|
|
revulsion, or else--worse than all--she would come to be
|
|
content with him, would come to be like him, would sink to
|
|
the level of steam beer and cheap tobacco, and all her
|
|
pretty ways, her clean, trim little habits, would be
|
|
forgotten, since they would be thrown away upon her stupid,
|
|
brutish husband. "Her husband!" THAT, was her husband
|
|
in there--she could yet hear his snores--for life, for life.
|
|
A great despair seized upon her. She buried her face in the
|
|
pillow and thought of her mother with an infinite longing.
|
|
|
|
Aroused at length by the chittering of the canary, McTeague
|
|
had awakened slowly. After a while he had taken down his
|
|
concertina and played upon it the six very mournful airs
|
|
that he knew.
|
|
|
|
Face downward upon the bed, Trina still wept. Throughout
|
|
that little suite could be heard but two sounds, the
|
|
lugubrious strains of the concertina and the noise of
|
|
stifled weeping.
|
|
|
|
That her husband should be ignorant of her distress seemed
|
|
to Trina an additional grievance. With perverse
|
|
inconsistency she began to wish him to come to her, to
|
|
comfort her. He ought to know that she was in trouble, that
|
|
she was lonely and unhappy.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac," she called in a trembling voice. But the
|
|
concertina still continued to wail and lament. Then Trina
|
|
wished she were dead, and on the instant jumped up and ran
|
|
into the "Dental Parlors," and threw herself into her
|
|
husband's arms, crying: "Oh, Mac, dear, love me, love me
|
|
big! I'm so unhappy."
|
|
|
|
"What--what--what--" the dentist exclaimed, starting up
|
|
bewildered, a little frightened.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing, nothing, only LOVE me, love me always and
|
|
always."
|
|
|
|
But this first crisis, this momentary revolt, as much a
|
|
matter of high-strung feminine nerves as of anything else,
|
|
passed, and in the end Trina's affection for her "old bear"
|
|
grew in spite of herself. She began to love him more and
|
|
more, not for what he was, but for what she had given up to
|
|
him. Only once again did Trina undergo a reaction against
|
|
her husband, and then it was but the matter of an instant,
|
|
brought on, curiously enough, by the sight of a bit of egg
|
|
on McTeague's heavy mustache one morning just after
|
|
breakfast.
|
|
|
|
Then, too, the pair had learned to make concessions, little
|
|
by little, and all unconsciously they adapted their
|
|
modes of life to suit each other. Instead of sinking to
|
|
McTeague's level as she had feared, Trina found that she
|
|
could make McTeague rise to hers, and in this saw a solution
|
|
of many a difficult and gloomy complication.
|
|
|
|
For one thing, the dentist began to dress a little better,
|
|
Trina even succeeding in inducing him to wear a high silk
|
|
hat and a frock coat of a Sunday. Next he relinquished his
|
|
Sunday afternoon's nap and beer in favor of three or four
|
|
hours spent in the park with her--the weather permitting.
|
|
So that gradually Trina's misgivings ceased, or when they
|
|
did assail her, she could at last meet them with a shrug of
|
|
the shoulders, saying to herself meanwhile, "Well, it's done
|
|
now and it can't be helped; one must make the best of it."
|
|
|
|
During the first months of their married life these nervous
|
|
relapses of hers had alternated with brusque outbursts of
|
|
affection when her only fear was that her husband's love did
|
|
not equal her own. Without an instant's warning, she would
|
|
clasp him about the neck, rubbing her cheek against his,
|
|
murmuring:
|
|
|
|
"Dear old Mac, I love you so, I love you so. Oh, aren't we
|
|
happy together, Mac, just us two and no one else? You love
|
|
me as much as I love you, don't you, Mac? Oh, if you
|
|
shouldn't--if you SHOULDN'T."
|
|
|
|
But by the middle of the winter Trina's emotions,
|
|
oscillating at first from one extreme to another, commenced
|
|
to settle themselves to an equilibrium of calmness and
|
|
placid quietude. Her household duties began more and more to
|
|
absorb her attention, for she was an admirable housekeeper,
|
|
keeping the little suite in marvellous good order and
|
|
regulating the schedule of expenditure with an economy that
|
|
often bordered on positive niggardliness. It was a passion
|
|
with her to save money. In the bottom of her trunk, in the
|
|
bedroom, she hid a brass match-safe that answered the
|
|
purposes of a savings bank. Each time she added a quarter or
|
|
a half dollar to the little store she laughed and sang with
|
|
a veritable childish delight; whereas, if the butcher or
|
|
milkman compelled her to pay an overcharge she was unhappy
|
|
for the rest of the day. She did not save this money
|
|
for any ulterior purpose, she hoarded instinctively, without
|
|
knowing why, responding to the dentist's remonstrances with:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, I know I'm a little miser, I know it."
|
|
|
|
Trina had always been an economical little body, but it was
|
|
only since her great winning in the lottery that she had
|
|
become especially penurious. No doubt, in her fear lest
|
|
their great good luck should demoralize them and lead to
|
|
habits of extravagance, she had recoiled too far in the
|
|
other direction. Never, never, never should a penny of that
|
|
miraculous fortune be spent; rather should it be added to.
|
|
It was a nest egg, a monstrous, roc-like nest egg, not so
|
|
large, however, but that it could be made larger. Already
|
|
by the end of that winter Trina had begun to make up the
|
|
deficit of two hundred dollars that she had been forced to
|
|
expend on the preparations for her marriage.
|
|
|
|
McTeague, on his part, never asked himself now-a-days
|
|
whether he loved Trina the wife as much as he had loved
|
|
Trina the young girl. There had been a time when to kiss
|
|
Trina, to take her in his arms, had thrilled him from head
|
|
to heel with a happiness that was beyond words; even the
|
|
smell of her wonderful odorous hair had sent a sensation of
|
|
faintness all through him. That time was long past now.
|
|
Those sudden outbursts of affection on the part of his
|
|
little woman, outbursts that only increased in vehemence the
|
|
longer they lived together, puzzled rather than pleased him.
|
|
He had come to submit to them good-naturedly, answering her
|
|
passionate inquiries with a "Sure, sure, Trina, sure I love
|
|
you. What--what's the matter with you?"
|
|
|
|
There was no passion in the dentist's regard for his wife.
|
|
He dearly liked to have her near him, he took an enormous
|
|
pleasure in watching her as she moved about their rooms,
|
|
very much at home, gay and singing from morning till night;
|
|
and it was his great delight to call her into the "Dental
|
|
Parlors" when a patient was in the chair and, while he held
|
|
the plugger, to have her rap in the gold fillings with the
|
|
little box-wood mallet as he had taught her. But that
|
|
tempest of passion, that overpowering desire that had
|
|
suddenly taken possession of him that day when he had given
|
|
her ether, again when he had caught her in his arms in
|
|
the B Street station, and again and again during the early
|
|
days of their married life, rarely stirred him now. On the
|
|
other hand, he was never assailed with doubts as to the
|
|
wisdom of his marriage.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had relapsed to his wonted stolidity. He never
|
|
questioned himself, never looked for motives, never went to
|
|
the bottom of things. The year following upon the summer of
|
|
his marriage was a time of great contentment for him; after
|
|
the novelty of the honeymoon had passed he slipped easily
|
|
into the new order of things without a question. Thus his
|
|
life would be for years to come. Trina was there; he was
|
|
married and settled. He accepted the situation. The little
|
|
animal comforts which for him constituted the enjoyment of
|
|
life were ministered to at every turn, or when they were
|
|
interfered with--as in the case of his Sunday afternoon's
|
|
nap and beer--some agreeable substitute was found. In her
|
|
attempts to improve McTeague--to raise him from the stupid
|
|
animal life to which he had been accustomed in his bachelor
|
|
days--Trina was tactful enough to move so cautiously and
|
|
with such slowness that the dentist was unconscious of any
|
|
process of change. In the matter of the high silk hat, it
|
|
seemed to him that the initiative had come from himself.
|
|
|
|
Gradually the dentist improved under the influence of his
|
|
little wife. He no longer went abroad with frayed cuffs
|
|
about his huge red wrists--or worse, without any cuffs at
|
|
all. Trina kept his linen clean and mended, doing most of
|
|
his washing herself, and insisting that he should change his
|
|
flannels--thick red flannels they were, with enormous bone
|
|
buttons--once a week, his linen shirts twice a week, and his
|
|
collars and cuffs every second day. She broke him of the
|
|
habit of eating with his knife, she caused him to substitute
|
|
bottled beer in the place of steam beer, and she induced him
|
|
to take off his hat to Miss Baker, to Heise's wife, and to
|
|
the other women of his acquaintance. McTeague no longer
|
|
spent an evening at Frenna's. Instead of this he brought a
|
|
couple of bottles of beer up to the rooms and shared it with
|
|
Trina. In his "Parlors" he was no longer gruff and
|
|
indifferent to his female patients; he arrived at that stage
|
|
where he could work and talk to them at the same time;
|
|
he even accompanied them to the door, and held it open for
|
|
them when the operation was finished, bowing them out with
|
|
great nods of his huge square-cut head.
|
|
|
|
Besides all this, he began to observe the broader, larger
|
|
interests of life, interests that affected him not as an
|
|
individual, but as a member of a class, a profession, or a
|
|
political party. He read the papers, he subscribed to a
|
|
dental magazine; on Easter, Christmas, and New Year's he
|
|
went to church with Trina. He commenced to have opinions,
|
|
convictions--it was not fair to deprive tax-paying women of
|
|
the privilege to vote; a university education should not be
|
|
a prerequisite for admission to a dental college; the
|
|
Catholic priests were to be restrained in their efforts to
|
|
gain control of the public schools.
|
|
|
|
But most wonderful of all, McTeague began to have ambitions
|
|
--very vague, very confused ideas of something better--ideas
|
|
for the most part borrowed from Trina. Some day, perhaps,
|
|
he and his wife would have a house of their own. What a
|
|
dream! A little home all to themselves, with six rooms and a
|
|
bath, with a grass plat in front and calla-lilies. Then
|
|
there would be children. He would have a son, whose name
|
|
would be Daniel, who would go to High School, and perhaps
|
|
turn out to be a prosperous plumber or house painter. Then
|
|
this son Daniel would marry a wife, and they would all live
|
|
together in that six-room-and-bath house; Daniel would have
|
|
little children. McTeague would grow old among them all.
|
|
The dentist saw himself as a venerable patriarch surrounded
|
|
by children and grandchildren.
|
|
|
|
So the winter passed. It was a season of great happiness
|
|
for the McTeagues; the new life jostled itself into its
|
|
grooves. A routine began.
|
|
|
|
On weekdays they rose at half-past six, being awakened by
|
|
the boy who brought the bottled milk, and who had
|
|
instructions to pound upon the bedroom door in passing.
|
|
Trina made breakfast--coffee, bacon and eggs, and a roll of
|
|
Vienna bread from the bakery. The breakfast was eaten in
|
|
the kitchen, on the round deal table covered with the shiny
|
|
oilcloth table-spread tacked on. After breakfast the
|
|
dentist immediately betook himself to his "Parlors" to meet
|
|
his early morning appointments--those made with the clerks
|
|
and shop girls who stopped in for half an hour on their way
|
|
to their work.
|
|
|
|
Trina, meanwhile, busied herself about the suite, clearing
|
|
away the breakfast, sponging off the oilcloth table-spread,
|
|
making the bed, pottering about with a broom or duster or
|
|
cleaning rag. Towards ten o'clock she opened the windows to
|
|
air the rooms, then put on her drab jacket, her little round
|
|
turban with its red wing, took the butcher's and grocer's
|
|
books from the knife basket in the drawer of the kitchen
|
|
table, and descended to the street, where she spent a
|
|
delicious hour--now in the huge market across the way, now
|
|
in the grocer's store with its fragrant aroma of coffee and
|
|
spices, and now before the counters of the haberdasher's,
|
|
intent on a bit of shopping, turning over ends of veiling,
|
|
strips of elastic, or slivers of whalebone. On the street
|
|
she rubbed elbows with the great ladies of the avenue in
|
|
their beautiful dresses, or at intervals she met an
|
|
acquaintance or two--Miss Baker, or Heise's lame wife, or
|
|
Mrs. Ryer. At times she passed the flat and looked up at
|
|
the windows of her home, marked by the huge golden molar
|
|
that projected, flashing, from the bay window of the
|
|
"Parlors." She saw the open windows of the sitting-room,
|
|
the Nottingham lace curtains stirring and billowing in the
|
|
draft, and she caught sight of Maria Macapa's towelled head
|
|
as the Mexican maid-of-all-work went to and fro in the
|
|
suite, sweeping or carrying away the ashes. Occasionally in
|
|
the windows of the "Parlors" she beheld McTeague's rounded
|
|
back as he bent to his work. Sometimes, even, they saw each
|
|
other and waved their hands gayly in recognition.
|
|
|
|
By eleven o'clock Trina returned to the flat, her brown net
|
|
reticule--once her mother's--full of parcels. At once she
|
|
set about getting lunch--sausages, perhaps, with mashed
|
|
potatoes; or last evening's joint warmed over or made into a
|
|
stew; chocolate, which Trina adored, and a side dish or two
|
|
--a salted herring or a couple of artichokes or a salad. At
|
|
half-past twelve the dentist came in from the "Parlors,"
|
|
bringing with him the smell of creosote and of ether.
|
|
They sat down to lunch in the sitting-room. They told each
|
|
other of their doings throughout the forenoon; Trina showed
|
|
her purchases, McTeague recounted the progress of an
|
|
operation. At one o'clock they separated, the dentist
|
|
returning to the "Parlors," Trina settling to her work on
|
|
the Noah's ark animals. At about three o'clock she put this
|
|
work away, and for the rest of the afternoon was variously
|
|
occupied--sometimes it was the mending, sometimes the wash,
|
|
sometimes new curtains to be put up, or a bit of carpet to
|
|
be tacked down, or a letter to be written, or a visit--
|
|
generally to Miss Baker--to be returned. Towards five
|
|
o'clock the old woman whom they had hired for that purpose
|
|
came to cook supper, for even Trina was not equal to the
|
|
task of preparing three meals a day.
|
|
|
|
This woman was French, and was known to the flat as
|
|
Augustine, no one taking enough interest in her to inquire
|
|
for her last name; all that was known of her was that she
|
|
was a decayed French laundress, miserably poor, her trade
|
|
long since ruined by Chinese competition. Augustine cooked
|
|
well, but she was otherwise undesirable, and Trina lost
|
|
patience with her at every moment. The old French woman's
|
|
most marked characteristic was her timidity. Trina could
|
|
scarcely address her a simple direction without Augustine
|
|
quailing and shrinking; a reproof, however gentle, threw her
|
|
into an agony of confusion; while Trina's anger promptly
|
|
reduced her to a state of nervous collapse, wherein she lost
|
|
all power of speech, while her head began to bob and nod
|
|
with an incontrollable twitching of the muscles, much like
|
|
the oscillations of the head of a toy donkey. Her timidity
|
|
was exasperating, her very presence in the room unstrung the
|
|
nerves, while her morbid eagerness to avoid offence only
|
|
served to develop in her a clumsiness that was at times
|
|
beyond belief. More than once Trina had decided that she
|
|
could no longer put up with Augustine but each time she had
|
|
retained her as she reflected upon her admirably cooked
|
|
cabbage soups and tapioca puddings, and--which in Trina's
|
|
eyes was her chiefest recommendation--the pittance for which
|
|
she was contented to work.
|
|
|
|
Augustine had a husband. He was a spirit-medium--a
|
|
"professor." At times he held seances in the larger
|
|
rooms of the flat, playing vigorously upon a mouth-organ and
|
|
invoking a familiar whom he called "Edna," and whom he
|
|
asserted was an Indian maiden.
|
|
|
|
The evening was a period of relaxation for Trina and
|
|
McTeague. They had supper at six, after which McTeague
|
|
smoked his pipe and read the papers for half an hour, while
|
|
Trina and Augustine cleared away the table and washed the
|
|
dishes. Then, as often as not, they went out together. One
|
|
of their amusements was to go "down town" after dark and
|
|
promenade Market and Kearney Streets. It was very gay; a
|
|
great many others were promenading there also. All of the
|
|
stores were brilliantly lighted and many of them still open.
|
|
They walked about aimlessly, looking into the shop windows.
|
|
Trina would take McTeague's arm, and he, very much
|
|
embarrassed at that, would thrust both hands into his
|
|
pockets and pretend not to notice. They stopped before the
|
|
jewellers' and milliners' windows, finding a great delight
|
|
in picking out things for each other, saying how they would
|
|
choose this and that if they were rich. Trina did most of
|
|
the talking. McTeague merely approving by a growl or a
|
|
movement of the head or shoulders; she was interested in the
|
|
displays of some of the cheaper stores, but he found an
|
|
irresistible charm in an enormous golden molar with four
|
|
prongs that hung at a corner of Kearney Street. Sometimes
|
|
they would look at Mars or at the moon through the street
|
|
telescopes or sit for a time in the rotunda of a vast
|
|
department store where a band played every evening.
|
|
|
|
Occasionally they met Heise the harness-maker and his wife,
|
|
with whom they had become acquainted. Then the evening was
|
|
concluded by a four-cornered party in the Luxembourg, a
|
|
quiet German restaurant under a theatre. Trina had a tamale
|
|
and a glass of beer, Mrs. Heise (who was a decayed writing
|
|
teacher) ate salads, with glasses of grenadine and currant
|
|
syrups. Heise drank cocktails and whiskey straight, and
|
|
urged the dentist to join him. But McTeague was obstinate,
|
|
shaking his head. "I can't drink that stuff," he said. "It
|
|
don't agree with me, somehow; I go kinda crazy after
|
|
two glasses." So he gorged himself with beer and
|
|
frankfurter sausages plastered with German mustard.
|
|
|
|
When the annual Mechanic's Fair opened, McTeague and Trina
|
|
often spent their evenings there, studying the exhibits
|
|
carefully (since in Trina's estimation education meant
|
|
knowing things and being able to talk about them). Wearying
|
|
of this they would go up into the gallery, and, leaning
|
|
over, look down into the huge amphitheatre full of light and
|
|
color and movement.
|
|
|
|
There rose to them the vast shuffling noise of thousands of
|
|
feet and a subdued roar of conversation like the sound of a
|
|
great mill. Mingled with this was the purring of distant
|
|
machinery, the splashing of a temporary fountain, and the
|
|
rhythmic jangling of a brass band, while in the piano
|
|
exhibit a hired performer was playing upon a concert grand
|
|
with a great flourish. Nearer at hand they could catch ends
|
|
of conversation and notes of laughter, the noise of moving
|
|
dresses, and the rustle of stiffly starched skirts. Here
|
|
and there school children elbowed their way through the
|
|
crowd, crying shrilly, their hands full of advertisement
|
|
pamphlets, fans, picture cards, and toy whips, while the air
|
|
itself was full of the smell of fresh popcorn.
|
|
|
|
They even spent some time in the art gallery. Trina's
|
|
cousin Selina, who gave lessons in hand painting at two bits
|
|
an hour, generally had an exhibit on the walls, which they
|
|
were interested to find. It usually was a bunch of yellow
|
|
poppies painted on black velvet and framed in gilt. They
|
|
stood before it some little time, hazarding their opinions,
|
|
and then moved on slowly from one picture to another. Trina
|
|
had McTeague buy a catalogue and made a duty of finding the
|
|
title of every picture. This, too, she told McTeague, as a
|
|
kind of education one ought to cultivate. Trina professed
|
|
to be fond of art, having perhaps acquired a taste for
|
|
painting and sculpture from her experience with the Noah's
|
|
ark animals.
|
|
|
|
"Of course," she told the dentist, "I'm no critic, I only
|
|
know what I like." She knew that she liked the "Ideal
|
|
Heads," lovely girls with flowing straw-colored hair and
|
|
immense, upturned eyes. These always had for title,
|
|
"Reverie," or "An Idyll," or "Dreams of Love."
|
|
|
|
"I think those are lovely, don't you, Mac?" she said.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes," answered McTeague, nodding his head, bewildered,
|
|
trying to understand. "Yes, yes, lovely, that's the word.
|
|
Are you dead sure now, Trina, that all that's hand-painted
|
|
just like the poppies?"
|
|
|
|
Thus the winter passed, a year went by, then two. The
|
|
little life of Polk Street, the life of small traders, drug
|
|
clerks, grocers, stationers, plumbers, dentists, doctors,
|
|
spirit-mediums, and the like, ran on monotonously in its
|
|
accustomed grooves. The first three years of their married
|
|
life wrought little change in the fortunes of the McTeagues.
|
|
In the third summer the branch post-office was moved from
|
|
the ground floor of the flat to a corner farther up the
|
|
street in order to be near the cable line that ran mail
|
|
cars. Its place was taken by a German saloon, called a
|
|
"Wein Stube," in the face of the protests of every female
|
|
lodger. A few months later quite a little flurry of
|
|
excitement ran through the street on the occasion of "The
|
|
Polk Street Open Air Festival," organized to celebrate the
|
|
introduction there of electric lights. The festival lasted
|
|
three days and was quite an affair. The street was garlanded
|
|
with yellow and white bunting; there were processions and
|
|
"floats" and brass bands. Marcus Schouler was in his
|
|
element during the whole time of the celebration. He was
|
|
one of the marshals of the parade, and was to be seen at
|
|
every hour of the day, wearing a borrowed high hat and
|
|
cotton gloves, and galloping a broken-down cab-horse over
|
|
the cobbles. He carried a baton covered with yellow and
|
|
white calico, with which he made furious passes and
|
|
gestures. His voice was soon reduced to a whisper by
|
|
continued shouting, and he raged and fretted over trifles
|
|
till he wore himself thin. McTeague was disgusted with him.
|
|
As often as Marcus passed the window of the flat the dentist
|
|
would mutter:
|
|
|
|
"Ah, you think you're smart, don't you?"
|
|
|
|
The result of the festival was the organizing of a body
|
|
known as the "Polk Street Improvement Club," of which Marcus
|
|
was elected secretary. McTeague and Trina often heard
|
|
of him in this capacity through Heise the harness-maker.
|
|
Marcus had evidently come to have political aspirations. It
|
|
appeared that he was gaining a reputation as a maker of
|
|
speeches, delivered with fiery emphasis, and occasionally
|
|
reprinted in the "Progress," the organ of the club--
|
|
"outraged constituencies," "opinions warped by personal
|
|
bias," "eyes blinded by party prejudice," etc.
|
|
|
|
Of her family, Trina heard every fortnight in letters from
|
|
her mother. The upholstery business which Mr. Sieppe had
|
|
bought was doing poorly, and Mrs. Sieppe bewailed the day
|
|
she had ever left B Street. Mr. Sieppe was losing money
|
|
every month. Owgooste, who was to have gone to school, had
|
|
been forced to go to work in "the store," picking waste.
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe was obliged to take a lodger or two. Affairs
|
|
were in a very bad way. Occasionally she spoke of Marcus.
|
|
Mr. Sieppe had not forgotten him despite his own troubles,
|
|
but still had an eye out for some one whom Marcus could "go
|
|
in with" on a ranch.
|
|
|
|
It was toward the end of this period of three years that
|
|
Trina and McTeague had their first serious quarrel. Trina
|
|
had talked so much about having a little house of their own
|
|
at some future day, that McTeague had at length come to
|
|
regard the affair as the end and object of all their labors.
|
|
For a long time they had had their eyes upon one house in
|
|
particular. It was situated on a cross street close by,
|
|
between Polk Street and the great avenue one block above,
|
|
and hardly a Sunday afternoon passed that Trina and McTeague
|
|
did not go and look at it. They stood for fully half an
|
|
hour upon the other side of the street, examining every
|
|
detail of its exterior, hazarding guesses as to the
|
|
arrangement of the rooms, commenting upon its immediate
|
|
neighborhood--which was rather sordid. The house was a
|
|
wooden two-story arrangement, built by a misguided
|
|
contractor in a sort of hideous Queen Anne style, all
|
|
scrolls and meaningless mill work, with a cheap imitation of
|
|
stained glass in the light over the door. There was a
|
|
microscopic front yard full of dusty calla-lilies. The
|
|
front door boasted an electric bell. But for the McTeagues
|
|
it was an ideal home. Their idea was to live in this little
|
|
house, the dentist retaining merely his office in the
|
|
flat. The two places were but around the corner from each
|
|
other, so that McTeague could lunch with his wife, as usual,
|
|
and could even keep his early morning appointments and
|
|
return to breakfast if he so desired.
|
|
|
|
However, the house was occupied. A Hungarian family lived
|
|
in it. The father kept a stationery and notion "bazaar"
|
|
next to Heise's harness-shop on Polk Street, while the
|
|
oldest son played a third violin in the orchestra of a
|
|
theatre. The family rented the house unfurnished for
|
|
thirty-five dollars, paying extra for the water.
|
|
|
|
But one Sunday as Trina and McTeague on their way home from
|
|
their usual walk turned into the cross street on which the
|
|
little house was situated, they became promptly aware of an
|
|
unwonted bustle going on upon the sidewalk in front of it.
|
|
A dray was back against the curb, an express wagon drove
|
|
away loaded with furniture; bedsteads, looking-glasses, and
|
|
washbowls littered the sidewalks. The Hungarian family were
|
|
moving out.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac, look!" gasped Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," muttered the dentist.
|
|
|
|
After that they spoke but little. For upwards of an hour
|
|
the two stood upon the sidewalk opposite, watching intently
|
|
all that went forward, absorbed, excited.
|
|
|
|
On the evening of the next day they returned and visited the
|
|
house, finding a great delight in going from room to room
|
|
and imagining themselves installed therein. Here would be
|
|
the bedroom, here the dining-room, here a charming little
|
|
parlor. As they came out upon the front steps once more they
|
|
met the owner, an enormous, red-faced fellow, so fat that
|
|
his walking seemed merely a certain movement of his feet by
|
|
which he pushed his stomach along in front of him. Trina
|
|
talked with him a few moments, but arrived at no
|
|
understanding, and the two went away after giving him their
|
|
address. At supper that night McTeague said:
|
|
|
|
"Huh--what do you think, Trina?"
|
|
|
|
Trina put her chin in the air, tilting back her heavy tiara
|
|
of swarthy hair.
|
|
|
|
"I am not so sure yet. Thirty-five dollars and the
|
|
water extra. I don't think we can afford it, Mac."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, pshaw!" growled the dentist, "sure we can."
|
|
|
|
"It isn't only that," said Trina, "but it'll cost so much to
|
|
make the change."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, you talk's though we were paupers. Ain't we got five
|
|
thousand dollars?"
|
|
|
|
Trina flushed on the instant, even to the lobes of her tiny
|
|
pale ears, and put her lips together.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Mac, you know I don't want you should talk like that.
|
|
That money's never, never to be touched."
|
|
|
|
"And you've been savun up a good deal, besides," went on
|
|
McTeague, exasperated at Trina's persistent economies. "How
|
|
much money have you got in that little brass match-safe in
|
|
the bottom of your trunk? Pretty near a hundred dollars, I
|
|
guess--ah, sure." He shut his eyes and nodded his great
|
|
head in a knowing way.
|
|
|
|
Trina had more than that in the brass match-safe in
|
|
question, but her instinct of hoarding had led her to keep
|
|
it a secret from her husband. Now she lied to him with
|
|
prompt fluency.
|
|
|
|
"A hundred dollars! What are you talking of, Mac? I've not
|
|
got fifty. I've not got THIRTY."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, let's take that little house," broke in McTeague. "We
|
|
got the chance now, and it may never come again. Come on,
|
|
Trina, shall we? Say, come on, shall we, huh?"
|
|
|
|
"We'd have to be awful saving if we did, Mac."
|
|
|
|
"Well, sure, I say let's take it."
|
|
|
|
"I don't know," said Trina, hesitating. "Wouldn't it be
|
|
lovely to have a house all to ourselves? But let's not
|
|
decide until to-morrow."
|
|
|
|
The next day the owner of the house called. Trina was out
|
|
at her morning's marketing and the dentist, who had no one
|
|
in the chair at the time, received him in the "Parlors."
|
|
Before he was well aware of it, McTeague had concluded the
|
|
bargain. The owner bewildered him with a world of phrases,
|
|
made him believe that it would be a great saving to
|
|
move into the little house, and finally offered it to him
|
|
"water free."
|
|
|
|
"All right, all right," said McTeague, "I'll take it."
|
|
|
|
The other immediately produced a paper.
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, suppose you sign for the first month's rent,
|
|
and we'll call it a bargain. That's business, you know,"
|
|
and McTeague, hesitating, signed.
|
|
|
|
"I'd like to have talked more with my wife about it first,"
|
|
he said, dubiously.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that's all right," answered the owner, easily. "I
|
|
guess if the head of the family wants a thing, that's
|
|
enough."
|
|
|
|
McTeague could not wait until lunch time to tell the news to
|
|
Trina. As soon as he heard her come in, he laid down the
|
|
plaster-of-paris mould he was making and went out into the
|
|
kitchen and found her chopping up onions.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Trina," he said, "we got that house. I've taken it."
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean?" she answered, quickly. The dentist told
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
"And you signed a paper for the first month's rent?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure. That's business, you know."
|
|
|
|
"Well, why did you DO it?" cried Trina. "You might have
|
|
asked ME something about it. Now, what have you done?
|
|
I was talking with Mrs. Ryer about that house while I was
|
|
out this morning, and she said the Hungarians moved out
|
|
because it was absolutely unhealthy; there's water been
|
|
standing in the basement for months. And she told me, too,"
|
|
Trina went on indignantly, "that she knew the owner, and she
|
|
was sure we could get the house for thirty if we'd bargain
|
|
for it. Now what have you gone and done? I hadn't made up
|
|
my mind about taking the house at all. And now I WON'T
|
|
take it, with the water in the basement and all."
|
|
|
|
"Well--well," stammered McTeague, helplessly, "we needn't go
|
|
in if it's unhealthy."
|
|
|
|
"But you've signed a PAPER," cried Trina, exasperated.
|
|
"You've got to pay that first month's rent, anyhow--to
|
|
forfeit it. Oh, you are so stupid! There's thirty-
|
|
five dollars just thrown away. I SHAN'T go into that
|
|
house; we won't move a FOOT out of here. I've changed
|
|
my mind about it, and there's water in the basement
|
|
besides."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I guess we can stand thirty-five dollars," mumbled
|
|
the dentist, "if we've got to."
|
|
|
|
"Thirty-five dollars just thrown out of the window," cried
|
|
Trina, her teeth clicking, every instinct of her parsimony
|
|
aroused. "Oh, you the thick-wittedest man that I ever knew.
|
|
Do you think we're millionaires? Oh, to think of losing
|
|
thirty-five dollars like that." Tears were in her eyes,
|
|
tears of grief as well as of anger. Never had McTeague seen
|
|
his little woman so aroused. Suddenly she rose to her feet
|
|
and slammed the chopping-bowl down upon the table. "Well,
|
|
I won't pay a nickel of it," she exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What, what?" stammered the dentist, taken all aback by
|
|
her outburst.
|
|
|
|
"I say that you will find that money, that thirty-five
|
|
dollars, yourself."
|
|
|
|
"Why--why----"
|
|
|
|
"It's your stupidity got us into this fix, and you'll be the
|
|
one that'll suffer by it."
|
|
|
|
"I can't do it, I WON'T do it. We'll--we'll share and
|
|
share alike. Why, you said--you told me you'd take the
|
|
house if the water was free."
|
|
|
|
"I NEVER did. I NEVER did. How can you stand there
|
|
and say such a thing?"
|
|
|
|
"You did tell me that," vociferated McTeague, beginning to
|
|
get angry in his turn.
|
|
|
|
"Mac, I didn't, and you know it. And what's more, I won't
|
|
pay a nickel. Mr. Heise pays his bill next week, it's
|
|
forty-three dollars, and you can just pay the thirty-five
|
|
out of that."
|
|
|
|
"Why, you got a whole hundred dollars saved up in your
|
|
match-safe," shouted the dentist, throwing out an arm with
|
|
an awkward gesture. "You pay half and I'll pay half, that's
|
|
only fair."
|
|
|
|
"No, no, NO," exclaimed Trina. "It's not a hundred
|
|
dollars. You won't touch it; you won't touch my money, I
|
|
tell you."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, how does it happen to be yours, I'd like to know?"
|
|
|
|
"It's mine! It's mine! It's mine!" cried Trina, her face
|
|
scarlet, her teeth clicking like the snap of a closing
|
|
purse.
|
|
|
|
"It ain't any more yours than it is mine."
|
|
|
|
"Every penny of it is mine."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, what a fine fix you'd get me into," growled the
|
|
dentist. "I've signed the paper with the owner; that's
|
|
business, you know, that's business, you know; and now you
|
|
go back on me. Suppose we'd taken the house, we'd 'a' shared
|
|
the rent, wouldn't we, just as we do here?"
|
|
|
|
Trina shrugged her shoulders with a great affectation of
|
|
indifference and began chopping the onions again.
|
|
|
|
"You settle it with the owner," she said. "It's your
|
|
affair; you've got the money." She pretended to assume a
|
|
certain calmness as though the matter was something that no
|
|
longer affected her. Her manner exasperated McTeague all
|
|
the more.
|
|
|
|
"No, I won't; no, I won't; I won't either," he shouted.
|
|
"I'll pay my half and he can come to you for the other
|
|
half." Trina put a hand over her ear to shut out his
|
|
clamor.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, don't try and be smart," cried McTeague. "Come, now,
|
|
yes or no, will you pay your half?"
|
|
|
|
"You heard what I said."
|
|
|
|
"Will you pay it?"
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"Miser!" shouted McTeague. "Miser! you're worse than old
|
|
Zerkow. All right, all right, keep your money. I'll pay
|
|
the whole thirty-five. I'd rather lose it than be such a
|
|
miser as you."
|
|
|
|
"Haven't you got anything to do," returned Trina, "instead
|
|
of staying here and abusing me?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, for the last time, will you help me out?"
|
|
Trina cut the heads of a fresh bunch of onions and gave no
|
|
answer.
|
|
|
|
"Huh? will you?"
|
|
|
|
"I'd like to have my kitchen to myself, please," she said in
|
|
a mincing way, irritating to a last degree. The
|
|
dentist stamped out of the room, banging the door behind
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
For nearly a week the breach between them remained unhealed.
|
|
Trina only spoke to the dentist in monosyllables, while he,
|
|
exasperated at her calmness and frigid reserve, sulked in
|
|
his "Dental Parlors," muttering terrible things beneath his
|
|
mustache, or finding solace in his concertina, playing his
|
|
six lugubrious airs over and over again, or swearing
|
|
frightful oaths at his canary. When Heise paid his bill,
|
|
McTeague, in a fury, sent the amount to the owner of the
|
|
little house.
|
|
|
|
There was no formal reconciliation between the dentist and
|
|
his little woman. Their relations readjusted themselves
|
|
inevitably. By the end of the week they were as amicable as
|
|
ever, but it was long before they spoke of the little house
|
|
again. Nor did they ever revisit it of a Sunday afternoon.
|
|
A month or so later the Ryers told them that the owner
|
|
himself had moved in. The McTeagues never occupied that
|
|
little house.
|
|
|
|
But Trina suffered a reaction after the quarrel. She began
|
|
to be sorry she had refused to help her husband, sorry she
|
|
had brought matters to such an issue. One afternoon as she
|
|
was at work on the Noah's ark animals, she surprised herself
|
|
crying over the affair. She loved her "old bear" too much
|
|
to do him an injustice, and perhaps, after all, she had been
|
|
in the wrong. Then it occurred to her how pretty it would be
|
|
to come up behind him unexpectedly, and slip the money,
|
|
thirty-five dollars, into his hand, and pull his huge head
|
|
down to her and kiss his bald spot as she used to do in the
|
|
days before they were married.
|
|
|
|
Then she hesitated, pausing in her work, her knife dropping
|
|
into her lap, a half-whittled figure between her fingers.
|
|
If not thirty-five dollars, then at least fifteen or
|
|
sixteen, her share of it. But a feeling of reluctance, a
|
|
sudden revolt against this intended generosity, arose in
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," she said to herself. "I'll give him ten dollars.
|
|
I'll tell him it's all I can afford. It IS all I can
|
|
afford."
|
|
|
|
She hastened to finish the figure of the animal she was then
|
|
at work upon, putting in the ears and tail with a drop
|
|
of glue, and tossing it into the basket at her side. Then
|
|
she rose and went into the bedroom and opened her trunk,
|
|
taking the key from under a corner of the carpet where she
|
|
kept it hid.
|
|
|
|
At the very bottom of her trunk, under her bridal dress, she
|
|
kept her savings. It was all in change--half dollars and
|
|
dollars for the most part, with here and there a gold piece.
|
|
Long since the little brass match-box had overflowed. Trina
|
|
kept the surplus in a chamois-skin sack she had made from an
|
|
old chest protector. Just now, yielding to an impulse which
|
|
often seized her, she drew out the match-box and the chamois
|
|
sack, and emptying the contents on the bed, counted them
|
|
carefully. It came to one hundred and sixty-five dollars,
|
|
all told. She counted it and recounted it and made little
|
|
piles of it, and rubbed the gold pieces between the folds of
|
|
her apron until they shone.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, yes, ten dollars is all I can afford to give Mac," said
|
|
Trina, "and even then, think of it, ten dollars--it will be
|
|
four or five months before I can save that again. But, dear
|
|
old Mac, I know it would make him feel glad, and perhaps,"
|
|
she added, suddenly taken with an idea, "perhaps Mac will
|
|
refuse to take it."
|
|
|
|
She took a ten-dollar piece from the heap and put the rest
|
|
away. Then she paused:
|
|
|
|
"No, not the gold piece," she said to herself. "It's too
|
|
pretty. He can have the silver." She made the change and
|
|
counted out ten silver dollars into her palm. But what a
|
|
difference it made in the appearance and weight of the
|
|
little chamois bag! The bag was shrunken and withered, long
|
|
wrinkles appeared running downward from the draw-string. It
|
|
was a lamentable sight. Trina looked longingly at the ten
|
|
broad pieces in her hand. Then suddenly all her intuitive
|
|
desire of saving, her instinct of hoarding, her love of
|
|
money for the money's sake, rose strong within her.
|
|
|
|
"No, no, no," she said. "I can't do it. It may be mean,
|
|
but I can't help it. It's stronger than I." She returned
|
|
the money to the bag and locked it and the brass match-box
|
|
in her trunk, turning the key with a long breath of
|
|
satisfaction.
|
|
|
|
She was a little troubled, however, as she went back
|
|
into the sitting-room and took up her work.
|
|
|
|
"I didn't use to be so stingy," she told herself. "Since I
|
|
won in the lottery I've become a regular little miser. It's
|
|
growing on me, but never mind, it's a good fault, and,
|
|
anyhow, I can't help it."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 11
|
|
|
|
|
|
On that particular morning the McTeagues had risen a half
|
|
hour earlier than usual and taken a hurried breakfast in the
|
|
kitchen on the deal table with its oilcloth cover. Trina
|
|
was house-cleaning that week and had a presentiment of a
|
|
hard day's work ahead of her, while McTeague remembered a
|
|
seven o'clock appointment with a little German shoemaker.
|
|
|
|
At about eight o'clock, when the dentist had been in his
|
|
office for over an hour, Trina descended upon the bedroom, a
|
|
towel about her head and the roller-sweeper in her hand.
|
|
She covered the bureau and sewing machine with sheets, and
|
|
unhooked the chenille portieres between the bedroom and the
|
|
sitting-room. As she was tying the Nottingham lace curtains
|
|
at the window into great knots, she saw old Miss Baker on
|
|
the opposite sidewalk in the street below, and raising the
|
|
sash called down to her.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it's you, Mrs. McTeague," cried the retired dressmaker,
|
|
facing about, her head in the air. Then a long conversation
|
|
was begun, Trina, her arms folded under her breast, her
|
|
elbows resting on the window ledge, willing to be idle for a
|
|
moment; old Miss Baker, her market-basket on her arm, her
|
|
hands wrapped in the ends of her worsted shawl against
|
|
the cold of the early morning. They exchanged phrases,
|
|
calling to each other from window to curb, their breath
|
|
coming from their lips in faint puffs of vapor, their voices
|
|
shrill, and raised to dominate the clamor of the waking
|
|
street. The newsboys had made their appearance on the
|
|
street, together with the day laborers. The cable cars had
|
|
begun to fill up; all along the street could be seen the
|
|
shopkeepers taking down their shutters; some were still
|
|
breakfasting. Now and then a waiter from one of the cheap
|
|
restaurants crossed from one sidewalk to another, balancing
|
|
on one palm a tray covered with a napkin.
|
|
|
|
"Aren't you out pretty early this morning, Miss Baker?"
|
|
called Trina.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," answered the other. "I'm always up at half-past
|
|
six, but I don't always get out so soon. I wanted to get a
|
|
nice head of cabbage and some lentils for a soup, and if you
|
|
don't go to market early, the restaurants get all the best."
|
|
|
|
"And you've been to market already, Miss Baker?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, my, yes; and I got a fish--a sole--see." She drew the
|
|
sole in question from her basket.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, the lovely sole!" exclaimed Trina.
|
|
|
|
"I got this one at Spadella's; he always has good fish on
|
|
Friday. How is the doctor, Mrs. McTeague?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, Mac is always well, thank you, Miss Baker."
|
|
|
|
"You know, Mrs. Ryer told me," cried the little dressmaker,
|
|
moving forward a step out of the way of a "glass-put-in"
|
|
man, "that Doctor McTeague pulled a tooth of that Catholic
|
|
priest, Father--oh, I forget his name--anyhow, he pulled his
|
|
tooth with his fingers. Was that true, Mrs. McTeague?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, of course. Mac does that almost all the time now,
|
|
'specially with front teeth. He's got a regular reputation
|
|
for it. He says it's brought him more patients than even
|
|
the sign I gave him," she added, pointing to the big golden
|
|
molar projecting from the office window.
|
|
|
|
"With his fingers! Now, think of that," exclaimed Miss
|
|
Baker, wagging her head. "Isn't he that strong! It's just
|
|
wonderful. Cleaning house to-day?" she inquired,
|
|
glancing at Trina's towelled head.
|
|
|
|
"Um hum," answered Trina. "Maria Macapa's coming in to help
|
|
pretty soon."
|
|
|
|
At the mention of Maria's name the little old dressmaker
|
|
suddenly uttered an exclamation.
|
|
|
|
"Well, if I'm not here talking to you and forgetting
|
|
something I was just dying to tell you. Mrs. McTeague, what
|
|
ever in the world do you suppose? Maria and old Zerkow,
|
|
that red-headed Polish Jew, the rag-bottles-sacks man, you
|
|
know, they're going to be married."
|
|
|
|
"No!" cried Trina, in blank amazement. "You don't mean it."
|
|
|
|
"Of course I do. Isn't it the funniest thing you ever heard
|
|
of?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, tell me all about it," said Trina, leaning eagerly from
|
|
the window. Miss Baker crossed the street and stood just
|
|
beneath her.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Maria came to me last night and wanted me to make her
|
|
a new gown, said she wanted something gay, like what the
|
|
girls at the candy store wear when they go out with their
|
|
young men. I couldn't tell what had got into the girl,
|
|
until finally she told me she wanted something to get
|
|
married in, and that Zerkow had asked her to marry him, and
|
|
that she was going to do it. Poor Maria! I guess it's the
|
|
first and only offer she ever received, and it's just turned
|
|
her head."
|
|
|
|
"But what DO those two see in each other?" cried Trina.
|
|
"Zerkow is a horror, he's an old man, and his hair is red
|
|
and his voice is gone, and then he's a Jew, isn't he?"
|
|
|
|
"I know, I know; but it's Maria's only chance for a husband,
|
|
and she don't mean to let it pass. You know she isn't quite
|
|
right in her head, anyhow. I'm awfully sorry for poor
|
|
Maria. But I can't see what Zerkow wants to marry her
|
|
for. It's not possible that he's in love with Maria, it's
|
|
out of the question. Maria hasn't a sou, either, and I'm
|
|
just positive that Zerkow has lots of money."
|
|
|
|
"I'll bet I know why," exclaimed Trina, with sudden
|
|
conviction; "yes, I know just why. See here, Miss Baker,
|
|
you know how crazy old Zerkow is after money and gold
|
|
and those sort of things."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I know; but you know Maria hasn't----"
|
|
|
|
"Now, just listen. You've heard Maria tell about that
|
|
wonderful service of gold dishes she says her folks used to
|
|
own in Central America; she's crazy on that subject, don't
|
|
you know. She's all right on everything else, but just
|
|
start her on that service of gold plate and she'll talk you
|
|
deaf. She can describe it just as though she saw it, and
|
|
she can make you see it, too, almost. Now, you see, Maria
|
|
and Zerkow have known each other pretty well. Maria goes to
|
|
him every two weeks or so to sell him junk; they got
|
|
acquainted that way, and I know Maria's been dropping in to
|
|
see him pretty often this last year, and sometimes he comes
|
|
here to see her. He's made Maria tell him the story of that
|
|
plate over and over and over again, and Maria does it and is
|
|
glad to, because he's the only one that believes it. Now
|
|
he's going to marry her just so's he can hear that story
|
|
every day, every hour. He's pretty near as crazy on the
|
|
subject as Maria is. They're a pair for you, aren't they?
|
|
Both crazy over a lot of gold dishes that never existed.
|
|
Perhaps Maria'll marry him because it's her only chance to
|
|
get a husband, but I'm sure it's more for the reason that
|
|
she's got some one to talk to now who believes her story.
|
|
Don't you think I'm right?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, I guess you're right," admitted Miss Baker.
|
|
|
|
"But it's a queer match anyway you put it," said Trina,
|
|
musingly.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, you may well say that," returned the other, nodding her
|
|
head. There was a silence. For a long moment the dentist's
|
|
wife and the retired dressmaker, the one at the window, the
|
|
other on the sidewalk, remained lost in thought, wondering
|
|
over the strangeness of the affair.
|
|
|
|
But suddenly there was a diversion. Alexander, Marcus
|
|
Schouler's Irish setter, whom his master had long since
|
|
allowed the liberty of running untrammelled about the
|
|
neighborhood, turned the corner briskly and came trotting
|
|
along the sidewalk where Miss Baker stood. At the same
|
|
moment the Scotch collie who had at one time belonged
|
|
to the branch post-office issued from the side door of a
|
|
house not fifty feet away. In an instant the two enemies
|
|
had recognized each other. They halted abruptly, their fore
|
|
feet planted rigidly. Trina uttered a little cry.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, look out, Miss Baker. Those two dogs hate each other
|
|
just like humans. You best look out. They'll fight sure."
|
|
Miss Baker sought safety in a nearby vestibule, whence she
|
|
peered forth at the scene, very interested and curious.
|
|
Maria Macapa's head thrust itself from one of the top-story
|
|
windows of the flat, with a shrill cry. Even McTeague's
|
|
huge form appeared above the half curtains of the "Parlor"
|
|
windows, while over his shoulder could be seen the face of
|
|
the "patient," a napkin tucked in his collar, the rubber dam
|
|
depending from his mouth. All the flat knew of the feud
|
|
between the dogs, but never before had the pair been brought
|
|
face to face.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, the collie and the setter had drawn near to each
|
|
other; five feet apart they paused as if by mutual consent.
|
|
The collie turned sidewise to the setter; the setter
|
|
instantly wheeled himself flank on to the collie. Their
|
|
tails rose and stiffened, they raised their lips over their
|
|
long white fangs, the napes of their necks bristled, and
|
|
they showed each other the vicious whites of their eyes,
|
|
while they drew in their breaths with prolonged and rasping
|
|
snarls. Each dog seemed to be the personification of fury
|
|
and unsatisfied hate. They began to circle about each other
|
|
with infinite slowness, walking stiffed-legged and upon the
|
|
very points of their feet. Then they wheeled about and
|
|
began to circle in the opposite direction. Twice they
|
|
repeated this motion, their snarls growing louder. But
|
|
still they did not come together, and the distance of five
|
|
feet between them was maintained with an almost mathematical
|
|
precision. It was magnificent, but it was not war. Then
|
|
the setter, pausing in his walk, turned his head slowly from
|
|
his enemy. The collie sniffed the air and pretended an
|
|
interest in an old shoe lying in the gutter. Gradually and
|
|
with all the dignity of monarchs they moved away from each
|
|
other. Alexander stalked back to the corner of the street.
|
|
The collie paced toward the side gate whence he had
|
|
issued, affecting to remember something of great importance.
|
|
They disappeared. Once out of sight of one another they
|
|
began to bark furiously.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I NEVER!" exclaimed Trina in great disgust. "The
|
|
way those two dogs have been carrying on you'd 'a' thought
|
|
they would 'a' just torn each other to pieces when they had
|
|
the chance, and here I'm wasting the whole morning----" she
|
|
closed her window with a bang.
|
|
|
|
"Sick 'im, sick 'im," called Maria Macapa, in a vain attempt
|
|
to promote a fight.
|
|
|
|
Old Miss Baker came out of the vestibule, pursing her lips,
|
|
quite put out at the fiasco. "And after all that fuss," she
|
|
said to herself aggrievedly.
|
|
|
|
The little dressmaker bought an envelope of nasturtium seeds
|
|
at the florist's, and returned to her tiny room in the flat.
|
|
But as she slowly mounted the first flight of steps she
|
|
suddenly came face to face with Old Grannis, who was coming
|
|
down. It was between eight and nine, and he was on his way
|
|
to his little dog hospital, no doubt. Instantly Miss Baker
|
|
was seized with trepidation, her curious little false curls
|
|
shook, a faint--a very faint--flush came into her withered
|
|
cheeks, and her heart beat so violently under the worsted
|
|
shawl that she felt obliged to shift the market-basket to
|
|
her other arm and put out her free hand to steady herself
|
|
against the rail.
|
|
|
|
On his part, Old Grannis was instantly overwhelmed with
|
|
confusion. His awkwardness seemed to paralyze his limbs,
|
|
his lips twitched and turned dry, his hand went tremblingly
|
|
to his chin. But what added to Miss Baker's miserable
|
|
embarrassment on this occasion was the fact that the old
|
|
Englishman should meet her thus, carrying a sordid market-
|
|
basket full of sordid fish and cabbage. It seemed as if a
|
|
malicious fate persisted in bringing the two old people face
|
|
to face at the most inopportune moments.
|
|
|
|
Just now, however, a veritable catastrophe occurred. The
|
|
little old dressmaker changed her basket to her other arm at
|
|
precisely the wrong moment, and Old Grannis, hastening to
|
|
pass, removing his hat in a hurried salutation, struck it
|
|
with his fore arm, knocking it from her grasp, and
|
|
sending it rolling and bumping down the stairs. The sole
|
|
fell flat upon the first landing; the lentils scattered
|
|
themselves over the entire flight; while the cabbage,
|
|
leaping from step to step, thundered down the incline and
|
|
brought up against the street door with a shock that
|
|
reverberated through the entire building.
|
|
|
|
The little retired dressmaker, horribly vexed, nervous and
|
|
embarrassed, was hard put to it to keep back the tears. Old
|
|
Grannis stood for a moment with averted eyes, murmuring:
|
|
"Oh, I'm so sorry, I'm so sorry. I--I really--I beg your
|
|
pardon, really--really."
|
|
|
|
Marcus Schouler, coming down stairs from his room, saved the
|
|
situation.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, people," he cried. "By damn! you've upset your
|
|
basket--you have, for a fact. Here, let's pick um up." He
|
|
and Old Grannis went up and down the flight, gathering up
|
|
the fish, the lentils, and the sadly battered cabbage.
|
|
Marcus was raging over the pusillanimity of Alexander, of
|
|
which Maria had just told him.
|
|
|
|
"I'll cut him in two--with the whip," he shouted. "I will,
|
|
I will, I say I will, for a fact. He wouldn't fight, hey?
|
|
I'll give um all the fight he wants, nasty, mangy cur. If
|
|
he won't fight he won't eat. I'm going to get the butcher's
|
|
bull pup and I'll put um both in a bag and shake um up. I
|
|
will, for a fact, and I guess Alec will fight. Come along,
|
|
Mister Grannis," and he took the old Englishman away.
|
|
|
|
Little Miss Baker hastened to her room and locked herself
|
|
in. She was excited and upset during all the rest of the
|
|
day, and listened eagerly for Old Grannis's return that
|
|
evening. He went instantly to work binding up "The Breeder
|
|
and Sportsman," and back numbers of the "Nation." She heard
|
|
him softly draw his chair and the table on which he had
|
|
placed his little binding apparatus close to the wall. At
|
|
once she did the same, brewing herself a cup of tea. All
|
|
through that evening the two old people "kept company" with
|
|
each other, after their own peculiar fashion. "Setting out
|
|
with each other" Miss Baker had begun to call it. That they
|
|
had been presented, that they had even been forced to
|
|
talk together, had made no change in their relative
|
|
positions. Almost immediately they had fallen back into
|
|
their old ways again, quite unable to master their timidity,
|
|
to overcome the stifling embarrassment that seized upon them
|
|
when in each other's presence. It was a sort of hypnotism,
|
|
a thing stronger than themselves. But they were not
|
|
altogether dissatisfied with the way things had come to be.
|
|
It was their little romance, their last, and they were
|
|
living through it with supreme enjoyment and calm
|
|
contentment.
|
|
|
|
Marcus Schouler still occupied his old room on the floor
|
|
above the McTeagues. They saw but little of him, however.
|
|
At long intervals the dentist or his wife met him on the
|
|
stairs of the flat. Sometimes he would stop and talk with
|
|
Trina, inquiring after the Sieppes, asking her if Mr. Sieppe
|
|
had yet heard of any one with whom he, Marcus, could "go in
|
|
with on a ranch." McTeague, Marcus merely nodded to. Never
|
|
had the quarrel between the two men been completely patched
|
|
up. It did not seem possible to the dentist now that Marcus
|
|
had ever been his "pal," that they had ever taken long walks
|
|
together. He was sorry that he had treated Marcus gratis
|
|
for an ulcerated tooth, while Marcus daily recalled the fact
|
|
that he had given up his "girl" to his friend--the girl who
|
|
had won a fortune--as the great mistake of his life. Only
|
|
once since the wedding had he called upon Trina, at a time
|
|
when he knew McTeague would be out. Trina had shown him
|
|
through the rooms and had told him, innocently enough, how
|
|
gay was their life there. Marcus had come away fairly sick
|
|
with envy; his rancor against the dentist--and against
|
|
himself, for that matter--knew no bounds. "And you might
|
|
'a' had it all yourself, Marcus Schouler," he muttered to
|
|
himself on the stairs. "You mushhead, you damn fool!"
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, Marcus was becoming involved in the politics of
|
|
his ward. As secretary of the Polk Street Improvement Club
|
|
--which soon developed into quite an affair and began to
|
|
assume the proportions of a Republican political machine--he
|
|
found he could make a little, a very little more than enough
|
|
to live on. At once he had given up his position as Old
|
|
Grannis's assistant in the dog hospital. Marcus felt
|
|
that he needed a wider sphere. He had his eye upon a place
|
|
connected with the city pound. When the great railroad
|
|
strike occurred, he promptly got himself engaged as deputy-
|
|
sheriff, and spent a memorable week in Sacramento, where he
|
|
involved himself in more than one terrible melee with the
|
|
strikers. Marcus had that quickness of temper and
|
|
passionate readiness to take offence which passes among his
|
|
class for bravery. But whatever were his motives, his
|
|
promptness to face danger could not for a moment be doubted.
|
|
After the strike he returned to Polk Street, and throwing
|
|
himself into the Improvement Club, heart, soul, and body,
|
|
soon became one of its ruling spirits. In a certain local
|
|
election, where a huge paving contract was at stake, the
|
|
club made itself felt in the ward, and Marcus so managed his
|
|
cards and pulled his wires that, at the end of the matter,
|
|
he found himself some four hundred dollars to the good.
|
|
|
|
When McTeague came out of his "Parlors" at noon of the day
|
|
upon which Trina had heard the news of Maria Macapa's
|
|
intended marriage, he found Trina burning coffee on a shovel
|
|
in the sitting-room. Try as she would, Trina could never
|
|
quite eradicate from their rooms a certain faint and
|
|
indefinable odor, particularly offensive to her. The smell
|
|
of the photographer's chemicals persisted in spite of all
|
|
Trina could do to combat it. She burnt pastilles and
|
|
Chinese punk, and even, as now, coffee on a shovel, all to
|
|
no purpose. Indeed, the only drawback to their delightful
|
|
home was the general unpleasant smell that pervaded it--a
|
|
smell that arose partly from the photographer's chemicals,
|
|
partly from the cooking in the little kitchen, and partly
|
|
from the ether and creosote of the dentist's "Parlors."
|
|
|
|
As McTeague came in to lunch on this occasion, he found the
|
|
table already laid, a red cloth figured with white flowers
|
|
was spread, and as he took his seat his wife put down the
|
|
shovel on a chair and brought in the stewed codfish and the
|
|
pot of chocolate. As he tucked his napkin into his enormous
|
|
collar, McTeague looked vaguely about the room, rolling his
|
|
eyes.
|
|
|
|
During the three years of their married life the McTeagues
|
|
had made but few additions to their furniture, Trina
|
|
declaring that they could not afford it. The sitting-
|
|
room could boast of but three new ornaments. Over the
|
|
melodeon hung their marriage certificate in a black frame.
|
|
It was balanced upon one side by Trina's wedding bouquet
|
|
under a glass case, preserved by some fearful unknown
|
|
process, and upon the other by the photograph of Trina and
|
|
the dentist in their wedding finery. This latter picture
|
|
was quite an affair, and had been taken immediately after
|
|
the wedding, while McTeague's broadcloth was still new, and
|
|
before Trina's silks and veil had lost their stiffness. It
|
|
represented Trina, her veil thrown back, sitting very
|
|
straight in a rep armchair, her elbows well in at her sides,
|
|
holding her bouquet of cut flowers directly before her. The
|
|
dentist stood at her side, one hand on her shoulder, the
|
|
other thrust into the breast of his "Prince Albert," his
|
|
chin in the air, his eyes to one side, his left foot forward
|
|
in the attitude of a statue of a Secretary of State.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Trina," said McTeague, his mouth full of codfish,
|
|
"Heise looked in on me this morning. He says 'What's the
|
|
matter with a basket picnic over at Schuetzen Park next
|
|
Tuesday?' You know the paper-hangers are going to be in the
|
|
"Parlors" all that day, so I'll have a holiday. That's what
|
|
made Heise think of it. Heise says he'll get the Ryers to go
|
|
too. It's the anniversary of their wedding day. We'll ask
|
|
Selina to go; she can meet us on the other side. Come on,
|
|
let's go, huh, will you?"
|
|
|
|
Trina still had her mania for family picnics, which had been
|
|
one of the Sieppes most cherished customs; but now there
|
|
were other considerations.
|
|
|
|
"I don't know as we can afford it this month, Mac," she
|
|
said, pouring the chocolate. "I got to pay the gas bill
|
|
next week, and there's the papering of your office to be
|
|
paid for some time."
|
|
|
|
"I know, I know," answered her husband. "But I got a new
|
|
patient this week, had two molars and an upper incisor
|
|
filled at the very first sitting, and he's going to bring
|
|
his children round. He's a barber on the next block."
|
|
|
|
"Well you pay half, then," said Trina. "It'll cost three or
|
|
four dollars at the very least; and mind, the Heises pay
|
|
their own fare both ways, Mac, and everybody gets their
|
|
OWN lunch. Yes," she added, after a pause, "I'll write
|
|
and have Selina join us. I haven't seen Selina in months.
|
|
I guess I'll have to put up a lunch for her, though,"
|
|
admitted Trina, "the way we did last time, because she lives
|
|
in a boarding-house now, and they make a fuss about putting
|
|
up a lunch."
|
|
|
|
They could count on pleasant weather at this time of the
|
|
year--it was May--and that particular Tuesday was all that
|
|
could be desired. The party assembled at the ferry slip at
|
|
nine o'clock, laden with baskets. The McTeagues came last
|
|
of all; Ryer and his wife had already boarded the boat.
|
|
They met the Heises in the waiting-room.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, Doctor," cried the harness-maker as the McTeagues
|
|
came up. "This is what you'd call an old folks' picnic, all
|
|
married people this time."
|
|
|
|
The party foregathered on the upper deck as the boat
|
|
started, and sat down to listen to the band of Italian
|
|
musicians who were playing outside this morning because of
|
|
the fineness of the weather.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, we're going to have lots of fun," cried Trina. "If
|
|
it's anything I do love it's a picnic. Do you remember our
|
|
first picnic, Mac?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," replied the dentist; "we had a Gotha truffle."
|
|
|
|
"And August lost his steamboat, put in Trina, "and papa
|
|
smacked him. I remember it just as well."
|
|
|
|
"Why, look there," said Mrs. Heise, nodding at a figure
|
|
coming up the companion-way. "Ain't that Mr. Schouler?"
|
|
|
|
It was Marcus, sure enough. As he caught sight of the party
|
|
he gaped at them a moment in blank astonishment, and then
|
|
ran up, his eyes wide.
|
|
|
|
"Well, by damn!" he exclaimed, excitedly. "What's up?
|
|
Where you all going, anyhow? Say, ain't ut queer we should
|
|
all run up against each other like this?" He made great
|
|
sweeping bows to the three women, and shook hands with
|
|
"Cousin Trina," adding, as he turned to the men of the
|
|
party, "Glad to see you, Mister Heise. How do, Mister
|
|
Ryer?" The dentist, who had formulated some sort of
|
|
reserved greeting, he ignored completely. McTeague
|
|
settled himself in his seat, growling inarticulately
|
|
behind his mustache.
|
|
|
|
"Say, say, what's all up, anyhow?" cried Marcus again.
|
|
|
|
"It's a picnic," exclaimed the three women, all speaking at
|
|
once; and Trina added, "We're going over to the same old
|
|
Schuetzen Park again. But you're all fixed up yourself,
|
|
Cousin Mark; you look as though you were going somewhere
|
|
yourself."
|
|
|
|
In fact, Marcus was dressed with great care. He wore a new
|
|
pair of slate-blue trousers, a black "cutaway," and a white
|
|
lawn "tie" (for him the symbol of the height of elegance).
|
|
He carried also his cane, a thin wand of ebony with a gold
|
|
head, presented to him by the Improvement Club in
|
|
"recognition of services."
|
|
|
|
"That's right, that's right," said Marcus, with a grin.
|
|
"I'm takun a holiday myself to-day. I had a bit of business
|
|
to do over at Oakland, an' I thought I'd go up to B Street
|
|
afterward and see Selina. I haven't called on----"
|
|
|
|
But the party uttered an exclamation.
|
|
|
|
"Why, Selina is going with us."
|
|
|
|
"She's going to meet us at the Schuetzen Park station"
|
|
explained Trina.
|
|
|
|
Marcus's business in Oakland was a fiction. He was crossing
|
|
the bay that morning solely to see Selina. Marcus had
|
|
"taken up with" Selina a little after Trina had married, and
|
|
had been "rushing" her ever since, dazzled and attracted by
|
|
her accomplishments, for which he pretended a great respect.
|
|
At the prospect of missing Selina on this occasion, he was
|
|
genuinely disappointed. His vexation at once assumed the
|
|
form of exasperation against McTeague. It was all the
|
|
dentist's fault. Ah, McTeague was coming between him and
|
|
Selina now as he had come between him and Trina. Best look
|
|
out, by damn! how he monkeyed with him now. Instantly his
|
|
face flamed and he glanced over furiously at the dentist,
|
|
who, catching his eye, began again to mutter behind his
|
|
mustache.
|
|
|
|
"Well, say," began Mrs. Ryer, with some hesitation, looking
|
|
to Ryer for approval, "why can't Marcus come along with us?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, of course," exclaimed Mrs. Heise, disregarding her
|
|
husband's vigorous nudges. "I guess we got lunch
|
|
enough to go round, all right; don't you say so, Mrs.
|
|
McTeague?"
|
|
|
|
Thus appealed to, Trina could only concur.
|
|
|
|
"Why, of course, Cousin Mark," she said; "of course, come
|
|
along with us if you want to."
|
|
|
|
"Why, you bet I will," cried Marcus, enthusiastic in an
|
|
instant. "Say, this is outa sight; it is, for a fact; a
|
|
picnic--ah, sure--and we'll meet Selina at the station."
|
|
|
|
Just as the boat was passing Goat Island, the harness-maker
|
|
proposed that the men of the party should go down to the bar
|
|
on the lower deck and shake for the drinks. The idea had an
|
|
immediate success.
|
|
|
|
"Have to see you on that," said Ryer.
|
|
|
|
"By damn, we'll have a drink! Yes, sir, we will, for a
|
|
fact."
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure, drinks, that's the word."
|
|
|
|
At the bar Heise and Ryer ordered cocktails, Marcus called
|
|
for a "creme Yvette" in order to astonish the others. The
|
|
dentist spoke for a glass of beer.
|
|
|
|
"Say, look here," suddenly exclaimed Heise as they took
|
|
their glasses. "Look here, you fellahs," he had turned to
|
|
Marcus and the dentist. "You two fellahs have had a grouch
|
|
at each other for the last year or so; now what's the matter
|
|
with your shaking hands and calling quits?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague was at once overcome with a great feeling of
|
|
magnanimity. He put out his great hand.
|
|
|
|
"I got nothing against Marcus," he growled.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I don't care if I shake," admitted Marcus, a little
|
|
shamefacedly, as their palms touched. "I guess that's all
|
|
right."
|
|
|
|
"That's the idea," exclaimed Heise, delighted at his
|
|
success. "Come on, boys, now let's drink." Their elbows
|
|
crooked and they drank silently.
|
|
|
|
Their picnic that day was very jolly. Nothing had changed
|
|
at Schuetzen Park since the day of that other memorable
|
|
Sieppe picnic four years previous. After lunch the men took
|
|
themselves off to the rifle range, while Selina, Trina, and
|
|
the other two women put away the dishes. An hour later the
|
|
men joined them in great spirits. Ryer had won the
|
|
impromptu match which they had arranged, making quite a
|
|
wonderful score, which included three clean bulls' eyes,
|
|
while McTeague had not been able even to hit the target
|
|
itself.
|
|
|
|
Their shooting match had awakened a spirit of rivalry in the
|
|
men, and the rest of the afternoon was passed in athletic
|
|
exercises between them. The women sat on the slope of the
|
|
grass, their hats and gloves laid aside, watching the men as
|
|
they strove together. Aroused by the little feminine cries
|
|
of wonder and the clapping of their ungloved palms, these
|
|
latter began to show off at once. They took off their coats
|
|
and vests, even their neckties and collars, and worked
|
|
themselves into a lather of perspiration for the sake of
|
|
making an impression on their wives. They ran hundred-yard
|
|
sprints on the cinder path and executed clumsy feats on the
|
|
rings and on the parallel bars. They even found a huge
|
|
round stone on the beach and "put the shot" for a while. As
|
|
long as it was a question of agility, Marcus was easily the
|
|
best of the four; but the dentist's enormous strength, his
|
|
crude, untutored brute force, was a matter of wonder for the
|
|
entire party. McTeague cracked English walnuts--taken from
|
|
the lunch baskets--in the hollow of his arm, and tossed the
|
|
round stone a full five feet beyond their best mark. Heise
|
|
believed himself to be particularly strong in the wrists,
|
|
but the dentist, using but one hand, twisted a cane out of
|
|
Heise's two with a wrench that all but sprained the harness-
|
|
maker's arm. Then the dentist raised weights and chinned
|
|
himself on the rings till they thought he would never tire.
|
|
|
|
His great success quite turned his head; he strutted back
|
|
and forth in front of the women, his chest thrown out, and
|
|
his great mouth perpetually expanded in a triumphant grin.
|
|
As he felt his strength more and more, he began to abuse it;
|
|
he domineered over the others, gripping suddenly at their
|
|
arms till they squirmed with pain, and slapping Marcus on
|
|
the back so that he gasped and gagged for breath. The
|
|
childish vanity of the great fellow was as undisguised as
|
|
that of a schoolboy. He began to tell of wonderful feats of
|
|
strength he had accomplished when he was a young man. Why,
|
|
at one time he had knocked down a half-grown heifer with
|
|
a blow of his fist between the eyes, sure, and the
|
|
heifer had just stiffened out and trembled all over and died
|
|
without getting up.
|
|
|
|
McTeague told this story again, and yet again. All through
|
|
the afternoon he could be overheard relating the wonder to
|
|
any one who would listen, exaggerating the effect of his
|
|
blow, inventing terrific details. Why, the heifer had just
|
|
frothed at the mouth, and his eyes had rolled up--ah, sure,
|
|
his eyes rolled up just like that--and the butcher had said
|
|
his skull was all mashed in--just all mashed in, sure,
|
|
that's the word--just as if from a sledge-hammer.
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding his reconciliation with the dentist on the
|
|
boat, Marcus's gorge rose within him at McTeague's boasting
|
|
swagger. When McTeague had slapped him on the back, Marcus
|
|
had retired to some little distance while he recovered his
|
|
breath, and glared at the dentist fiercely as he strode up
|
|
and down, glorying in the admiring glances of the women.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, one-horse dentist," he muttered between his teeth.
|
|
"Ah, zinc-plugger, cow-killer, I'd like to show you once,
|
|
you overgrown mucker, you--you--COW-KILLER!"
|
|
|
|
When he rejoined the group, he found them preparing for a
|
|
wrestling bout.
|
|
|
|
"I tell you what," said Heise, "we'll have a tournament.
|
|
Marcus and I will rastle, and Doc and Ryer, and then the
|
|
winners will rastle each other."
|
|
|
|
The women clapped their hands excitedly. This would be
|
|
exciting. Trina cried:
|
|
|
|
"Better let me hold your money, Mac, and your keys, so as
|
|
you won't lose them out of your pockets." The men gave
|
|
their valuables into the keeping of their wives and promptly
|
|
set to work.
|
|
|
|
The dentist thrust Ryer down without even changing his grip;
|
|
Marcus and the harness-maker struggled together for a few
|
|
moments till Heise all at once slipped on a bit of turf and
|
|
fell backwards. As they toppled over together, Marcus
|
|
writhed himself from under his opponent, and, as they
|
|
reached the ground, forced down first one shoulder and then
|
|
the other.
|
|
|
|
"All right, all right," panted the harness-maker, good-
|
|
naturedly, "I'm down. It's up to you and Doc now," he
|
|
added, as he got to his feet.
|
|
|
|
The match between McTeague and Marcus promised to be
|
|
interesting. The dentist, of course, had an enormous
|
|
advantage in point of strength, but Marcus prided himself on
|
|
his wrestling, and knew something about strangle-holds and
|
|
half-Nelsons. The men drew back to allow them a free space
|
|
as they faced each other, while Trina and the other women
|
|
rose to their feet in their excitement.
|
|
|
|
"I bet Mac will throw him, all the same," said Trina.
|
|
|
|
"All ready!" cried Ryer.
|
|
|
|
The dentist and Marcus stepped forward, eyeing each other
|
|
cautiously. They circled around the impromptu ring. Marcus
|
|
watching eagerly for an opening. He ground his teeth,
|
|
telling himself he would throw McTeague if it killed him.
|
|
Ah, he'd show him now. Suddenly the two men caught at each
|
|
other; Marcus went to his knees. The dentist threw his vast
|
|
bulk on his adversary's shoulders and, thrusting a huge palm
|
|
against his face, pushed him backwards and downwards. It
|
|
was out of the question to resist that enormous strength.
|
|
Marcus wrenched himself over and fell face downward on the
|
|
ground.
|
|
|
|
McTeague rose on the instant with a great laugh of
|
|
exultation.
|
|
|
|
"You're down!" he exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
Marcus leaped to his feet.
|
|
|
|
"Down nothing," he vociferated, with clenched fists. "Down
|
|
nothing, by damn! You got to throw me so's my shoulders
|
|
touch.
|
|
|
|
McTeague was stalking about, swelling with pride.
|
|
|
|
"Hoh, you're down. I threw you. Didn't I throw him, Trina?
|
|
Hoh, you can't rastle ME."
|
|
|
|
Marcus capered with rage.
|
|
|
|
"You didn't! you didn't! you didn't! and you can't! You got
|
|
to give me another try."
|
|
|
|
The other men came crowding up. Everybody was talking at
|
|
once.
|
|
|
|
"He's right."
|
|
|
|
"You didn't throw him."
|
|
|
|
"Both his shoulders at the same time."
|
|
|
|
Trina clapped and waved her hand at McTeague from where she
|
|
stood on the little slope of lawn above the wrestlers.
|
|
Marcus broke through the group, shaking all over with
|
|
excitement and rage.
|
|
|
|
"I tell you that ain't the WAY to rastle. You've got to
|
|
throw a man so's his shoulders touch. You got to give me
|
|
another bout."
|
|
|
|
"That's straight," put in Heise, "both his shoulders down at
|
|
the same time. Try it again. You and Schouler have another
|
|
try."
|
|
|
|
McTeague was bewildered by so much simultaneous talk. He
|
|
could not make out what it was all about. Could he have
|
|
offended Marcus again?
|
|
|
|
"What? What? Huh? What is it?" he exclaimed in
|
|
perplexity, looking from one to the other.
|
|
|
|
"Come on, you must rastle me again," shouted Marcus.
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," cried the dentist. "I'll rastle you again.
|
|
I'll rastle everybody," he cried, suddenly struck with an
|
|
idea. Trina looked on in some apprehension.
|
|
|
|
"Mark gets so mad," she said, half aloud.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," admitted Selina. "Mister Schouler's got an awful
|
|
quick temper, but he ain't afraid of anything."
|
|
|
|
"All ready!" shouted Ryer.
|
|
|
|
This time Marcus was more careful. Twice, as McTeague
|
|
rushed at him, he slipped cleverly away. But as the dentist
|
|
came in a third time, with his head bowed, Marcus, raising
|
|
himself to his full height, caught him with both arms around
|
|
the neck. The dentist gripped at him and rent away the
|
|
sleeve of his shirt. There was a great laugh.
|
|
|
|
"Keep your shirt on," cried Mrs. Ryer.
|
|
|
|
The two men were grappling at each other wildly. The party
|
|
could hear them panting and grunting as they labored and
|
|
struggled. Their boots tore up great clods of turf.
|
|
Suddenly they came to the ground with a tremendous shock.
|
|
But even as they were in the act of falling, Marcus,
|
|
like a very eel, writhed in the dentist's clasp and fell
|
|
upon his side. McTeague crashed down upon him like the
|
|
collapse of a felled ox.
|
|
|
|
"Now, you gotta turn him on his back," shouted Heise to the
|
|
dentist. "He ain't down if you don't."
|
|
|
|
With his huge salient chin digging into Marcus's shoulder,
|
|
the dentist heaved and tugged. His face was flaming, his
|
|
huge shock of yellow hair fell over his forehead, matted
|
|
with sweat. Marcus began to yield despite his frantic
|
|
efforts. One shoulder was down, now the other began to go;
|
|
gradually, gradually it was forced over. The little
|
|
audience held its breath in the suspense of the moment.
|
|
Selina broke the silence, calling out shrilly:
|
|
|
|
"Ain't Doctor McTeague just that strong!"
|
|
|
|
Marcus heard it, and his fury came instantly to a head.
|
|
Rage at his defeat at the hands of the dentist and before
|
|
Selina's eyes, the hate he still bore his old-time "pal" and
|
|
the impotent wrath of his own powerlessness were suddenly
|
|
unleashed.
|
|
|
|
"God damn you! get off of me," he cried under his breath,
|
|
spitting the words as a snake spits its venom. The little
|
|
audience uttered a cry. With the oath Marcus had twisted
|
|
his head and had bitten through the lobe of the dentist's
|
|
ear. There was a sudden flash of bright-red blood.
|
|
|
|
Then followed a terrible scene. The brute that in McTeague
|
|
lay so close to the surface leaped instantly to life,
|
|
monstrous, not to be resisted. He sprang to his feet with a
|
|
shrill and meaningless clamor, totally unlike the ordinary
|
|
bass of his speaking tones. It was the hideous yelling of a
|
|
hurt beast, the squealing of a wounded elephant. He framed
|
|
no words; in the rush of high-pitched sound that issued from
|
|
his wide-open mouth there was nothing articulate. It was
|
|
something no longer human; it was rather an echo from the
|
|
jungle.
|
|
|
|
Sluggish enough and slow to anger on ordinary occasions,
|
|
McTeague when finally aroused became another man. His rage
|
|
was a kind of obsession, an evil mania, the drunkenness of
|
|
passion, the exalted and perverted fury of the Berserker,
|
|
blind and deaf, a thing insensate.
|
|
|
|
As he rose he caught Marcus's wrist in both his hands.
|
|
He did not strike, he did not know what he was doing. His
|
|
only idea was to batter the life out of the man before him,
|
|
to crush and annihilate him upon the instant. Gripping his
|
|
enemy in his enormous hands, hard and knotted, and covered
|
|
with a stiff fell of yellow hair--the hands of the old-time
|
|
car-boy--he swung him wide, as a hammer-thrower swings his
|
|
hammer. Marcus's feet flipped from the ground, he spun
|
|
through the air about McTeague as helpless as a bundle of
|
|
clothes. All at once there was a sharp snap, almost like
|
|
the report of a small pistol. Then Marcus rolled over and
|
|
over upon the ground as McTeague released his grip; his arm,
|
|
the one the dentist had seized, bending suddenly, as though
|
|
a third joint had formed between wrist and elbow. The arm
|
|
was broken.
|
|
|
|
But by this time every one was crying out at once. Heise
|
|
and Ryan ran in between the two men. Selina turned her head
|
|
away. Trina was wringing her hands and crying in an agony of
|
|
dread:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, stop them, stop them! Don't let them fight. Oh, it's
|
|
too awful."
|
|
|
|
"Here, here, Doc, quit. Don't make a fool of yourself,"
|
|
cried Heise, clinging to the dentist. "That's enough now.
|
|
LISTEN to me, will you?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac, Mac," cried Trina, running to her husband. "Mac,
|
|
dear, listen; it's me, it's Trina, look at me, you----"
|
|
|
|
"Get hold of his other arm, will you, Ryer?" panted Heise.
|
|
"Quick!"
|
|
|
|
"Mac, Mac," cried Trina, her arms about his neck.
|
|
|
|
"For God's sake, hold up, Doc, will you?" shouted the
|
|
harness-maker. "You don't want to kill him, do you?"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Ryer and Heise's lame wife were filling the air with
|
|
their outcries. Selina was giggling with hysteria. Marcus,
|
|
terrified, but too brave to run, had picked up a jagged
|
|
stone with his left hand and stood on the defensive. His
|
|
swollen right arm, from which the shirt sleeve had been
|
|
torn, dangled at his side, the back of the hand twisted
|
|
where the palm should have been. The shirt itself was a
|
|
mass of grass stains and was spotted with the dentist's
|
|
blood.
|
|
|
|
But McTeague, in the centre of the group that struggled
|
|
to hold him, was nigh to madness. The side of his face, his
|
|
neck, and all the shoulder and breast of his shirt were
|
|
covered with blood. He had ceased to cry out, but kept
|
|
muttering between his gripped jaws, as he labored to tear
|
|
himself free of the retaining hands:
|
|
|
|
"Ah, I'll kill him! Ah, I'll kill him! I'll kill him!
|
|
Damn you, Heise," he exclaimed suddenly, trying to strike
|
|
the harness-maker, "let go of me, will you!"
|
|
|
|
Little by little they pacified him, or rather (for he paid
|
|
but little attention to what was said to him) his bestial
|
|
fury lapsed by degrees. He turned away and let fall his
|
|
arms, drawing long breaths, and looking stupidly about him,
|
|
now searching helplessly upon the ground, now gazing vaguely
|
|
into the circle of faces about him. His ear bled as though
|
|
it would never stop.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Doctor," asked Heise, "what's the best thing to do?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh?" answered McTeague. "What--what do you mean? What is
|
|
it?"
|
|
|
|
"What'll we do to stop this bleeding here?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague did not answer, but looked intently at the blood-
|
|
stained bosom of his shirt.
|
|
|
|
"Mac," cried Trina, her face close to his, "tell us
|
|
something--the best thing we can do to stop your ear
|
|
bleeding."
|
|
|
|
"Collodium," said the dentist.
|
|
|
|
"But we can't get to that right away; we--"
|
|
|
|
"There's some ice in our lunch basket," broke in Heise. "We
|
|
brought it for the beer; and take the napkins and make a
|
|
bandage."
|
|
|
|
"Ice," muttered the dentist, "sure, ice, that's the word."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Heise and the Ryers were looking after Marcus's broken
|
|
arm. Selina sat on the slope of the grass, gasping and
|
|
sobbing. Trina tore the napkins into strips, and, crushing
|
|
some of the ice, made a bandage for her husband's head.'
|
|
|
|
The party resolved itself into two groups; the Ryers and
|
|
Mrs. Heise bending over Marcus, while the harness-maker and
|
|
Trina came and went about McTeague, sitting on the ground,
|
|
his shirt, a mere blur of red and white, detaching itself
|
|
violently from the background of pale-green grass. Between
|
|
the two groups was the torn and trampled bit of turf, the
|
|
wrestling ring; the picnic baskets, together with empty beer
|
|
bottles, broken egg-shells, and discarded sardine tins, were
|
|
scattered here and there. In the middle of the improvised
|
|
wrestling ring the sleeve of Marcus's shirt fluttered
|
|
occasionally in the sea breeze.
|
|
|
|
Nobody was paying any attention to Selina. All at once she
|
|
began to giggle hysterically again, then cried out with a
|
|
peal of laughter:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, what a way for our picnic to end!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 12
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Now, then, Maria," said Zerkow, his cracked, strained voice
|
|
just rising above a whisper, hitching his chair closer to
|
|
the table, "now, then, my girl, let's have it all over
|
|
again. Tell us about the gold plate--the service. Begin
|
|
with, 'There were over a hundred pieces and every one of
|
|
them gold.'"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know what you're talking about, Zerkow," answered
|
|
Maria. "There never was no gold plate, no gold service. I
|
|
guess you must have dreamed it."
|
|
|
|
Maria and the red-headed Polish Jew had been married about a
|
|
month after the McTeague's picnic which had ended in such
|
|
lamentable fashion. Zerkow had taken Maria home to his
|
|
wretched hovel in the alley back of the flat, and the flat
|
|
had been obliged to get another maid of all work. Time
|
|
passed, a month, six months, a whole year went by. At
|
|
length Maria gave birth to a child, a wretched, sickly
|
|
child, with not even strength enough nor wits enough to
|
|
cry. At the time of its birth Maria was out of her mind,
|
|
and continued in a state of dementia for nearly ten days.
|
|
She recovered just in time to make the arrangements for the
|
|
baby's burial. Neither Zerkow nor Maria was much affected
|
|
by either the birth or the death of this little child.
|
|
Zerkow had welcomed it with pronounced disfavor, since it
|
|
had a mouth to be fed and wants to be provided for. Maria
|
|
was out of her head so much of the time that she could
|
|
scarcely remember how it looked when alive. The child was a
|
|
mere incident in their lives, a thing that had come
|
|
undesired and had gone unregretted. It had not even a name;
|
|
a strange, hybrid little being, come and gone within a
|
|
fortnight's time, yet combining in its puny little body the
|
|
blood of the Hebrew, the Pole, and the Spaniard.
|
|
|
|
But the birth of this child had peculiar consequences.
|
|
Maria came out of her dementia, and in a few days the
|
|
household settled itself again to its sordid regime and
|
|
Maria went about her duties as usual. Then one evening,
|
|
about a week after the child's burial, Zerkow had asked
|
|
Maria to tell him the story of the famous service of gold
|
|
plate for the hundredth time.
|
|
|
|
Zerkow had come to believe in this story infallibly. He was
|
|
immovably persuaded that at one time Maria or Maria's people
|
|
had possessed these hundred golden dishes. In his perverted
|
|
mind the hallucination had developed still further. Not
|
|
only had that service of gold plate once existed, but it
|
|
existed now, entire, intact; not a single burnished golden
|
|
piece of it was missing. It was somewhere, somebody had it,
|
|
locked away in that leather trunk with its quilted lining
|
|
and round brass locks. It was to be searched for and
|
|
secured, to be fought for, to be gained at all hazards.
|
|
Maria must know where it was; by dint of questioning, Zerkow
|
|
would surely get the information from her. Some day, if only
|
|
he was persistent, he would hit upon the right combination
|
|
of questions, the right suggestion that would disentangle
|
|
Maria's confused recollections. Maria would tell him where
|
|
the thing was kept, was concealed, was buried, and he would
|
|
go to that place and secure it, and all that wonderful gold
|
|
would be his forever and forever. This service of plate had
|
|
come to be Zerkow's mania.
|
|
|
|
On this particular evening, about a week after the
|
|
child's burial, in the wretched back room of the Junk shop,
|
|
Zerkow had made Maria sit down to the table opposite him--
|
|
the whiskey bottle and the red glass tumbler with its broken
|
|
base between them--and had said:
|
|
|
|
"Now, then, Maria, tell us that story of the gold dishes
|
|
again."
|
|
|
|
Maria stared at him, an expression of perplexity coming into
|
|
her face.
|
|
|
|
"What gold dishes?" said she.
|
|
|
|
"The ones your people used to own in Central America. Come
|
|
on, Maria, begin, begin." The Jew craned himself forward,
|
|
his lean fingers clawing eagerly at his lips.
|
|
|
|
"What gold plate?" said Maria, frowning at him as she drank
|
|
her whiskey. "What gold plate? I don' know what you're
|
|
talking about, Zerkow."
|
|
|
|
Zerkow sat back in his chair, staring at her.
|
|
|
|
"Why, your people's gold dishes, what they used to eat off
|
|
of. You've told me about it a hundred times."
|
|
|
|
"You're crazy, Zerkow," said Maria. "Push the bottle here,
|
|
will you?"
|
|
|
|
"Come, now," insisted Zerkow, sweating with desire, "come,
|
|
now, my girl, don't be a fool; let's have it, let's have it.
|
|
Begin now, 'There were more'n a hundred pieces, and every
|
|
one of 'em gold.' Oh, YOU know; come on, come on."
|
|
|
|
"I don't remember nothing of the kind," protested Maria,
|
|
reaching for the bottle. Zerkow snatched it from her.
|
|
|
|
"You fool!" he wheezed, trying to raise his broken voice to
|
|
a shout. "You fool! Don't you dare try an' cheat ME, or
|
|
I'll DO for you. You know about the gold plate, and you
|
|
know where it is." Suddenly he pitched his voice at the
|
|
prolonged rasping shout with which he made his street cry.
|
|
He rose to his feet, his long, prehensile fingers curled
|
|
into fists. He was menacing, terrible in his rage. He
|
|
leaned over Maria, his fists in her face.
|
|
|
|
"I believe you've got it!" he yelled. "I believe you've got
|
|
it, an' are hiding it from me. Where is it, where is it? Is
|
|
it here?" he rolled his eyes wildly about the room.
|
|
"Hey? hey?" he went on, shaking Maria by the shoulders.
|
|
"Where is it? Is it here? Tell me where it is. Tell me,
|
|
or I'll do for you!"
|
|
|
|
"It ain't here," cried Maria, wrenching from him. "It ain't
|
|
anywhere. What gold plate? What are you talking about? I
|
|
don't remember nothing about no gold plate at all."
|
|
|
|
No, Maria did not remember. The trouble and turmoil of her
|
|
mind consequent upon the birth of her child seemed to have
|
|
readjusted her disordered ideas upon this point. Her mania
|
|
had come to a crisis, which in subsiding had cleared her
|
|
brain of its one illusion. She did not remember. Or it was
|
|
possible that the gold plate she had once remembered had had
|
|
some foundation in fact, that her recital of its splendors
|
|
had been truth, sound and sane. It was possible that now
|
|
her FORGETFULNESS of it was some form of brain trouble,
|
|
a relic of the dementia of childbirth. At all events Maria
|
|
did not remember; the idea of the gold plate had passed
|
|
entirely out of her mind, and it was now Zerkow who labored
|
|
under its hallucination. It was now Zerkow, the raker of
|
|
the city's muck heap, the searcher after gold, that saw that
|
|
wonderful service in the eye of his perverted mind. It was
|
|
he who could now describe it in a language almost eloquent.
|
|
Maria had been content merely to remember it; but Zerkow's
|
|
avarice goaded him to a belief that it was still in
|
|
existence, hid somewhere, perhaps in that very house, stowed
|
|
away there by Maria. For it stood to reason, didn't it,
|
|
that Maria could not have described it with such wonderful
|
|
accuracy and such careful detail unless she had seen it
|
|
recently--the day before, perhaps, or that very day, or that
|
|
very hour, that very HOUR?
|
|
|
|
"Look out for yourself," he whispered, hoarsely, to his
|
|
wife. "Look out for yourself, my girl. I'll hunt for it,
|
|
and hunt for it, and hunt for it, and some day I'll find it
|
|
--I will, you'll see--I'll find it, I'll find it; and if
|
|
I don't, I'll find a way that'll make you tell me where it
|
|
is. I'll make you speak--believe me, I will, I will, my
|
|
girl--trust me for that."
|
|
|
|
And at night Maria would sometimes wake to find Zerkow
|
|
gone from the bed, and would see him burrowing into
|
|
some corner by the light of his dark-lantern and would hear
|
|
him mumbling to himself: "There were more'n a hundred
|
|
pieces, and every one of 'em gold--when the leather trunk
|
|
was opened it fair dazzled your eyes--why, just that punch-
|
|
bowl was worth a fortune, I guess; solid, solid, heavy,
|
|
rich, pure gold, nothun but gold, gold, heaps and heaps of
|
|
it--what a glory! I'll find it yet, I'll find it. It's
|
|
here somewheres, hid somewheres in this house."
|
|
|
|
At length his continued ill success began to exasperate him.
|
|
One day he took his whip from his junk wagon and thrashed
|
|
Maria with it, gasping the while, "Where is it, you beast?
|
|
Where is it? Tell me where it is; I'll make you speak."
|
|
|
|
"I don' know, I don' know," cried Maria, dodging his blows.
|
|
"I'd tell you, Zerkow, if I knew; but I don' know nothing
|
|
about it. How can I tell you if I don' know?"
|
|
|
|
Then one evening matters reached a crisis. Marcus Schouler
|
|
was in his room, the room in the flat just over McTeague's
|
|
"Parlors" which he had always occupied. It was between
|
|
eleven and twelve o'clock. The vast house was quiet; Polk
|
|
Street outside was very still, except for the occasional
|
|
whirr and trundle of a passing cable car and the persistent
|
|
calling of ducks and geese in the deserted market directly
|
|
opposite. Marcus was in his shirt sleeves, perspiring and
|
|
swearing with exertion as he tried to get all his belongings
|
|
into an absurdly inadequate trunk. The room was in great
|
|
confusion. It looked as though Marcus was about to move.
|
|
He stood in front of his trunk, his precious silk hat in its
|
|
hat-box in his hand. He was raging at the perverseness of a
|
|
pair of boots that refused to fit in his trunk, no matter
|
|
how he arranged them.
|
|
|
|
"I've tried you SO, and I've tried you SO," he
|
|
exclaimed fiercely, between his teeth, "and you won't go."
|
|
He began to swear horribly, grabbing at the boots with his
|
|
free hand. "Pretty soon I won't take you at all; I won't,
|
|
for a fact."
|
|
|
|
He was interrupted by a rush of feet upon the back stairs
|
|
and a clamorous pounding upon his door. He opened it to let
|
|
in Maria Macapa, her hair dishevelled and her eyes starting
|
|
with terror.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, MISTER Schouler," she gasped, "lock the door
|
|
quick. Don't let him get me. He's got a knife, and he says
|
|
sure he's going to do for me, if I don't tell him where it
|
|
is."
|
|
|
|
"Who has? What has? Where is what?" shouted Marcus,
|
|
flaming with excitement upon the instant. He opened the
|
|
door and peered down the dark hall, both fists clenched,
|
|
ready to fight--he did not know whom, and he did not know
|
|
why.
|
|
|
|
"It's Zerkow," wailed Maria, pulling him back into the room
|
|
and bolting the door, "and he's got a knife as long as
|
|
THAT. Oh, my Lord, here he comes now! Ain't that him?
|
|
Listen."
|
|
|
|
Zerkow was coming up the stairs, calling for Maria.
|
|
|
|
"Don't you let him get me, will you, Mister Schouler?"
|
|
gasped Maria.
|
|
|
|
"I'll break him in two," shouted Marcus, livid with rage.
|
|
"Think I'm afraid of his knife?"
|
|
|
|
"I know where you are," cried Zerkow, on the landing
|
|
outside. "You're in Schouler's room. What are you doing in
|
|
Schouler's room at this time of night? Come outa there; you
|
|
oughta be ashamed. I'll do for you yet, my girl. Come outa
|
|
there once, an' see if I don't."
|
|
|
|
"I'll do for you myself, you dirty Jew," shouted Marcus,
|
|
unbolting the door and running out into the hall.
|
|
|
|
"I want my wife," exclaimed the Jew, backing down the
|
|
stairs. "What's she mean by running away from me and going
|
|
into your room?"
|
|
|
|
"Look out, he's got a knife!" cried Maria through the crack
|
|
of the door.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, there you are. Come outa that, and come back home,"
|
|
exclaimed Zerkow.
|
|
|
|
"Get outa here yourself," cried Marcus, advancing on him
|
|
angrily. "Get outa here."
|
|
|
|
"Maria's gota come too."
|
|
|
|
"Get outa here," vociferated Marcus, "an' put up that knife.
|
|
I see it; you needn't try an' hide it behind your leg.
|
|
Give it to me, anyhow," he shouted suddenly, and before
|
|
Zerkow was aware, Marcus had wrenched it away. "Now, get
|
|
outa here."
|
|
|
|
Zerkow backed away, peering and peeping over Marcus's
|
|
shoulder.
|
|
|
|
"I want Maria."
|
|
|
|
"Get outa here. Get along out, or I'll PUT you out."
|
|
The street door closed. The Jew was gone.
|
|
|
|
"Huh!" snorted Marcus, swelling with arrogance. "Huh!
|
|
Think I'm afraid of his knife? I ain't afraid of
|
|
ANYBODY," he shouted pointedly, for McTeague and his wife,
|
|
roused by the clamor, were peering over the banisters from
|
|
the landing above. "Not of anybody," repeated Marcus.
|
|
|
|
Maria came out into the hall.
|
|
|
|
"Is he gone? Is he sure gone?"
|
|
|
|
"What was the trouble?" inquired Marcus, suddenly.
|
|
|
|
"I woke up about an hour ago," Maria explained, "and Zerkow
|
|
wasn't in bed; maybe he hadn't come to bed at all. He was
|
|
down on his knees by the sink, and he'd pried up some boards
|
|
off the floor and was digging there. He had his dark-
|
|
lantern. He was digging with that knife, I guess, and all
|
|
the time he kept mumbling to himself, 'More'n a hundred
|
|
pieces, an' every one of 'em gold; more'n a hundred pieces,
|
|
an' every one of 'em gold.' Then, all of a sudden, he caught
|
|
sight of me. I was sitting up in bed, and he jumped up and
|
|
came at me with his knife, an' he says, 'Where is it? Where
|
|
is it? I know you got it hid somewhere. Where is it? Tell
|
|
me or I'll knife you.' I kind of fooled him and kept him
|
|
off till I got my wrapper on, an' then I run out. I didn't
|
|
dare stay."
|
|
|
|
"Well, what did you tell him about your gold dishes for in
|
|
the first place?" cried Marcus.
|
|
|
|
"I never told him," protested Maria, with the greatest
|
|
energy. "I never told him; I never heard of any gold dishes.
|
|
I don' know where he got the idea; he must be crazy."
|
|
|
|
By this time Trina and McTeague, Old Grannis, and little
|
|
Miss Baker--all the lodgers on the upper floors of the flat
|
|
--had gathered about Maria. Trina and the dentist, who had
|
|
gone to bed, were partially dressed, and Trina's enormous
|
|
mane of black hair was hanging in two thick braids far down
|
|
her back. But, late as it was, Old Grannis and the
|
|
retired dressmaker had still been up and about when Maria
|
|
had aroused them.
|
|
|
|
"Why, Maria," said Trina, "you always used to tell us about
|
|
your gold dishes. You said your folks used to have them."
|
|
|
|
"Never, never, never!" exclaimed Maria, vehemently. "You
|
|
folks must all be crazy. I never HEARD of any gold
|
|
dishes."
|
|
|
|
"Well," spoke up Miss Baker, "you're a queer girl, Maria;
|
|
that's all I can say." She left the group and returned to
|
|
her room. Old Grannis watched her go from the corner of his
|
|
eye, and in a few moments followed her, leaving the group as
|
|
unnoticed as he had joined it. By degrees the flat quieted
|
|
down again. Trina and McTeague returned to their rooms.
|
|
|
|
"I guess I'll go back now," said Maria. "He's all right
|
|
now. I ain't afraid of him so long as he ain't got his
|
|
knife."
|
|
|
|
"Well, say," Marcus called to her as she went down stairs,
|
|
"if he gets funny again, you just yell out; I'LL hear
|
|
you. I won't let him hurt you."
|
|
|
|
Marcus went into his room again and resumed his wrangle with
|
|
the refractory boots. His eye fell on Zerkow's knife, a
|
|
long, keen-bladed hunting-knife, with a buckhorn handle.
|
|
"I'll take you along with me," he exclaimed, suddenly.
|
|
"I'll just need you where I'm going."
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, old Miss Baker was making tea to calm her nerves
|
|
after the excitement of Maria's incursion. This evening she
|
|
went so far as to make tea for two, laying an extra place on
|
|
the other side of her little teatable, setting out a cup and
|
|
saucer and one of the Gorham silver spoons. Close upon the
|
|
other side of the partition Old Grannis bound uncut numbers
|
|
of the "Nation."
|
|
|
|
"Do you know what I think, Mac?" said Trina, when the couple
|
|
had returned to their rooms. "I think Marcus is going
|
|
away."
|
|
|
|
"What? What?" muttered the dentist, very sleepy and stupid,
|
|
"what you saying? What's that about Marcus?"
|
|
|
|
"I believe Marcus has been packing up, the last two or three
|
|
days. I wonder if he's going away."
|
|
|
|
"Who's going away?" said McTeague, blinking at her.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, go to bed," said Trina, pushing him goodnaturedly.
|
|
"Mac, you're the stupidest man I ever knew."
|
|
|
|
But it was true. Marcus was going away. Trina received a
|
|
letter the next morning from her mother. The carpet-
|
|
cleaning and upholstery business in which Mr. Sieppe had
|
|
involved himself was going from bad to worse. Mr. Sieppe
|
|
had even been obliged to put a mortgage upon their house.
|
|
Mrs. Sieppe didn't know what was to become of them all. Her
|
|
husband had even begun to talk of emigrating to New Zealand.
|
|
Meanwhile, she informed Trina that Mr. Sieppe had finally
|
|
come across a man with whom Marcus could "go in with on a
|
|
ranch," a cattle ranch in the southeastern portion of the
|
|
State. Her ideas were vague upon the subject, but she knew
|
|
that Marcus was wildly enthusiastic at the prospect, and was
|
|
expected down before the end of the month. In the meantime,
|
|
could Trina send them fifty dollars?
|
|
|
|
"Marcus IS going away, after all, Mac," said Trina to
|
|
her husband that day as he came out of his "Parlors" and sat
|
|
down to the lunch of sausages, mashed potatoes, and
|
|
chocolate in the sitting-room.
|
|
|
|
"Huh?" said the dentist, a little confused. "Who's going
|
|
away? Schouler going away? Why's Schouler going away?"
|
|
|
|
Trina explained. "Oh!" growled McTeague, behind his thick
|
|
mustache, "he can go far before I'LL stop him."
|
|
|
|
"And, say, Mac," continued Trina, pouring the chocolate,
|
|
"what do you think? Mamma wants me--wants us to send her
|
|
fifty dollars. She says they're hard up."
|
|
|
|
"Well," said the dentist, after a moment, "well, I guess we
|
|
can send it, can't we?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that's easy to say," complained Trina, her little chin
|
|
in the air, her small pale lips pursed. "I wonder if mamma
|
|
thinks we're millionaires?"
|
|
|
|
"Trina, you're getting to be regular stingy," muttered
|
|
McTeague. "You're getting worse and worse every day."
|
|
|
|
"But fifty dollars is fifty dollars, Mac. Just think how
|
|
long it takes you to earn fifty dollars. Fifty dollars!
|
|
That's two months of our interest."
|
|
|
|
"Well," said McTeague, easily, his mouth full of mashed
|
|
potato, "you got a lot saved up."
|
|
|
|
Upon every reference to that little hoard in the brass
|
|
match-safe and chamois-skin bag at the bottom of her trunk,
|
|
Trina bridled on the instant.
|
|
|
|
"Don't TALK that way, Mac. 'A lot of money.' What do
|
|
you call a lot of money? I don't believe I've got fifty
|
|
dollars saved."
|
|
|
|
"Hoh!" exclaimed McTeague. "Hoh! I guess you got nearer a
|
|
hundred AN' fifty. That's what I guess YOU got."
|
|
|
|
"I've NOT, I've NOT," declared Trina, "and you know
|
|
I've not. I wish mamma hadn't asked me for any money. Why
|
|
can't she be a little more economical? I manage all
|
|
right. No, no, I can't possibly afford to send her fifty."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, pshaw! What WILL you do, then?" grumbled her
|
|
husband.
|
|
|
|
"I'll send her twenty-five this month, and tell her I'll
|
|
send the rest as soon as I can afford it."
|
|
|
|
"Trina, you're a regular little miser," said McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"I don't care," answered Trina, beginning to laugh. "I
|
|
guess I am, but I can't help it, and it's a good fault."
|
|
|
|
Trina put off sending this money for a couple of weeks, and
|
|
her mother made no mention of it in her next letter. "Oh, I
|
|
guess if she wants it so bad," said Trina, "she'll speak
|
|
about it again." So she again postponed the sending of it.
|
|
Day by day she put it off. When her mother asked her for it
|
|
a second time, it seemed harder than ever for Trina to part
|
|
with even half the sum requested. She answered her mother,
|
|
telling her that they were very hard up themselves for that
|
|
month, but that she would send down the amount in a few
|
|
weeks.
|
|
|
|
"I'll tell you what we'll do, Mac," she said to her husband,
|
|
"you send half and I'll send half; we'll send twenty-five
|
|
dollars altogether. Twelve and a half apiece. That's an
|
|
idea. How will that do?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," McTeague had answered, giving her the money.
|
|
Trina sent McTeague's twelve dollars, but never sent the
|
|
twelve that was to be her share. One day the dentist
|
|
happened to ask her about it.
|
|
|
|
"You sent that twenty-five to your mother, didn't you?" said
|
|
he.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, long ago," answered Trina, without thinking.
|
|
|
|
In fact, Trina never allowed herself to think very much of
|
|
this affair. And, in fact, another matter soon came to
|
|
engross her attention.
|
|
|
|
One Sunday evening Trina and her husband were in their
|
|
sitting-room together. It was dark, but the lamp had not
|
|
been lit. McTeague had brought up some bottles of beer from
|
|
the "Wein Stube" on the ground floor, where the branch post-
|
|
office used to be. But they had not opened the beer. It
|
|
was a warm evening in summer. Trina was sitting on
|
|
McTeague's lap in the bay window, and had looped back the
|
|
Nottingham curtains so the two could look out into the
|
|
darkened street and watch the moon coming up over the glass
|
|
roof of the huge public baths. On occasions they sat like
|
|
this for an hour or so, "philandering," Trina cuddling
|
|
herself down upon McTeague's enormous body, rubbing her
|
|
cheek against the grain of his unshaven chin, kissing the
|
|
bald spot on the top of his head, or putting her fingers
|
|
into his ears and eyes. At times, a brusque access of
|
|
passion would seize upon her, and, with a nervous little
|
|
sigh, she would clasp his thick red neck in both her small
|
|
arms and whisper in his ear:
|
|
|
|
"Do you love me, Mac, dear? Love me BIG, BIG?
|
|
Sure, do you love me as much as you did when we were
|
|
married?"
|
|
|
|
Puzzled, McTeague would answer: "Well, you know it, don't
|
|
you, Trina?"
|
|
|
|
"But I want you to SAY so; say so always and always."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I do, of course I do."
|
|
|
|
"Say it, then."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, I love you."
|
|
|
|
"But you don't say it of your own accord."
|
|
|
|
"Well, what--what--what--I don't understand," stammered the
|
|
dentist, bewildered.
|
|
|
|
There was a knock on the door. Confused and
|
|
embarrassed, as if they were not married, Trina scrambled
|
|
off McTeague's lap, hastening to light the lamp, whispering,
|
|
"Put on your coat, Mac, and smooth your hair," and making
|
|
gestures for him to put the beer bottles out of sight. She
|
|
opened the door and uttered an exclamation.
|
|
|
|
"Why, Cousin Mark!" she said. McTeague glared at him,
|
|
struck speechless, confused beyond expression. Marcus
|
|
Schouler, perfectly at his ease, stood in the doorway,
|
|
smiling with great affability.
|
|
|
|
"Say," he remarked, "can I come in?"
|
|
|
|
Taken all aback, Trina could only answer:
|
|
|
|
"Why--I suppose so. Yes, of course--come in."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, come in," exclaimed the dentist, suddenly,
|
|
speaking without thought. "Have some beer?" he added,
|
|
struck with an idea.
|
|
|
|
"No, thanks, Doctor," said Marcus, pleasantly.
|
|
|
|
McTeague and Trina were puzzled. What could it all mean?
|
|
Did Marcus want to become reconciled to his enemy? "I
|
|
know." Trina said to herself. "He's going away, and he
|
|
wants to borrow some money. He won't get a penny, not a
|
|
penny." She set her teeth together hard.
|
|
|
|
"Well," said Marcus, "how's business, Doctor?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh," said McTeague, uneasily, "oh, I don' know. I guess--I
|
|
guess," he broke off in helpless embarrassment. They had
|
|
all sat down by now. Marcus continued, holding his hat and
|
|
his cane--the black wand of ebony with the gold top
|
|
presented to him by the "Improvement Club."
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" said he, wagging his head and looking about the
|
|
sitting-room, "you people have got the best fixed rooms in
|
|
the whole flat. Yes, sir; you have, for a fact." He
|
|
glanced from the lithograph framed in gilt and red plush--
|
|
the two little girls at their prayers--to the "I'm Grandpa"
|
|
and "I'm Grandma" pictures, noted the clean white matting
|
|
and the gay worsted tidies over the chair backs, and
|
|
appeared to contemplate in ecstasy the framed
|
|
photograph of McTeague and Trina in their wedding finery.
|
|
|
|
"Well, you two are pretty happy together, ain't you?" said
|
|
he, smiling good-humoredly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, we don't complain," answered Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Plenty of money, lots to do, everything fine, hey?"
|
|
|
|
"We've got lots to do," returned Trina, thinking to head him
|
|
off, "but we've not got lots of money."
|
|
|
|
But evidently Marcus wanted no money.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Cousin Trina," he said, rubbing his knee, "I'm going
|
|
away."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, mamma wrote me; you're going on a ranch."
|
|
|
|
"I'm going in ranching with an English duck," corrected
|
|
Marcus. "Mr. Sieppe has fixed things. We'll see if we can't
|
|
raise some cattle. I know a lot about horses, and he's
|
|
ranched some before--this English duck. And then I'm going
|
|
to keep my eye open for a political chance down there. I
|
|
got some introductions from the President of the Improvement
|
|
Club. I'll work things somehow, oh, sure."
|
|
|
|
"How long you going to be gone?" asked Trina.
|
|
|
|
Marcus stared.
|
|
|
|
"Why, I ain't EVER coming back," he vociferated. "I'm
|
|
going to-morrow, and I'm going for good. I come to say
|
|
good-by."
|
|
|
|
Marcus stayed for upwards of an hour that evening. He
|
|
talked on easily and agreeably, addressing himself as much
|
|
to McTeague as to Trina. At last he rose.
|
|
|
|
"Well, good-by, Doc."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, Marcus," returned McTeague. The two shook hands.
|
|
|
|
"Guess we won't ever see each other again," continued
|
|
Marcus. "But good luck to you, Doc. Hope some day you'll
|
|
have the patients standing in line on the stairs."
|
|
|
|
"Huh! I guess so, I guess so," said the dentist.
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, Cousin Trina."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, Marcus," answered Trina. "You be sure to
|
|
remember me to mamma, and papa, and everybody. I'm
|
|
going to make two great big sets of Noah's ark animals for
|
|
the twins on their next birthday; August is too old for
|
|
toys. But you can tell the twins that I'll make them some
|
|
great big animals. Good-by, success to you, Marcus."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, good-by. Good luck to you both."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, Cousin Mark."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, Marcus."
|
|
|
|
He was gone.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 13
|
|
|
|
|
|
One morning about a week after Marcus had left for the
|
|
southern part of the State, McTeague found an oblong letter
|
|
thrust through the letter-drop of the door of his "Parlors."
|
|
The address was typewritten. He opened it. The letter had
|
|
been sent from the City Hall and was stamped in one corner
|
|
with the seal of the State of California, very official; the
|
|
form and file numbers superscribed.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had been making fillings when this letter arrived.
|
|
He was in his "Parlors," pottering over his movable rack
|
|
underneath the bird cage in the bay window. He was making
|
|
"blocks" to be used in large proximal cavities and
|
|
"cylinders" for commencing fillings. He heard the postman's
|
|
step in the hall and saw the envelopes begin to shuttle
|
|
themselves through the slit of his letter-drop. Then came
|
|
the fat oblong envelope, with its official seal, that
|
|
dropped flatwise to the floor with a sodden, dull impact.
|
|
|
|
The dentist put down the broach and scissors and gathered
|
|
up his mail. There were four letters altogether. One
|
|
was for Trina, in Selina's "elegant" handwriting; another
|
|
was an advertisement of a new kind of operating chair for
|
|
dentists; the third was a card from a milliner on the next
|
|
block, announcing an opening; and the fourth, contained in
|
|
the fat oblong envelope, was a printed form with blanks left
|
|
for names and dates, and addressed to McTeague, from an
|
|
office in the City Hall. McTeague read it through
|
|
laboriously. "I don' know, I don' know," he muttered,
|
|
looking stupidly at the rifle manufacturer's calendar. Then
|
|
he heard Trina, from the kitchen, singing as she made a
|
|
clattering noise with the breakfast dishes. "I guess I'll
|
|
ask Trina about it," he muttered.
|
|
|
|
He went through the suite, by the sitting-room, where the
|
|
sun was pouring in through the looped backed Nottingham
|
|
curtains upon the clean white matting and the varnished
|
|
surface of the melodeon, passed on through the bedroom, with
|
|
its framed lithographs of round-cheeked English babies and
|
|
alert fox terriers, and came out into the brick-paved
|
|
kitchen. The kitchen was clean as a new whistle; the
|
|
freshly blackened cook stove glowed like a negro's hide; the
|
|
tins and porcelain-lined stew-pans might have been of silver
|
|
and of ivory. Trina was in the centre of the room, wiping
|
|
off, with a damp sponge, the oilcloth table-cover, on which
|
|
they had breakfasted. Never had she looked so pretty.
|
|
Early though it was, her enormous tiara of swarthy hair was
|
|
neatly combed and coiled, not a pin was so much as loose.
|
|
She wore a blue calico skirt with a white figure, and a belt
|
|
of imitation alligator skin clasped around her small,
|
|
firmly-corseted waist; her shirt waist was of pink linen, so
|
|
new and crisp that it crackled with every movement, while
|
|
around the collar, tied in a neat knot, was one of
|
|
McTeague's lawn ties which she had appropriated. Her
|
|
sleeves were carefully rolled up almost to her shoulders,
|
|
and nothing could have been more delicious than the sight of
|
|
her small round arms, white as milk, moving back and forth
|
|
as she sponged the table-cover, a faint touch of pink coming
|
|
and going at the elbows as they bent and straightened. She
|
|
looked up quickly as her husband entered, her narrow eyes
|
|
alight, her adorable little chin in the air; her lips
|
|
rounded and opened with the last words of her song, so
|
|
that one could catch a glint of gold in the fillings of her
|
|
upper teeth.
|
|
|
|
The whole scene--the clean kitchen and its clean brick
|
|
floor; the smell of coffee that lingered in the air; Trina
|
|
herself, fresh as if from a bath, and singing at her work;
|
|
the morning sun, striking obliquely through the white muslin
|
|
half-curtain of the window and spanning the little kitchen
|
|
with a bridge of golden mist--gave off, as it were, a note
|
|
of gayety that was not to be resisted. Through the opened
|
|
top of the window came the noises of Polk Street, already
|
|
long awake. One heard the chanting of street cries, the
|
|
shrill calling of children on their way to school, the merry
|
|
rattle of a butcher's cart, the brisk noise of hammering, or
|
|
the occasional prolonged roll of a cable car trundling
|
|
heavily past, with a vibrant whirring of its jostled glass
|
|
and the joyous clanging of its bells.
|
|
|
|
"What is it, Mac, dear?" said Trina.
|
|
|
|
McTeague shut the door behind him with his heel and handed
|
|
her the letter. Trina read it through. Then suddenly her
|
|
small hand gripped tightly upon the sponge, so that the
|
|
water started from it and dripped in a little pattering
|
|
deluge upon the bricks.
|
|
|
|
The letter--or rather printed notice--informed McTeague that
|
|
he had never received a diploma from a dental college, and
|
|
that in consequence he was forbidden to practise his
|
|
profession any longer. A legal extract bearing upon the
|
|
case was attached in small type.
|
|
|
|
"Why, what's all this?" said Trina, calmly, without thought
|
|
as yet.
|
|
|
|
"I don' know, I don' know," answered her husband.
|
|
|
|
"You can't practise any longer," continued Trina,--"'is
|
|
herewith prohibited and enjoined from further continuing----
|
|
'" She re-read the extract, her forehead lifting and
|
|
puckering. She put the sponge carefully away in its wire
|
|
rack over the sink, and drew up a chair to the table,
|
|
spreading out the notice before her. "Sit down," she said to
|
|
McTeague. "Draw up to the table here, Mac, and let's see
|
|
what this is."
|
|
|
|
"I got it this morning," murmured the dentist. "It just now
|
|
came. I was making some fillings--there, in the
|
|
'Parlors,' in the window--and the postman shoved it through
|
|
the door. I thought it was a number of the 'American System
|
|
of Dentistry' at first, and when I'd opened it and looked at
|
|
it I thought I'd better----"
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mac," interrupted Trina, looking up from the notice,
|
|
"DIDN'T you ever go to a dental college?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What? What?" exclaimed McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"How did you learn to be a dentist? Did you go to a
|
|
college?"
|
|
|
|
"I went along with a fellow who came to the mine once. My
|
|
mother sent me. We used to go from one camp to another. I
|
|
sharpened his excavators for him, and put up his notices in
|
|
the towns--stuck them up in the post-offices and on the
|
|
doors of the Odd Fellows' halls. He had a wagon."
|
|
|
|
"But didn't you never go to a college?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What? College? No, I never went. I learned from
|
|
the fellow."
|
|
|
|
Trina rolled down her sleeves. She was a little paler than
|
|
usual. She fastened the buttons into the cuffs and said:
|
|
|
|
"But do you know you can't practise unless you're graduated
|
|
from a college? You haven't the right to call yourself,
|
|
'doctor.'"
|
|
|
|
McTeague stared a moment; then:
|
|
|
|
"Why, I've been practising ten years. More--nearly twelve."
|
|
|
|
"But it's the law."
|
|
|
|
"What's the law?"
|
|
|
|
"That you can't practise, or call yourself doctor, unless
|
|
you've got a diploma."
|
|
|
|
"What's that--a diploma?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know exactly. It's a kind of paper that--that--oh,
|
|
Mac, we're ruined." Trina's voice rose to a cry.
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean, Trina? Ain't I a dentist? Ain't I a
|
|
doctor? Look at my sign, and the gold tooth you gave me.
|
|
Why, I've been practising nearly twelve years."
|
|
|
|
Trina shut her lips tightly, cleared her throat, and
|
|
pretended to resettle a hair-pin at the back of her head.
|
|
|
|
"I guess it isn't as bad as that," she said, very quietly.
|
|
"Let's read this again. 'Herewith prohibited and
|
|
enjoined from further continuing----'" She read to the end.
|
|
|
|
"Why, it isn't possible," she cried. "They can't mean--oh,
|
|
Mac, I do believe--pshaw!" she exclaimed, her pale face
|
|
flushing. "They don't know how good a dentist you are.
|
|
What difference does a diploma make, if you're a first-class
|
|
dentist? I guess that's all right. Mac, didn't you ever go
|
|
to a dental college?"
|
|
|
|
"No," answered McTeague, doggedly. "What was the good? I
|
|
learned how to operate; wa'n't that enough?"
|
|
|
|
"Hark," said Trina, suddenly. "Wasn't that the bell of your
|
|
office?" They had both heard the jangling of the bell that
|
|
McTeague had hung over the door of his "Parlors." The
|
|
dentist looked at the kitchen clock.
|
|
|
|
"That's Vanovitch," said he. "He's a plumber round on
|
|
Sutter Street. He's got an appointment with me to have a
|
|
bicuspid pulled. I got to go back to work." He rose.
|
|
|
|
"But you can't," cried Trina, the back of her hand upon her
|
|
lips, her eyes brimming. "Mac, don't you see? Can't you
|
|
understand? You've got to stop. Oh, it's dreadful!
|
|
Listen." She hurried around the table to him and caught his
|
|
arm in both her hands.
|
|
|
|
"Huh?" growled McTeague, looking at her with a puzzled
|
|
frown.
|
|
|
|
"They'll arrest you. You'll go to prison. You can't work--
|
|
can't work any more. We're ruined."
|
|
|
|
Vanovitch was pounding on the door of the sitting-room.
|
|
|
|
"He'll be gone in a minute," exclaimed McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"Well, let him go. Tell him to go; tell him to come again."
|
|
|
|
"Why, he's got an APPOINTMENT with me," exclaimed
|
|
McTeague, his hand upon the door.
|
|
|
|
Trina caught him back. "But, Mac, you ain't a dentist any
|
|
longer; you ain't a doctor. You haven't the right to work.
|
|
You never went to a dental college."
|
|
|
|
"Well, suppose I never went to a college, ain't I a dentist
|
|
just the same? Listen, he's pounding there again. No, I'm
|
|
going, sure."
|
|
|
|
"Well, of course, go," said Trina, with sudden reaction.
|
|
"It ain't possible they'll make you stop. If you're a
|
|
good dentist, that's all that's wanted. Go on, Mac; hurry,
|
|
before he goes."
|
|
|
|
McTeague went out, closing the door. Trina stood for a
|
|
moment looking intently at the bricks at her feet. Then she
|
|
returned to the table, and sat down again before the notice,
|
|
and, resting her head in both her fists, read it yet another
|
|
time. Suddenly the conviction seized upon her that it was
|
|
all true. McTeague would be obliged to stop work, no matter
|
|
how good a dentist he was. But why had the authorities at
|
|
the City Hall waited this long before serving the notice?
|
|
All at once Trina snapped her fingers, with a quick flash of
|
|
intelligence.
|
|
|
|
"It's Marcus that's done it," she cried.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
It was like a clap of thunder. McTeague was stunned,
|
|
stupefied. He said nothing. Never in his life had he been
|
|
so taciturn. At times he did not seem to hear Trina when she
|
|
spoke to him, and often she had to shake him by the shoulder
|
|
to arouse his attention. He would sit apart in his
|
|
"Parlors," turning the notice about in his enormous clumsy
|
|
fingers, reading it stupidly over and over again. He
|
|
couldn't understand. What had a clerk at the City Hall to
|
|
do with him? Why couldn't they let him alone?
|
|
|
|
"Oh, what's to become of us NOW?" wailed Trina. "What's
|
|
to become of us now? We're paupers, beggars--and all so
|
|
sudden." And once, in a quick, inexplicable fury, totally
|
|
unlike anything that McTeague had noticed in her before, she
|
|
had started up, with fists and teeth shut tight, and had
|
|
cried, "Oh, if you'd only KILLED Marcus Schouler that
|
|
time he fought you!"
|
|
|
|
McTeague had continued his work, acting from sheer force of
|
|
habit; his sluggish, deliberate nature, methodical,
|
|
obstinate, refusing to adapt itself to the new conditions.
|
|
|
|
"Maybe Marcus was only trying to scare us," Trina had said.
|
|
"How are they going to know whether you're practising or
|
|
not?"
|
|
|
|
"I got a mould to make to-morrow," McTeague said, "and
|
|
Vanovitch, that plumber round on Sutter Street, he's
|
|
coming again at three."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you go right ahead," Trina told him, decisively; "you
|
|
go right ahead and make the mould, and pull every tooth in
|
|
Vanovitch's head if you want to. Who's going to know?
|
|
Maybe they just sent that notice as a matter of form. Maybe
|
|
Marcus got that paper and filled it in himself."
|
|
|
|
The two would lie awake all night long, staring up into the
|
|
dark, talking, talking, talking.
|
|
|
|
"Haven't you got any right to practise if you've not been to
|
|
a dental college, Mac? Didn't you ever go?" Trina would ask
|
|
again and again.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," answered the dentist, "I never went. I learnt
|
|
from the fellow I was apprenticed to. I don' know anything
|
|
about a dental college. Ain't I got a right to do as I
|
|
like?" he suddenly exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"If you know your profession, isn't that enough?" cried
|
|
Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," growled McTeague. "I ain't going to stop for
|
|
them."
|
|
|
|
"You go right on," Trina said, "and I bet you won't hear
|
|
another word about it."
|
|
|
|
"Suppose I go round to the City Hall and see them," hazarded
|
|
McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"No, no, don't you do it, Mac," exclaimed Trina. "Because,
|
|
if Marcus has done this just to scare you, they won't know
|
|
anything about it there at the City Hall; but they'll begin
|
|
to ask you questions, and find out that you never HAD
|
|
graduated from a dental college, and you'd be just as bad
|
|
off as ever."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I ain't going to quit for just a piece of paper,"
|
|
declared the dentist. The phrase stuck to him. All day
|
|
long he went about their rooms or continued at his work in
|
|
the "Parlors," growling behind his thick mustache: "I ain't
|
|
going to quit for just a piece of paper. No, I ain't going
|
|
to quit for just a piece of paper. Sure not."
|
|
|
|
The days passed, a week went by, McTeague continued his
|
|
work as usual. They heard no more from the City Hall,
|
|
but the suspense of the situation was harrowing. Trina was
|
|
actually sick with it. The terror of the thing was ever at
|
|
their elbows, going to bed with them, sitting down with them
|
|
at breakfast in the kitchen, keeping them company all
|
|
through the day. Trina dared not think of what would be
|
|
their fate if the income derived from McTeague's practice
|
|
was suddenly taken from them. Then they would have to fall
|
|
back on the interest of her lottery money and the pittance
|
|
she derived from the manufacture of the Noah's ark animals,
|
|
a little over thirty dollars a month. No, no, it was not to
|
|
be thought of. It could not be that their means of
|
|
livelihood was to be thus stricken from them.
|
|
|
|
A fortnight went by. "I guess we're all right, Mac," Trina
|
|
allowed herself to say. "It looks as though we were all
|
|
right. How are they going to tell whether you're practising
|
|
or not?"
|
|
|
|
That day a second and much more peremptory notice was served
|
|
upon McTeague by an official in person. Then suddenly Trina
|
|
was seized with a panic terror, unreasoned, instinctive. If
|
|
McTeague persisted they would both be sent to a prison, she
|
|
was sure of it; a place where people were chained to the
|
|
wall, in the dark, and fed on bread and water.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac, you've got to quit," she wailed. "You can't go
|
|
on. They can make you stop. Oh, why didn't you go to a
|
|
dental college? Why didn't you find out that you had to
|
|
have a college degree? And now we're paupers, beggars.
|
|
We've got to leave here--leave this flat where I've been--
|
|
where WE'VE been so happy, and sell all the pretty
|
|
things; sell the pictures and the melodeon, and--Oh, it's
|
|
too dreadful!"
|
|
|
|
"Huh? Huh? What? What?" exclaimed the dentist,
|
|
bewildered. "I ain't going to quit for just a piece of
|
|
paper. Let them put me out. I'll show them. They--they
|
|
can't make small of me."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that's all very fine to talk that way, but you'll have
|
|
to quit."
|
|
|
|
"Well, we ain't paupers," McTeague suddenly exclaimed, an
|
|
idea entering his mind. "We've got our money yet. You've
|
|
got your five thousand dollars and the money you've been
|
|
saving up. People ain't paupers when they've got over
|
|
five thousand dollars."
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean, Mac?" cried Trina, apprehensively.
|
|
|
|
"Well, we can live on THAT money until--until--until--"
|
|
he broke off with an uncertain movement of his shoulders,
|
|
looking about him stupidly.
|
|
|
|
"Until WHEN?" cried Trina. "There ain't ever going to
|
|
be any 'until.' We've got the INTEREST of that five
|
|
thousand and we've got what Uncle Oelbermann gives me, a
|
|
little over thirty dollars a month, and that's all we've
|
|
got. You'll have to find something else to do."
|
|
|
|
"What will I find to do?"
|
|
|
|
What, indeed? McTeague was over thirty now, sluggish and
|
|
slow-witted at best. What new trade could he learn at this
|
|
age?
|
|
|
|
Little by little Trina made the dentist understand the
|
|
calamity that had befallen them, and McTeague at last began
|
|
cancelling his appointments. Trina gave it out that he was
|
|
sick.
|
|
|
|
"Not a soul need know what's happened to us," she said to
|
|
her husband.
|
|
|
|
But it was only by slow degrees that McTeague abandoned his
|
|
profession. Every morning after breakfast he would go into
|
|
his "Parlors" as usual and potter about his instruments, his
|
|
dental engine, and his washstand in the corner behind his
|
|
screen where he made his moulds. Now he would sharpen a
|
|
"hoe" excavator, now he would busy himself for a whole hour
|
|
making "mats" and "cylinders." Then he would look over his
|
|
slate where he kept a record of his appointments.
|
|
|
|
One day Trina softly opened the door of the "Parlors" and
|
|
came in from the sitting-room. She had not heard McTeague
|
|
moving about for some time and had begun to wonder what he
|
|
was doing. She came in, quietly shutting the door behind
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had tidied the room with the greatest care. The
|
|
volumes of the "Practical Dentist" and the "American System
|
|
of Dentistry" were piled upon the marble-top centre-table in
|
|
rectangular blocks. The few chairs were drawn up against
|
|
the wall under the steel engraving of "Lorenzo de'
|
|
Medici" with more than usual precision. The dental engine
|
|
and the nickelled trimmings of the operating chair had been
|
|
furbished till they shone, while on the movable rack in the
|
|
bay window McTeague had arranged his instruments with the
|
|
greatest neatness and regularity. "Hoe" excavators,
|
|
pluggers, forceps, pliers, corundum disks and burrs, even
|
|
the boxwood mallet that Trina was never to use again, all
|
|
were laid out and ready for immediate use.
|
|
|
|
McTeague himself sat in his operating chair, looking
|
|
stupidly out of the windows, across the roofs opposite, with
|
|
an unseeing gaze, his red hands lying idly in his lap.
|
|
Trina came up to him. There was something in his eyes that
|
|
made her put both arms around his neck and lay his huge head
|
|
with its coarse blond hair upon her shoulder.
|
|
|
|
"I--I got everything fixed," he said. "I got everything
|
|
fixed an' ready. See, everything ready an' waiting, an'--
|
|
an'--an' nobody comes, an' nobody's ever going to come any
|
|
more. Oh, Trina!" He put his arms about her and drew her
|
|
down closer to him.
|
|
|
|
"Never mind, dear; never mind," cried Trina, through her
|
|
tears. "It'll all come right in the end, and we'll be poor
|
|
together if we have to. You can sure find something else to
|
|
do. We'll start in again."
|
|
|
|
"Look at the slate there," said McTeague, pulling away from
|
|
her and reaching down the slate on which he kept a record of
|
|
his appointments. "Look at them. There's Vanovitch at two
|
|
on Wednesday, and Loughhead's wife Thursday morning, and
|
|
Heise's little girl Thursday afternoon at one-thirty; Mrs.
|
|
Watson on Friday, and Vanovitch again Saturday morning
|
|
early--at seven. That's what I was to have had, and they
|
|
ain't going to come. They ain't ever going to come any
|
|
more."
|
|
|
|
Trina took the little slate from him and looked at it
|
|
ruefully.
|
|
|
|
"Rub them out," she said, her voice trembling; "rub it all
|
|
out;" and as she spoke her eyes brimmed again, and a great
|
|
tear dropped on the slate. "That's it," she said; "that's
|
|
the way to rub it out, by me crying on it." Then she
|
|
passed her fingers over the tear-blurred writing and washed
|
|
the slate clean. "All gone, all gone," she said.
|
|
|
|
"All gone," echoed the dentist. There was a silence. Then
|
|
McTeague heaved himself up to his full six feet two, his
|
|
face purpling, his enormous mallet-like fists raised over
|
|
his head. His massive jaw protruded more than ever, while
|
|
his teeth clicked and grated together; then he growled:
|
|
|
|
"If ever I meet Marcus Schouler--" he broke off abruptly,
|
|
the white of his eyes growing suddenly pink.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, if ever you DO," exclaimed Trina, catching her
|
|
breath.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 14
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Well, what do you think?" said Trina.
|
|
|
|
She and McTeague stood in a tiny room at the back of the
|
|
flat and on its very top floor. The room was whitewashed.
|
|
It contained a bed, three cane-seated chairs, and a wooden
|
|
washstand with its washbowl and pitcher. From its single
|
|
uncurtained window one looked down into the flat's dirty
|
|
back yard and upon the roofs of the hovels that bordered the
|
|
alley in the rear. There was a rag carpet on the floor. In
|
|
place of a closet some dozen wooden pegs were affixed to the
|
|
wall over the washstand. There was a smell of cheap soap
|
|
and of ancient hair-oil in the air.
|
|
|
|
"That's a single bed," said Trina, "but the landlady says
|
|
she'll put in a double one for us. You see----"
|
|
|
|
"I ain't going to live here," growled McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"Well, you've got to live somewhere," said Trina,
|
|
impatiently. "We've looked Polk Street over, and this
|
|
is the only thing we can afford."
|
|
|
|
"Afford, afford," muttered the dentist. "You with your five
|
|
thousand dollars, and the two or three hundred you got saved
|
|
up, talking about 'afford.' You make me sick."
|
|
|
|
"Now, Mac," exclaimed Trina, deliberately, sitting down in
|
|
one of the cane-seated chairs; "now, Mac, let's have this
|
|
thing----"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I don't figure on living in one room," growled the
|
|
dentist, sullenly. "Let's live decently until we can get a
|
|
fresh start. We've got the money."
|
|
|
|
"Who's got the money?"
|
|
|
|
"WE'VE got it."
|
|
|
|
"We!"
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's all in the family. What's yours is mine, and
|
|
what's mine is yours, ain't it?"
|
|
|
|
"No, it's not; no, it's not," cried Trina, vehemently.
|
|
"It's all mine, mine. There's not a penny of it belongs to
|
|
anybody else. I don't like to have to talk this way to you,
|
|
but you just make me. We're not going to touch a penny of
|
|
my five thousand nor a penny of that little money I managed
|
|
to save--that seventy-five."
|
|
|
|
"That TWO hundred, you mean."
|
|
|
|
"That SEVENTY-FIVE. We're just going to live on the
|
|
interest of that and on what I earn from Uncle Oelbermann--
|
|
on just that thirty-one or two dollars."
|
|
|
|
"Huh! Think I'm going to do that, an' live in such a room
|
|
as this?"
|
|
|
|
Trina folded her arms and looked him squarely in the face.
|
|
|
|
"Well, what ARE you going to do, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh?"
|
|
|
|
"I say, what ARE you going to do? You can go on and
|
|
find something to do and earn some more money, and THEN
|
|
we'll talk."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I ain't going to live here."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, very well, suit yourself. I'M going to live here."
|
|
|
|
"You'll live where I TELL you," the dentist suddenly
|
|
cried, exasperated at the mincing tone she affected.
|
|
|
|
"Then YOU'LL pay the rent," exclaimed Trina, quite
|
|
as angry as he.
|
|
|
|
"Are you my boss, I'd like to know? Who's the boss, you or
|
|
I?"
|
|
|
|
"Who's got the MONEY, I'd like to know?" cried Trina,
|
|
flushing to her pale lips. "Answer me that, McTeague,
|
|
who's got the money?"
|
|
|
|
"You make me sick, you and your money. Why, you're a
|
|
miser. I never saw anything like it. When I was
|
|
practising, I never thought of my fees as my own; we lumped
|
|
everything in together."
|
|
|
|
"Exactly; and I'M doing the working now. I'm working
|
|
for Uncle Oelbermann, and you're not lumping in ANYTHING
|
|
now. I'm doing it all. Do you know what I'm doing,
|
|
McTeague? I'm supporting you."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, shut up; you make me sick."
|
|
|
|
"You got no RIGHT to talk to me that way. I won't let
|
|
you. I--I won't have it." She caught her breath. Tears
|
|
were in her eyes.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, live where you like, then," said McTeague, sullenly.
|
|
|
|
"Well, shall we take this room then?"
|
|
|
|
"All right, we'll take it. But why can't you take a little
|
|
of your money an'--an'--sort of fix it up?"
|
|
|
|
"Not a penny, not a single penny."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I don't care WHAT you do." And for the rest of the
|
|
day the dentist and his wife did not speak.
|
|
|
|
This was not the only quarrel they had during these days
|
|
when they were occupied in moving from their suite and in
|
|
looking for new quarters. Every hour the question of money
|
|
came up. Trina had become more niggardly than ever since the
|
|
loss of McTeague's practice. It was not mere economy with
|
|
her now. It was a panic terror lest a fraction of a cent of
|
|
her little savings should be touched; a passionate eagerness
|
|
to continue to save in spite of all that had happened.
|
|
Trina could have easily afforded better quarters than the
|
|
single whitewashed room at the top of the flat, but she made
|
|
McTeague believe that it was impossible.
|
|
|
|
"I can still save a little," she said to herself, after the
|
|
room had been engaged; "perhaps almost as much as ever.
|
|
I'll have three hundred dollars pretty soon, and Mac thinks
|
|
it's only two hundred. It's almost two hundred and fifty;
|
|
and I'll get a good deal out of the sale."
|
|
|
|
But this sale was a long agony. It lasted a week.
|
|
Everything went--everything but the few big pieces that went
|
|
with the suite, and that belonged to the photographer. The
|
|
melodeon, the chairs, the black walnut table before which
|
|
they were married, the extension table in the sitting-room,
|
|
the kitchen table with its oilcloth cover, the framed
|
|
lithographs from the English illustrated papers, the very
|
|
carpets on the floors. But Trina's heart nearly broke when
|
|
the kitchen utensils and furnishings began to go. Every
|
|
pot, every stewpan, every knife and fork, was an old friend.
|
|
How she had worked over them! How clean she had kept them!
|
|
What a pleasure it had been to invade that little brick-
|
|
paved kitchen every morning, and to wash up and put to
|
|
rights after breakfast, turning on the hot water at the
|
|
sink, raking down the ashes in the cook-stove, going and
|
|
coming over the warm bricks, her head in the air, singing at
|
|
her work, proud in the sense of her proprietorship and her
|
|
independence! How happy had she been the day after her
|
|
marriage when she had first entered that kitchen and knew
|
|
that it was all her own! And how well she remembered her
|
|
raids upon the bargain counters in the house-furnishing
|
|
departments of the great down-town stores! And now it was
|
|
all to go. Some one else would have it all, while she was
|
|
relegated to cheap restaurants and meals cooked by hired
|
|
servants. Night after night she sobbed herself to sleep at
|
|
the thought of her past happiness and her present
|
|
wretchedness. However, she was not alone in her unhappiness.
|
|
|
|
"Anyhow, I'm going to keep the steel engraving an' the stone
|
|
pug dog," declared the dentist, his fist clenching. When it
|
|
had come to the sale of his office effects McTeague had
|
|
rebelled with the instinctive obstinacy of a boy, shutting
|
|
his eyes and ears. Only little by little did Trina induce
|
|
him to part with his office furniture. He fought over every
|
|
article, over the little iron stove, the bed-lounge, the
|
|
marble-topped centre table, the whatnot in the corner,
|
|
the bound volumes of "Allen's Practical Dentist," the rifle
|
|
manufacturer's calendar, and the prim, military chairs. A
|
|
veritable scene took place between him and his wife before
|
|
he could bring himself to part with the steel engraving of
|
|
"Lorenzo de' Medici and His Court" and the stone pug dog
|
|
with its goggle eyes.
|
|
|
|
"Why," he would cry, "I've had 'em ever since--ever since I
|
|
BEGAN; long before I knew you, Trina. That steel
|
|
engraving I bought in Sacramento one day when it was
|
|
raining. I saw it in the window of a second-hand store, and
|
|
a fellow GAVE me that stone pug dog. He was a druggist.
|
|
It was in Sacramento too. We traded. I gave him a shaving-
|
|
mug and a razor, and he gave me the pug dog."
|
|
|
|
There were, however, two of his belongings that even Trina
|
|
could not induce him to part with.
|
|
|
|
"And your concertina, Mac," she prompted, as they were
|
|
making out the list for the second-hand dealer. "The
|
|
concertina, and--oh, yes, the canary and the bird cage."
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"Mac, you MUST be reasonable. The concertina would
|
|
bring quite a sum, and the bird cage is as good as new.
|
|
I'll sell the canary to the bird-store man on Kearney
|
|
Street."
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"If you're going to make objections to every single thing,
|
|
we might as well quit. Come, now, Mac, the concertina and
|
|
the bird cage. We'll put them in Lot D."
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"You'll have to come to it sooner or later. I'M giving
|
|
up everything. I'm going to put them down, see."
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
And she could get no further than that. The dentist did not
|
|
lose his temper, as in the case of the steel engraving or
|
|
the stone pug dog; he simply opposed her entreaties and
|
|
persuasions with a passive, inert obstinacy that nothing
|
|
could move. In the end Trina was obliged to submit.
|
|
McTeague kept his concertina and his canary, even going so
|
|
far as to put them both away in the bedroom, attaching
|
|
to them tags on which he had scrawled in immense round
|
|
letters, "Not for Sale."
|
|
|
|
One evening during that same week the dentist and his wife
|
|
were in the dismantled sitting-room. The room presented
|
|
the appearance of a wreck. The Nottingham lace curtains
|
|
were down. The extension table was heaped high with dishes,
|
|
with tea and coffee pots, and with baskets of spoons and
|
|
knives and forks. The melodeon was hauled out into the
|
|
middle of the floor, and covered with a sheet marked "Lot
|
|
A," the pictures were in a pile in a corner, the chenille
|
|
portieres were folded on top of the black walnut table. The
|
|
room was desolate, lamentable. Trina was going over the
|
|
inventory; McTeague, in his shirt sleeves, was smoking his
|
|
pipe, looking stupidly out of the window. All at once there
|
|
was a brisk rapping at the door.
|
|
|
|
"Come in," called Trina, apprehensively. Now-a-days at
|
|
every unexpected visit she anticipated a fresh calamity.
|
|
The door opened to let in a young man wearing a checked
|
|
suit, a gay cravat, and a marvellously figured waistcoat.
|
|
Trina and McTeague recognized him at once. It was the
|
|
Other Dentist, the debonair fellow whose clients were the
|
|
barbers and the young women of the candy stores and soda-
|
|
water fountains, the poser, the wearer of waistcoats, who
|
|
bet money on greyhound races.
|
|
|
|
"How'do?" said this one, bowing gracefully to the McTeagues
|
|
as they stared at him distrustfully.
|
|
|
|
"How'do? They tell me, Doctor, that you are going out of
|
|
the profession."
|
|
|
|
McTeague muttered indistinctly behind his mustache and
|
|
glowered at him.
|
|
|
|
"Well, say," continued the other, cheerily, "I'd like to
|
|
talk business with you. That sign of yours, that big golden
|
|
tooth that you got outside of your window, I don't suppose
|
|
you'll have any further use for it. Maybe I'd buy it if we
|
|
could agree on terms."
|
|
|
|
Trina shot a glance at her husband. McTeague began to
|
|
glower again.
|
|
|
|
"What do you say?" said the Other Dentist.
|
|
|
|
"I guess not," growled McTeague
|
|
|
|
"What do you say to ten dollars?"
|
|
|
|
"Ten dollars!" cried Trina, her chin in the air.
|
|
|
|
"Well, what figure DO you put on it?"
|
|
|
|
Trina was about to answer when she was interrupted by
|
|
McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"You go out of here."
|
|
|
|
"Hey? What?"
|
|
|
|
"You go out of here."
|
|
|
|
The other retreated toward the door.
|
|
|
|
"You can't make small of me. Go out of here."
|
|
|
|
McTeague came forward a step, his great red fist clenching.
|
|
The young man fled. But half way down the stairs he paused
|
|
long enough to call back:
|
|
|
|
"You don't want to trade anything for a diploma, do you?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague and his wife exchanged looks.
|
|
|
|
"How did he know?" exclaimed Trina, sharply. They had
|
|
invented and spread the fiction that McTeague was merely
|
|
retiring from business, without assigning any reason. But
|
|
evidently every one knew the real cause. The humiliation
|
|
was complete now. Old Miss Baker confirmed their suspicions
|
|
on this point the next day. The little retired dressmaker
|
|
came down and wept with Trina over her misfortune, and did
|
|
what she could to encourage her. But she too knew that
|
|
McTeague had been forbidden by the authorities from
|
|
practising. Marcus had evidently left them no loophole of
|
|
escape.
|
|
|
|
"It's just like cutting off your husband's hands, my dear,"
|
|
said Miss Baker. "And you two were so happy. When I first
|
|
saw you together I said, 'What a pair!'"
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis also called during this period of the breaking
|
|
up of the McTeague household.
|
|
|
|
"Dreadful, dreadful," murmured the old Englishman, his hand
|
|
going tremulously to his chin. "It seems unjust; it does.
|
|
But Mr. Schouler could not have set them on to do it. I
|
|
can't quite believe it of him."
|
|
|
|
"Of Marcus!" cried Trina. "Hoh! Why, he threw his knife at
|
|
Mac one time, and another time he bit him, actually bit him
|
|
with his teeth, while they were wrestling just for fun.
|
|
Marcus would do anything to injure Mac."
|
|
|
|
"Dear, dear," returned Old Grannis, genuinely pained. "I
|
|
had always believed Schouler to be such a good fellow."
|
|
|
|
"That's because you're so good yourself, Mr. Grannis,"
|
|
responded Trina.
|
|
|
|
"I tell you what, Doc," declared Heise the harness-maker,
|
|
shaking his finger impressively at the dentist, "you must
|
|
fight it; you must appeal to the courts; you've been
|
|
practising too long to be debarred now. The statute of
|
|
limitations, you know."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," Trina had exclaimed, when the dentist had repeated
|
|
this advice to her. "No, no, don't go near the law courts.
|
|
I know them. The lawyers take all your money, and you
|
|
lose your case. We're bad off as it is, without lawing
|
|
about it."
|
|
|
|
Then at last came the sale. McTeague and Trina, whom Miss
|
|
Baker had invited to her room for that day, sat there side
|
|
by side, holding each other's hands, listening nervously to
|
|
the turmoil that rose to them from the direction of their
|
|
suite. From nine o'clock till dark the crowds came and
|
|
went. All Polk Street seemed to have invaded the suite,
|
|
lured on by the red flag that waved from the front windows.
|
|
It was a fete, a veritable holiday, for the whole
|
|
neighborhood. People with no thought of buying presented
|
|
themselves. Young women--the candy-store girls and
|
|
florist's apprentices--came to see the fun, walking arm in
|
|
arm from room to room, making jokes about the pretty
|
|
lithographs and mimicking the picture of the two little
|
|
girls saying their prayers.
|
|
|
|
"Look here," they would cry, "look here what she used for
|
|
curtains--NOTTINGHAM lace, actually! Whoever thinks of
|
|
buying Nottingham lace now-a-days? Say, don't that JAR
|
|
you?"
|
|
|
|
"And a melodeon," another one would exclaim, lifting the
|
|
sheet. "A melodeon, when you can rent a piano for a dollar a
|
|
week; and say, I really believe they used to eat in the
|
|
kitchen."
|
|
|
|
"Dollarn-half, dollarn-half, dollarn-half, give me two,"
|
|
intoned the auctioneer from the second-hand store. By noon
|
|
the crowd became a jam. Wagons backed up to the curb
|
|
outside and departed heavily laden. In all directions
|
|
people could be seen going away from the house,
|
|
carrying small articles of furniture--a clock, a water
|
|
pitcher, a towel rack. Every now and then old Miss Baker,
|
|
who had gone below to see how things were progressing,
|
|
returned with reports of the foray.
|
|
|
|
"Mrs. Heise bought the chenille portieres. Mister Ryer made
|
|
a bid for your bed, but a man in a gray coat bid over him.
|
|
It was knocked down for three dollars and a half. The
|
|
German shoe-maker on the next block bought the stone pug
|
|
dog. I saw our postman going away with a lot of the
|
|
pictures. Zerkow has come, on my word! the rags-bottles-
|
|
sacks man; he's buying lots; he bought all Doctor McTeague's
|
|
gold tape and some of the instruments. Maria's there too.
|
|
That dentist on the corner took the dental engine, and
|
|
wanted to get the sign, the big gold tooth," and so on and
|
|
so on. Cruelest of all, however, at least to Trina, was
|
|
when Miss Baker herself began to buy, unable to resist a
|
|
bargain. The last time she came up she carried a bundle of
|
|
the gay tidies that used to hang over the chair backs.
|
|
|
|
"He offered them, three for a nickel," she explained to
|
|
Trina, "and I thought I'd spend just a quarter. You don't
|
|
mind, now, do you, Mrs. McTeague?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, no, of course not, Miss Baker," answered Trina,
|
|
bravely.
|
|
|
|
"They'll look very pretty on some of my chairs," went on the
|
|
little old dressmaker, innocently. "See." She spread one
|
|
of them on a chair back for inspection. Trina's chin
|
|
quivered.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, VERY pretty," she answered.
|
|
|
|
At length that dreadful day was over. The crowd dispersed.
|
|
Even the auctioneer went at last, and as he closed the door
|
|
with a bang, the reverberation that went through the suite
|
|
gave evidence of its emptiness.
|
|
|
|
"Come," said Trina to the dentist, "let's go down and look--
|
|
take a last look."
|
|
|
|
They went out of Miss Baker's room and descended to the
|
|
floor below. On the stairs, however, they were met by Old
|
|
Grannis. In his hands he carried a little package. Was it
|
|
possible that he too had taken advantage of their
|
|
misfortunes to join in the raid upon the suite?
|
|
|
|
"I went in," he began, timidly, "for--for a few moments.
|
|
This"--he indicated the little package he carried--"this was
|
|
put up. It was of no value but to you. I--I ventured to
|
|
bid it in. I thought perhaps"--his hand went to his chin,
|
|
"that you wouldn't mind; that--in fact, I bought it for you
|
|
--as a present. Will you take it?" He handed the package
|
|
to Trina and hurried on. Trina tore off the wrappings.
|
|
|
|
It was the framed photograph of McTeague and his wife in
|
|
their wedding finery, the one that had been taken
|
|
immediately after the marriage. It represented Trina
|
|
sitting very erect in a rep armchair, holding her wedding
|
|
bouquet straight before her, McTeague standing at her side,
|
|
his left foot forward, one hand upon her shoulder, and the
|
|
other thrust into the breast of his "Prince Albert" coat, in
|
|
the attitude of a statue of a Secretary of State.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it WAS good of him, it WAS good of him," cried
|
|
Trina, her eyes filling again. "I had forgotten to put it
|
|
away. Of course it was not for sale."
|
|
|
|
They went on down the stairs, and arriving at the door of
|
|
the sitting-room, opened it and looked in. It was late in
|
|
the afternoon, and there was just light enough for the
|
|
dentist and his wife to see the results of that day of sale.
|
|
Nothing was left, not even the carpet. It was a pillage, a
|
|
devastation, the barrenness of a field after the passage of
|
|
a swarm of locusts. The room had been picked and stripped
|
|
till only the bare walls and floor remained. Here where
|
|
they had been married, where the wedding supper had taken
|
|
place, where Trina had bade farewell to her father and
|
|
mother, here where she had spent those first few hard months
|
|
of her married life, where afterward she had grown to be
|
|
happy and contented, where she had passed the long hours of
|
|
the afternoon at her work of whittling, and where she and
|
|
her husband had spent so many evenings looking out of the
|
|
window before the lamp was lit--here in what had been her
|
|
home, nothing was left but echoes and the emptiness of
|
|
complete desolation. Only one thing remained. On the wall
|
|
between the windows, in its oval glass frame, preserved by
|
|
some unknown and fearful process, a melancholy relic of a
|
|
vanished happiness, unsold, neglected, and forgotten, a
|
|
thing that nobody wanted, hung Trina's wedding bouquet.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 15
|
|
|
|
|
|
Then the grind began. It would have been easier for the
|
|
McTeagues to have faced their misfortunes had they befallen
|
|
them immediately after their marriage, when their love for
|
|
each other was fresh and fine, and when they could have
|
|
found a certain happiness in helping each other and sharing
|
|
each other's privations. Trina, no doubt, loved her husband
|
|
more than ever, in the sense that she felt she belonged to
|
|
him. But McTeague's affection for his wife was dwindling a
|
|
little every day--HAD been dwindling for a long time, in
|
|
fact. He had become used to her by now. She was part of
|
|
the order of the things with which he found himself
|
|
surrounded. He saw nothing extraordinary about her; it was
|
|
no longer a pleasure for him to kiss her and take her in his
|
|
arms; she was merely his wife. He did not dislike her; he
|
|
did not love her. She was his wife, that was all. But he
|
|
sadly missed and regretted all those little animal comforts
|
|
which in the old prosperous life Trina had managed to find
|
|
for him. He missed the cabbage soups and steaming chocolate
|
|
that Trina had taught him to like; he missed his good
|
|
tobacco that Trina had educated him to prefer; he missed the
|
|
Sunday afternoon walks that she had caused him to substitute
|
|
in place of his nap in the operating chair; and he
|
|
missed the bottled beer that she had induced him to
|
|
drink in place of the steam beer from Frenna's. In the end
|
|
he grew morose and sulky, and sometimes neglected to answer
|
|
his wife when she spoke to him. Besides this, Trina's
|
|
avarice was a perpetual annoyance to him. Oftentimes when a
|
|
considerable alleviation of this unhappiness could have been
|
|
obtained at the expense of a nickel or a dime, Trina refused
|
|
the money with a pettishness that was exasperating.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," she would exclaim. "To ride to the park Sunday
|
|
afternoon, that means ten cents, and I can't afford it."
|
|
|
|
"Let's walk there, then."
|
|
|
|
"I've got to work."
|
|
|
|
"But you've worked morning and afternoon every day this
|
|
week."
|
|
|
|
"I don't care, I've got to work."
|
|
|
|
There had been a time when Trina had hated the idea of
|
|
McTeague drinking steam beer as common and vulgar.
|
|
|
|
"Say, let's have a bottle of beer to-night. We haven't had
|
|
a drop of beer in three weeks."
|
|
|
|
"We can't afford it. It's fifteen cents a bottle."
|
|
|
|
"But I haven't had a swallow of beer in three weeks."
|
|
|
|
"Drink STEAM beer, then. You've got a nickel. I gave
|
|
you a quarter day before yesterday."
|
|
|
|
"But I don't like steam beer now."
|
|
|
|
It was so with everything. Unfortunately, Trina had
|
|
cultivated tastes in McTeague which now could not be
|
|
gratified. He had come to be very proud of his silk hat and
|
|
"Prince Albert" coat, and liked to wear them on Sundays.
|
|
Trina had made him sell both. He preferred "Yale mixture"
|
|
in his pipe; Trina had made him come down to "Mastiff," a
|
|
five-cent tobacco with which he was once contented, but now
|
|
abhorred. He liked to wear clean cuffs; Trina allowed him a
|
|
fresh pair on Sundays only. At first these deprivations
|
|
angered McTeague. Then, all of a sudden, he slipped back
|
|
into the old habits (that had been his before he knew Trina)
|
|
with an ease that was surprising. Sundays he dined at the
|
|
car conductors' coffee-joint once more, and spent the
|
|
afternoon lying full length upon the bed, crop-full,
|
|
stupid, warm, smoking his huge pipe, drinking his steam
|
|
beer, and playing his six mournful tunes upon his
|
|
concertina, dozing off to sleep towards four o'clock.
|
|
|
|
The sale of their furniture had, after paying the rent and
|
|
outstanding bills, netted about a hundred and thirty
|
|
dollars. Trina believed that the auctioneer from the second-
|
|
hand store had swindled and cheated them and had made a
|
|
great outcry to no effect. But she had arranged the affair
|
|
with the auctioneer herself, and offset her disappointment
|
|
in the matter of the sale by deceiving her husband as to the
|
|
real amount of the returns. It was easy to lie to McTeague,
|
|
who took everything for granted; and since the occasion of
|
|
her trickery with the money that was to have been sent to
|
|
her mother, Trina had found falsehood easier than ever.
|
|
|
|
"Seventy dollars is all the auctioneer gave me," she told
|
|
her husband; "and after paying the balance due on the rent,
|
|
and the grocer's bill, there's only fifty left."
|
|
|
|
"Only fifty?" murmured McTeague, wagging his head, "only
|
|
fifty? Think of that."
|
|
|
|
"Only fifty," declared Trina. Afterwards she said to
|
|
herself with a certain admiration for her cleverness:
|
|
|
|
"Couldn't save sixty dollars much easier than that," and she
|
|
had added the hundred and thirty to the little hoard in the
|
|
chamois-skin bag and brass match-box in the bottom of her
|
|
trunk.
|
|
|
|
In these first months of their misfortunes the routine of
|
|
the McTeagues was as follows: They rose at seven and
|
|
breakfasted in their room, Trina cooking the very meagre
|
|
meal on an oil stove. Immediately after breakfast Trina sat
|
|
down to her work of whittling the Noah's ark animals, and
|
|
McTeague took himself off to walk down town. He had by the
|
|
greatest good luck secured a position with a manufacturer of
|
|
surgical instruments, where his manual dexterity in the
|
|
making of excavators, pluggers, and other dental
|
|
contrivances stood him in fairly good stead. He lunched at
|
|
a sailor's boarding-house near the water front, and in the
|
|
afternoon worked till six. He was home at six-thirty, and
|
|
he and Trina had supper together in the "ladies' dining
|
|
parlor," an adjunct of the car conductors' coffee-
|
|
joint. Trina, meanwhile, had worked at her whittling all
|
|
day long, with but half an hour's interval for lunch, which
|
|
she herself prepared upon the oil stove. In the evening
|
|
they were both so tired that they were in no mood for
|
|
conversation, and went to bed early, worn out, harried,
|
|
nervous, and cross.
|
|
|
|
Trina was not quite so scrupulously tidy now as in the old
|
|
days. At one time while whittling the Noah's ark animals
|
|
she had worn gloves. She never wore them now. She still
|
|
took pride in neatly combing and coiling her wonderful black
|
|
hair, but as the days passed she found it more and more
|
|
comfortable to work in her blue flannel wrapper. Whittlings
|
|
and chips accumulated under the window where she did her
|
|
work, and she was at no great pains to clear the air of the
|
|
room vitiated by the fumes of the oil stove and heavy with
|
|
the smell of cooking. It was not gay, that life. The room
|
|
itself was not gay. The huge double bed sprawled over
|
|
nearly a fourth of the available space; the angles of
|
|
Trina's trunk and the washstand projected into the room from
|
|
the walls, and barked shins and scraped elbows. Streaks and
|
|
spots of the "non-poisonous" paint that Trina used were upon
|
|
the walls and wood-work. However, in one corner of the
|
|
room, next the window, monstrous, distorted, brilliant,
|
|
shining with a light of its own, stood the dentist's sign,
|
|
the enormous golden tooth, the tooth of a Brobdingnag.
|
|
|
|
One afternoon in September, about four months after the
|
|
McTeagues had left their suite, Trina was at her work by the
|
|
window. She had whittled some half-dozen sets of animals,
|
|
and was now busy painting them and making the arks. Little
|
|
pots of "non-poisonous" paint stood at her elbow on the
|
|
table, together with a box of labels that read, "Made in
|
|
France." Her huge clasp-knife was stuck into the under side
|
|
of the table. She was now occupied solely with the brushes
|
|
and the glue pot. She turned the little figures in her
|
|
fingers with a wonderful lightness and deftness, painting
|
|
the chickens Naples yellow, the elephants blue gray, the
|
|
horses Vandyke brown, adding a dot of Chinese white for the
|
|
eyes and sticking in the ears and tail with a drop of glue.
|
|
The animals once done, she put together and painted the
|
|
arks, some dozen of them, all windows and no doors, each one
|
|
opening only by a lid which was half the roof. She had all
|
|
the work she could handle these days, for, from this time
|
|
till a week before Christmas, Uncle Oelbermann could take as
|
|
many "Noah's ark sets" as she could make.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly Trina paused in her work, looking expectantly
|
|
toward the door. McTeague came in.
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mac," exclaimed Trina. "It's only three o'clock. What
|
|
are you home so early for? Have they discharged you?"
|
|
|
|
"They've fired me," said McTeague, sitting down on the bed.
|
|
|
|
"Fired you! What for?"
|
|
|
|
"I don' know. Said the times were getting hard an' they had
|
|
to let me go."
|
|
|
|
Trina let her paint-stained hands fall into her lap.
|
|
|
|
"OH!" she cried. "If we don't have the HARDEST luck
|
|
of any two people I ever heard of. What can you do now? Is
|
|
there another place like that where they make surgical
|
|
instruments?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh? No, I don' know. There's three more."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you must try them right away. Go down there right
|
|
now."
|
|
|
|
"Huh? Right now? No, I'm tired. I'll go down in the
|
|
morning."
|
|
|
|
"Mac," cried Trina, in alarm, "what are you thinking of?
|
|
You talk as though we were millionaires. You must go down
|
|
this minute. You're losing money every second you sit
|
|
there." She goaded the huge fellow to his feet again,
|
|
thrust his hat into his hands, and pushed him out of the
|
|
door, he obeying the while, docile and obedient as a big
|
|
cart horse. He was on the stairs when she came running
|
|
after him.
|
|
|
|
"Mac, they paid you off, didn't they, when they discharged
|
|
you?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Then you must have some money. Give it to me."
|
|
|
|
The dentist heaved a shoulder uneasily.
|
|
|
|
"No, I don' want to."
|
|
|
|
"I've got to have that money. There's no more oil for
|
|
the stove, and I must buy some more meal tickets to-night."
|
|
|
|
"Always after me about money," muttered the dentist; but he
|
|
emptied his pockets for her, nevertheless.
|
|
|
|
"I--you've taken it all," he grumbled. "Better leave me
|
|
something for car fare. It's going to rain."
|
|
|
|
"Pshaw! You can walk just as well as not. A big fellow
|
|
like you 'fraid of a little walk; and it ain't going to
|
|
rain."
|
|
|
|
Trina had lied again both as to the want of oil for the
|
|
stove and the commutation ticket for the restaurant. But
|
|
she knew by instinct that McTeague had money about him, and
|
|
she did not intend to let it go out of the house. She
|
|
listened intently until she was sure McTeague was gone.
|
|
Then she hurriedly opened her trunk and hid the money in the
|
|
chamois bag at the bottom.
|
|
|
|
The dentist presented himself at every one of the makers of
|
|
surgical instruments that afternoon and was promptly turned
|
|
away in each case. Then it came on to rain, a fine, cold
|
|
drizzle, that chilled him and wet him to the bone. He had
|
|
no umbrella, and Trina had not left him even five cents for
|
|
car fare. He started to walk home through the rain. It was
|
|
a long way to Polk Street, as the last manufactory he had
|
|
visited was beyond even Folsom Street, and not far from the
|
|
city front.
|
|
|
|
By the time McTeague reached Polk Street his teeth were
|
|
chattering with the cold. He was wet from head to foot. As
|
|
he was passing Heise's harness shop a sudden deluge of rain
|
|
overtook him and he was obliged to dodge into the vestibule
|
|
for shelter. He, who loved to be warm, to sleep and to be
|
|
well fed, was icy cold, was exhausted and footsore from
|
|
tramping the city. He could look forward to nothing better
|
|
than a badly-cooked supper at the coffee-joint--hot meat on
|
|
a cold plate, half done suet pudding, muddy coffee, and bad
|
|
bread, and he was cold, miserably cold, and wet to the bone.
|
|
All at once a sudden rage against Trina took possession of
|
|
him. It was her fault. She knew it was going to rain, and
|
|
she had not let him have a nickel for car fare--she who had
|
|
five thousand dollars. She let him walk the streets in the
|
|
cold and in the rain. "Miser," he growled behind his
|
|
mustache. "Miser, nasty little old miser. You're worse
|
|
than old Zerkow, always nagging about money, money, and you
|
|
got five thousand dollars. You got more, an' you live in
|
|
that stinking hole of a room, and you won't drink any decent
|
|
beer. I ain't going to stand it much longer. She knew it
|
|
was going to rain. She KNEW it. Didn't I TELL her?
|
|
And she drives me out of my own home in the rain, for me to
|
|
get money for her; more money, and she takes it. She took
|
|
that money from me that I earned. 'Twasn't hers; it was
|
|
mine, I earned it--and not a nickel for car fare. She don't
|
|
care if I get wet and get a cold and DIE. No, she
|
|
don't, as long as she's warm and's got her money." He
|
|
became more and more indignant at the picture he made of
|
|
himself. "I ain't going to stand it much longer," he
|
|
repeated.
|
|
|
|
"Why, hello, Doc. Is that you?" exclaimed Heise, opening
|
|
the door of the harness shop behind him. "Come in out of
|
|
the wet. Why, you're soaked through," he added as he and
|
|
McTeague came back into the shop, that reeked of oiled
|
|
leather. "Didn't you have any umbrella? Ought to have
|
|
taken a car."
|
|
|
|
"I guess so--I guess so," murmured the dentist, confused.
|
|
His teeth were chattering.
|
|
|
|
"YOU'RE going to catch your death-a-cold," exclaimed
|
|
Heise. "Tell you what," he said, reaching for his hat, "come
|
|
in next door to Frenna's and have something to warm you up.
|
|
I'll get the old lady to mind the shop." He called Mrs.
|
|
Heise down from the floor above and took McTeague into Joe
|
|
Frenna's saloon, which was two doors above his harness shop.
|
|
|
|
"Whiskey and gum twice, Joe," said he to the barkeeper as he
|
|
and the dentist approached the bar.
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What?" said McTeague. "Whiskey? No, I can't drink
|
|
whiskey. It kind of disagrees with me."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, the hell!" returned Heise, easily. "Take it as
|
|
medicine. You'll get your death-a-cold if you stand round
|
|
soaked like that. Two whiskey and gum, Joe."
|
|
|
|
McTeague emptied the pony glass at a single enormous gulp.
|
|
|
|
"That's the way," said Heise, approvingly. "Do you good."
|
|
He drank his off slowly.
|
|
|
|
"I'd--I'd ask you to have a drink with me, Heise," said
|
|
the dentist, who had an indistinct idea of the amenities of
|
|
the barroom, "only," he added shamefacedly, "only--you see,
|
|
I don't believe I got any change." His anger against Trina,
|
|
heated by the whiskey he had drank, flamed up afresh. What
|
|
a humiliating position for Trina to place him in, not to
|
|
leave him the price of a drink with a friend, she who had
|
|
five thousand dollars!
|
|
|
|
"Sha! That's all right, Doc," returned Heise, nibbling on a
|
|
grain of coffee. "Want another? Hey? This my treat. Two
|
|
more of the same, Joe."
|
|
|
|
McTeague hesitated. It was lamentably true that whiskey did
|
|
not agree with him; he knew it well enough. However, by
|
|
this time he felt very comfortably warm at the pit of his
|
|
stomach. The blood was beginning to circulate in his
|
|
chilled finger-tips and in his soggy, wet feet. He had had
|
|
a hard day of it; in fact, the last week, the last month,
|
|
the last three or four months, had been hard. He deserved a
|
|
little consolation. Nor could Trina object to this. It
|
|
wasn't costing a cent. He drank again with Heise.
|
|
|
|
"Get up here to the stove and warm yourself," urged Heise,
|
|
drawing up a couple of chairs and cocking his feet upon the
|
|
guard. The two fell to talking while McTeague's draggled
|
|
coat and trousers smoked.
|
|
|
|
"What a dirty turn that was that Marcus Schouler did you!"
|
|
said Heise, wagging his head. "You ought to have fought
|
|
that, Doc, sure. You'd been practising too long." They
|
|
discussed this question some ten or fifteen minutes and then
|
|
Heise rose.
|
|
|
|
"Well, this ain't earning any money. I got to get back to
|
|
the shop." McTeague got up as well, and the pair started
|
|
for the door. Just as they were going out Ryer met them.
|
|
|
|
"Hello, hello," he cried. "Lord, what a wet day! You two
|
|
are going the wrong way. You're going to have a drink with
|
|
me. Three whiskey punches, Joe."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," answered McTeague, shaking his head. "I'm going
|
|
back home. I've had two glasses of whiskey already."
|
|
|
|
"Sha!" cried Heise, catching his arm. "A strapping big chap
|
|
like you ain't afraid of a little whiskey."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I--I--I got to go right afterwards," protested
|
|
McTeague.
|
|
|
|
About half an hour after the dentist had left to go down
|
|
town, Maria Macapa had come in to see Trina. Occasionally
|
|
Maria dropped in on Trina in this fashion and spent an hour
|
|
or so chatting with her while she worked. At first Trina
|
|
had been inclined to resent these intrusions of the Mexican
|
|
woman, but of late she had begun to tolerate them. Her day
|
|
was long and cheerless at the best, and there was no one to
|
|
talk to. Trina even fancied that old Miss Baker had come to
|
|
be less cordial since their misfortune. Maria retailed to
|
|
her all the gossip of the flat and the neighborhood, and,
|
|
which was much more interesting, told her of her troubles
|
|
with Zerkow.
|
|
|
|
Trina said to herself that Maria was common and vulgar, but
|
|
one had to have some diversion, and Trina could talk and
|
|
listen without interrupting her work. On this particular
|
|
occasion Maria was much excited over Zerkow's demeanor of
|
|
late.
|
|
|
|
"He's gettun worse an' worse," she informed Trina as she sat
|
|
on the edge of the bed, her chin in her hand. "He says he
|
|
knows I got the dishes and am hidun them from him. The
|
|
other day I thought he'd gone off with his wagon, and I was
|
|
doin' a bit of ir'ning, an' by an' by all of a sudden I saw
|
|
him peeping at me through the crack of the door. I never
|
|
let on that I saw him, and, honest, he stayed there over two
|
|
hours, watchun everything I did. I could just feel his eyes
|
|
on the back of my neck all the time. Last Sunday he took
|
|
down part of the wall, 'cause he said he'd seen me making
|
|
figures on it. Well, I was, but it was just the wash list.
|
|
All the time he says he'll kill me if I don't tell."
|
|
|
|
"Why, what do you stay with him for?" exclaimed Trina. "I'd
|
|
be deathly 'fraid of a man like that; and he did take a
|
|
knife to you once."
|
|
|
|
"Hoh! HE won't kill me, never fear. If he'd kill me
|
|
he'd never know where the dishes were; that's what HE
|
|
thinks."
|
|
|
|
"But I can't understand, Maria; you told him about those
|
|
gold dishes yourself."
|
|
|
|
"Never, never! I never saw such a lot of crazy folks as
|
|
you are."
|
|
|
|
"But you say he hits you sometimes."
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" said Maria, tossing her head scornfully, "I ain't
|
|
afraid of him. He takes his horsewhip to me now and then,
|
|
but I can always manage. I say, 'If you touch me with that,
|
|
then I'll NEVER tell you.' Just pretending, you know,
|
|
and he drops it as though it was red hot. Say, Mrs.
|
|
McTeague, have you got any tea? Let's make a cup of tea
|
|
over the stove."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," cried Trina, with niggardly apprehension; "no, I
|
|
haven't got a bit of tea." Trina's stinginess had increased
|
|
to such an extent that it had gone beyond the mere hoarding
|
|
of money. She grudged even the food that she and McTeague
|
|
ate, and even brought away half loaves of bread, lumps of
|
|
sugar, and fruit from the car conductors' coffee-joint. She
|
|
hid these pilferings away on the shelf by the window, and
|
|
often managed to make a very creditable lunch from them,
|
|
enjoying the meal with the greater relish because it cost
|
|
her nothing.
|
|
|
|
"No, Maria, I haven't got a bit of tea," she said, shaking
|
|
her head decisively. "Hark, ain't that Mac?" she added, her
|
|
chin in the air. "That's his step, sure."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'm going to skip," said Maria. She left hurriedly,
|
|
passing the dentist in the hall just outside the door.
|
|
"Well?" said Trina interrogatively as her husband entered.
|
|
McTeague did not answer. He hung his hat on the hook behind
|
|
the door and dropped heavily into a chair.
|
|
|
|
"Well," asked Trina, anxiously, "how did you make out, Mac?"
|
|
|
|
Still the dentist pretended not to hear, scowling fiercely
|
|
at his muddy boots.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me, Mac, I want to know. Did you get a place? Did
|
|
you get caught in the rain?"
|
|
|
|
"Did I? Did I?" cried the dentist, sharply, an alacrity in
|
|
his manner and voice that Trina had never observed before.
|
|
|
|
"Look at me. Look at me," he went on, speaking with an
|
|
unwonted rapidity, his wits sharp, his ideas succeeding
|
|
each other quickly. "Look at me, drenched through,
|
|
shivering cold. I've walked the city over. Caught in the
|
|
rain! Yes, I guess I did get caught in the rain, and it
|
|
ain't your fault I didn't catch my death-a-cold; wouldn't
|
|
even let me have a nickel for car fare."
|
|
|
|
"But, Mac," protested Trina, "I didn't know it was going to
|
|
rain."
|
|
|
|
The dentist put back his head and laughed scornfully. His
|
|
face was very red, and his small eyes twinkled. "Hoh! no,
|
|
you didn't know it was going to rain. Didn't I TELL you
|
|
it was?" he exclaimed, suddenly angry again. "Oh, you're a
|
|
DAISY, you are. Think I'm going to put up with your
|
|
foolishness ALL the time? Who's the boss, you or I?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mac, I never saw you this way before. You talk like a
|
|
different man."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I AM a different man," retorted the dentist,
|
|
savagely. "You can't make small of me ALWAYS."
|
|
|
|
"Well, never mind that. You know I'm not trying to make
|
|
small of you. But never mind that. Did you get a place?"
|
|
|
|
"Give me my money," exclaimed McTeague, jumping up briskly.
|
|
There was an activity, a positive nimbleness about the huge
|
|
blond giant that had never been his before; also his
|
|
stupidity, the sluggishness of his brain, seemed to be
|
|
unusually stimulated.
|
|
|
|
"Give me my money, the money I gave you as I was going
|
|
away."
|
|
|
|
"I can't," exclaimed Trina. "I paid the grocer's bill with
|
|
it while you were gone."
|
|
|
|
"Don't believe you."
|
|
|
|
"Truly, truly, Mac. Do you think I'd lie to you? Do you
|
|
think I'd lower myself to do that?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, the next time I earn any money I'll keep it myself."
|
|
|
|
"But tell me, Mac, DID you get a place?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague turned his back on her.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me, Mac, please, did you?"
|
|
|
|
The dentist jumped up and thrust his face close to
|
|
hers, his heavy jaw protruding, his little eyes twinkling
|
|
meanly.
|
|
|
|
"No," he shouted. "No, no, NO. Do you hear? NO."
|
|
|
|
Trina cowered before him. Then suddenly she began to sob
|
|
aloud, weeping partly at his strange brutality, partly at
|
|
the disappointment of his failure to find employment.
|
|
|
|
McTeague cast a contemptuous glance about him, a glance that
|
|
embraced the dingy, cheerless room, the rain streaming down
|
|
the panes of the one window, and the figure of his weeping
|
|
wife.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, ain't this all FINE?" he exclaimed. "Ain't it
|
|
lovely?"
|
|
|
|
"It's not my fault," sobbed Trina.
|
|
|
|
"It is too," vociferated McTeague. "It is too. We could
|
|
live like Christians and decent people if you wanted to.
|
|
You got more'n five thousand dollars, and you're so damned
|
|
stingy that you'd rather live in a rat hole--and make me
|
|
live there too--before you'd part with a nickel of it. I
|
|
tell you I'm sick and tired of the whole business."
|
|
|
|
An allusion to her lottery money never failed to rouse
|
|
Trina.
|
|
|
|
"And I'll tell you this much too," she cried, winking back
|
|
the tears. "Now that you're out of a job, we can't afford
|
|
even to live in your rat hole, as you call it. We've got to
|
|
find a cheaper place than THIS even."
|
|
|
|
"What!" exclaimed the dentist, purple with rage. "What, get
|
|
into a worse hole in the wall than this? Well, we'll
|
|
SEE if we will. We'll just see about that. You're going
|
|
to do just as I tell you after this, Trina McTeague," and
|
|
once more he thrust his face close to hers.
|
|
|
|
"I know what's the matter," cried Trina, with a half
|
|
sob; "I know, I can smell it on your breath. You've been
|
|
drinking whiskey."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I've been drinking whiskey," retorted her husband.
|
|
"I've been drinking whiskey. Have you got anything to say
|
|
about it? Ah, yes, you're RIGHT, I've been drinking
|
|
whiskey. What have YOU got to say about my drinking
|
|
whiskey? Let's hear it."
|
|
|
|
"Oh! Oh! Oh!" sobbed Trina, covering her face with her
|
|
hands. McTeague caught her wrists in one palm and
|
|
pulled them down. Trina's pale face was streaming with
|
|
tears; her long, narrow blue eyes were swimming; her
|
|
adorable little chin upraised and quivering.
|
|
|
|
"Let's hear what you got to say," exclaimed McTeague.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing, nothing," said Trina, between her sobs.
|
|
|
|
"Then stop that noise. Stop it, do you hear me? Stop it."
|
|
He threw up his open hand threateningly. "STOP!" he
|
|
exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
Trina looked at him fearfully, half blinded with weeping.
|
|
Her husband's thick mane of yellow hair was disordered and
|
|
rumpled upon his great square-cut head; his big red ears
|
|
were redder than ever; his face was purple; the thick
|
|
eyebrows were knotted over the small, twinkling eyes; the
|
|
heavy yellow mustache, that smelt of alcohol, drooped over
|
|
the massive, protruding chin, salient, like that of the
|
|
carnivora; the veins were swollen and throbbing on his thick
|
|
red neck; while over her head Trina saw his upraised palm,
|
|
callused, enormous.
|
|
|
|
"Stop!" he exclaimed. And Trina, watching fearfully, saw
|
|
the palm suddenly contract into a fist, a fist that was hard
|
|
as a wooden mallet, the fist of the old-time car-boy. And
|
|
then her ancient terror of him, the intuitive fear of the
|
|
male, leaped to life again. She was afraid of him. Every
|
|
nerve of her quailed and shrank from him. She choked back
|
|
her sobs, catching her breath.
|
|
|
|
"There," growled the dentist, releasing her, "that's more
|
|
like. Now," he went on, fixing her with his little eyes,
|
|
"now listen to me. I'm beat out. I've walked the city
|
|
over--ten miles, I guess--an' I'm going to bed, an' I don't
|
|
want to be bothered. You understand? I want to be let
|
|
alone." Trina was silent.
|
|
|
|
"Do you HEAR?" he snarled.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Mac."
|
|
|
|
The dentist took off his coat, his collar and necktie,
|
|
unbuttoned his vest, and slipped his heavy-soled boots from
|
|
his big feet. Then he stretched himself upon the bed and
|
|
rolled over towards the wall. In a few minutes the sound of
|
|
his snoring filled the room.
|
|
|
|
Trina craned her neck and looked at her husband over the
|
|
footboard of the bed. She saw his red, congested face;
|
|
the huge mouth wide open; his unclean shirt, with its frayed
|
|
wristbands; and his huge feet encased in thick woollen
|
|
socks. Then her grief and the sense of her unhappiness
|
|
returned more poignant than ever. She stretched her arms
|
|
out in front of her on her work-table, and, burying her face
|
|
in them, cried and sobbed as though her heart would break.
|
|
|
|
The rain continued. The panes of the single window ran with
|
|
sheets of water; the eaves dripped incessantly. It grew
|
|
darker. The tiny, grimy room, full of the smells of cooking
|
|
and of "non-poisonous" paint, took on an aspect of
|
|
desolation and cheerlessness lamentable beyond words. The
|
|
canary in its little gilt prison chittered feebly from time
|
|
to time. Sprawled at full length upon the bed, the dentist
|
|
snored and snored, stupefied, inert, his legs wide apart,
|
|
his hands lying palm upward at his sides.
|
|
|
|
At last Trina raised her head, with a long, trembling
|
|
breath. She rose, and going over to the washstand, poured
|
|
some water from the pitcher into the basin, and washed her
|
|
face and swollen eyelids, and rearranged her hair.
|
|
Suddenly, as she was about to return to her work, she was
|
|
struck with an idea.
|
|
|
|
"I wonder," she said to herself, "I wonder where he got the
|
|
money to buy his whiskey." She searched the pockets of his
|
|
coat, which he had flung into a corner of the room, and even
|
|
came up to him as he lay upon the bed and went through the
|
|
pockets of his vest and trousers. She found nothing.
|
|
|
|
"I wonder," she murmured, "I wonder if he's got any
|
|
money he don't tell me about. I'll have to look out for
|
|
that."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 16
|
|
|
|
|
|
A week passed, then a fortnight, then a month. It was a
|
|
month of the greatest anxiety and unquietude for Trina.
|
|
McTeague was out of a job, could find nothing to do; and
|
|
Trina, who saw the impossibility of saving as much money as
|
|
usual out of her earnings under the present conditions, was
|
|
on the lookout for cheaper quarters. In spite of his
|
|
outcries and sulky resistance Trina had induced her husband
|
|
to consent to such a move, bewildering him with a torrent of
|
|
phrases and marvellous columns of figures by which she
|
|
proved conclusively that they were in a condition but one
|
|
remove from downright destitution.
|
|
|
|
The dentist continued idle. Since his ill success with the
|
|
manufacturers of surgical instruments he had made but two
|
|
attempts to secure a job. Trina had gone to see Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann and had obtained for McTeague a position in the
|
|
shipping department of the wholesale toy store. However, it
|
|
was a position that involved a certain amount of ciphering,
|
|
and McTeague had been obliged to throw it up in two days.
|
|
|
|
Then for a time they had entertained a wild idea that a
|
|
place on the police force could be secured for McTeague. He
|
|
could pass the physical examination with flying colors, and
|
|
Ryer, who had become the secretary of the Polk Street
|
|
Improvement Club, promised the requisite political "pull."
|
|
If McTeague had shown a certain energy in the matter the
|
|
attempt might have been successful; but he was too
|
|
stupid, or of late had become too listless to exert himself
|
|
greatly, and the affair resulted only in a violent quarrel
|
|
with Ryer.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had lost his ambition. He did not care to better
|
|
his situation. All he wanted was a warm place to sleep and
|
|
three good meals a day. At the first--at the very first--he
|
|
had chafed at his idleness and had spent the days with his
|
|
wife in their one narrow room, walking back and forth with
|
|
the restlessness of a caged brute, or sitting motionless for
|
|
hours, watching Trina at her work, feeling a dull glow of
|
|
shame at the idea that she was supporting him. This feeling
|
|
had worn off quickly, however. Trina's work was only hard
|
|
when she chose to make it so, and as a rule she supported
|
|
their misfortunes with a silent fortitude.
|
|
|
|
Then, wearied at his inaction and feeling the need of
|
|
movement and exercise, McTeague would light his pipe and
|
|
take a turn upon the great avenue one block above Polk
|
|
Street. A gang of laborers were digging the foundations for
|
|
a large brownstone house, and McTeague found interest and
|
|
amusement in leaning over the barrier that surrounded the
|
|
excavations and watching the progress of the work. He came
|
|
to see it every afternoon; by and by he even got to know the
|
|
foreman who superintended the job, and the two had long
|
|
talks together. Then McTeague would return to Polk Street
|
|
and find Heise in the back room of the harness shop, and
|
|
occasionally the day ended with some half dozen drinks of
|
|
whiskey at Joe Frenna's saloon.
|
|
|
|
It was curious to note the effect of the alcohol upon the
|
|
dentist. It did not make him drunk, it made him vicious.
|
|
So far from being stupefied, he became, after the fourth
|
|
glass, active, alert, quick-witted, even talkative; a
|
|
certain wickedness stirred in him then; he was intractable,
|
|
mean; and when he had drunk a little more heavily than
|
|
usual, he found a certain pleasure in annoying and
|
|
exasperating Trina, even in abusing and hurting her.
|
|
|
|
It had begun on the evening of Thanksgiving Day, when Heise
|
|
had taken McTeague out to dinner with him. The dentist on
|
|
this occasion had drunk very freely. He and Heise had
|
|
returned to Polk Street towards ten o'clock, and Heise
|
|
at once suggested a couple of drinks at Frenna's.
|
|
|
|
"All right, all right," said McTeague. "Drinks, that's the
|
|
word. I'll go home and get some money and meet you at
|
|
Joe's."
|
|
|
|
Trina was awakened by her husband pinching her arm.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac," she cried, jumping up in bed with a little
|
|
scream, "how you hurt! Oh, that hurt me dreadfully."
|
|
|
|
"Give me a little money," answered the dentist, grinning,
|
|
and pinching her again.
|
|
|
|
"I haven't a cent. There's not a--oh, MAC, will you
|
|
stop? I won't have you pinch me that way."
|
|
|
|
"Hurry up," answered her husband, calmly, nipping the flesh
|
|
of her shoulder between his thumb and finger. "Heise's
|
|
waiting for me." Trina wrenched from him with a sharp
|
|
intake of breath, frowning with pain, and caressing her
|
|
shoulder.
|
|
|
|
"Mac, you've no idea how that hurts. Mac, STOP!"
|
|
|
|
"Give me some money, then."
|
|
|
|
In the end Trina had to comply. She gave him half a dollar
|
|
from her dress pocket, protesting that it was the only piece
|
|
of money she had.
|
|
|
|
"One more, just for luck," said McTeague, pinching her
|
|
again; "and another."
|
|
|
|
"How can you--how CAN you hurt a woman so!" exclaimed
|
|
Trina, beginning to cry with the pain.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, now, CRY," retorted the dentist. "That's right,
|
|
CRY. I never saw such a little fool." He went out,
|
|
slamming the door in disgust.
|
|
|
|
But McTeague never became a drunkard in the generally
|
|
received sense of the term. He did not drink to excess more
|
|
than two or three times in a month, and never upon any
|
|
occasion did he become maudlin or staggering. Perhaps his
|
|
nerves were naturally too dull to admit of any excitation;
|
|
perhaps he did not really care for the whiskey, and only
|
|
drank because Heise and the other men at Frenna's did.
|
|
Trina could often reproach him with drinking too much; she
|
|
never could say that he was drunk. The alcohol had its
|
|
effect for all that. It roused the man, or rather the brute
|
|
in the man, and now not only roused it, but goaded it to
|
|
evil. McTeague's nature changed. It was not only the
|
|
alcohol, it was idleness and a general throwing off of the
|
|
good influence his wife had had over him in the days of
|
|
their prosperity. McTeague disliked Trina. She was a
|
|
perpetual irritation to him. She annoyed him because she
|
|
was so small, so prettily made, so invariably correct and
|
|
precise. Her avarice incessantly harassed him. Her
|
|
industry was a constant reproach to him. She seemed to
|
|
flaunt her work defiantly in his face. It was the red flag
|
|
in the eyes of the bull. One time when he had just come
|
|
back from Frenna's and had been sitting in the chair near
|
|
her, silently watching her at her work, he exclaimed all of
|
|
a sudden:
|
|
|
|
"Stop working. Stop it, I tell you. Put 'em away. Put 'em
|
|
all away, or I'll pinch you."
|
|
|
|
"But why--why?" Trina protested.
|
|
|
|
The dentist cuffed her ears. "I won't have you work." He
|
|
took her knife and her paint-pots away, and made her sit
|
|
idly in the window the rest of the afternoon.
|
|
|
|
It was, however, only when his wits had been stirred with
|
|
alcohol that the dentist was brutal to his wife. At other
|
|
times, say three weeks of every month, she was merely an
|
|
incumbrance to him. They often quarrelled about Trina's
|
|
money, her savings. The dentist was bent upon having at
|
|
least a part of them. What he would do with the money once
|
|
he had it, he did not precisely know. He would spend it in
|
|
royal fashion, no doubt, feasting continually, buying
|
|
himself wonderful clothes. The miner's idea of money quickly
|
|
gained and lavishly squandered, persisted in his mind. As
|
|
for Trina, the more her husband stormed, the tighter she
|
|
drew the strings of the little chamois-skin bag that she hid
|
|
at the bottom of her trunk underneath her bridal dress. Her
|
|
five thousand dollars invested in Uncle Oelbermann's
|
|
business was a glittering, splendid dream which came to her
|
|
almost every hour of the day as a solace and a compensation
|
|
for all her unhappiness.
|
|
|
|
At times, when she knew that McTeague was far from
|
|
home, she would lock her door, open her trunk, and pile all
|
|
her little hoard on her table. By now it was four hundred
|
|
and seven dollars and fifty cents. Trina would play with
|
|
this money by the hour, piling it, and repiling it, or
|
|
gathering it all into one heap, and drawing back to the
|
|
farthest corner of the room to note the effect, her head on
|
|
one side. She polished the gold pieces with a mixture of
|
|
soap and ashes until they shone, wiping them carefully on
|
|
her apron. Or, again, she would draw the heap lovingly
|
|
toward her and bury her face in it, delighted at the smell
|
|
of it and the feel of the smooth, cool metal on her cheeks.
|
|
She even put the smaller gold pieces in her mouth, and
|
|
jingled them there. She loved her money with an intensity
|
|
that she could hardly express. She would plunge her small
|
|
fingers into the pile with little murmurs of affection, her
|
|
long, narrow eyes half closed and shining, her breath coming
|
|
in long sighs.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, the dear money, the dear money," she would whisper. "I
|
|
love you so! All mine, every penny of it. No one shall
|
|
ever, ever get you. How I've worked for you! How I've
|
|
slaved and saved for you! And I'm going to get more; I'm
|
|
going to get more, more, more; a little every day."
|
|
|
|
She was still looking for cheaper quarters. Whenever she
|
|
could spare a moment from her work, she would put on her hat
|
|
and range up and down the entire neighborhood from Sutter to
|
|
Sacramento Streets, going into all the alleys and bystreets,
|
|
her head in the air, looking for the "Rooms-to-let" sign.
|
|
But she was in despair. All the cheaper tenements were
|
|
occupied. She could find no room more reasonable than the
|
|
one she and the dentist now occupied.
|
|
|
|
As time went on, McTeague's idleness became habitual. He
|
|
drank no more whiskey than at first, but his dislike for
|
|
Trina increased with every day of their poverty, with every
|
|
day of Trina's persistent stinginess. At times--fortunately
|
|
rare he was more than ever brutal to her. He would box her
|
|
ears or hit her a great blow with the back of a hair-brush,
|
|
or even with his closed fist. His old-time affection
|
|
for his "little woman," unable to stand the test of
|
|
privation, had lapsed by degrees, and what little of it was
|
|
left was changed, distorted, and made monstrous by the
|
|
alcohol.
|
|
|
|
The people about the house and the clerks at the provision
|
|
stores often remarked that Trina's fingertips were swollen
|
|
and the nails purple as though they had been shut in a door.
|
|
Indeed, this was the explanation she gave. The fact of the
|
|
matter was that McTeague, when he had been drinking, used to
|
|
bite them, crunching and grinding them with his immense
|
|
teeth, always ingenious enough to remember which were the
|
|
sorest. Sometimes he extorted money from her by this means,
|
|
but as often as not he did it for his own satisfaction.
|
|
|
|
And in some strange, inexplicable way this brutality made
|
|
Trina all the more affectionate; aroused in her a morbid,
|
|
unwholesome love of submission, a strange, unnatural
|
|
pleasure in yielding, in surrendering herself to the will of
|
|
an irresistible, virile power.
|
|
|
|
Trina's emotions had narrowed with the narrowing of her
|
|
daily life. They reduced themselves at last to but two, her
|
|
passion for her money and her perverted love for her husband
|
|
when he was brutal. She was a strange woman during these
|
|
days.
|
|
|
|
Trina had come to be on very intimate terms with Maria
|
|
Macapa, and in the end the dentist's wife and the maid of
|
|
all work became great friends. Maria was constantly in and
|
|
out of Trina's room, and, whenever she could, Trina threw a
|
|
shawl over her head and returned Maria's calls. Trina could
|
|
reach Zerkow's dirty house without going into the street.
|
|
The back yard of the flat had a gate that opened into a
|
|
little inclosure where Zerkow kept his decrepit horse and
|
|
ramshackle wagon, and from thence Trina could enter directly
|
|
into Maria's kitchen. Trina made long visits to Maria
|
|
during the morning in her dressing-gown and curl papers, and
|
|
the two talked at great length over a cup of tea served on
|
|
the edge of the sink or a corner of the laundry table. The
|
|
talk was all of their husbands and of what to do when they
|
|
came home in aggressive moods.
|
|
|
|
"You never ought to fight um," advised Maria. "It only
|
|
makes um worse. Just hump your back, and it's soonest
|
|
over."
|
|
|
|
They told each other of their husbands' brutalities, taking
|
|
a strange sort of pride in recounting some particularly
|
|
savage blow, each trying to make out that her own husband
|
|
was the most cruel. They critically compared each other's
|
|
bruises, each one glad when she could exhibit the worst.
|
|
They exaggerated, they invented details, and, as if proud of
|
|
their beatings, as if glorying in their husbands'
|
|
mishandling, lied to each other, magnifying their own
|
|
maltreatment. They had long and excited arguments as to
|
|
which were the most effective means of punishment, the
|
|
rope's ends and cart whips such as Zerkow used, or the fists
|
|
and backs of hair-brushes affected by McTeague. Maria
|
|
contended that the lash of the whip hurt the most; Trina,
|
|
that the butt did the most injury.
|
|
|
|
Maria showed Trina the holes in the walls and the loosened
|
|
boards in the flooring where Zerkow had been searching for
|
|
the gold plate. Of late he had been digging in the back
|
|
yard and had ransacked the hay in his horse-shed for the
|
|
concealed leather chest he imagined he would find. But he
|
|
was becoming impatient, evidently.
|
|
|
|
"The way he goes on," Maria told Trina, "is somethun
|
|
dreadful. He's gettun regularly sick with it--got a fever
|
|
every night--don't sleep, and when he does, talks to
|
|
himself. Says 'More'n a hundred pieces, an' every one of
|
|
'em gold. More'n a hundred pieces, an' every one of 'em
|
|
gold.' Then he'll whale me with his whip, and shout, 'You
|
|
know where it is. Tell me, tell me, you swine, or I'll do
|
|
for you.' An' then he'll get down on his knees and whimper,
|
|
and beg me to tell um where I've hid it. He's just gone plum
|
|
crazy. Sometimes he has regular fits, he gets so mad, and
|
|
rolls on the floor and scratches himself."
|
|
|
|
One morning in November, about ten o'clock, Trina pasted a
|
|
"Made in France" label on the bottom of a Noah's ark, and
|
|
leaned back in her chair with a long sigh of relief. She
|
|
had just finished a large Christmas order for Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann, and there was nothing else she could do that
|
|
morning. The bed had not yet been made, nor had the
|
|
breakfast things been washed. Trina hesitated for a moment,
|
|
then put her chin in the air indifferently.
|
|
|
|
"Bah!" she said, "let them go till this afternoon. I don't
|
|
care WHEN the room is put to rights, and I know Mac
|
|
don't." She determined that instead of making the bed or
|
|
washing the dishes she would go and call on Miss Baker on
|
|
the floor below. The little dressmaker might ask her to
|
|
stay to lunch, and that would be something saved, as the
|
|
dentist had announced his intention that morning of taking a
|
|
long walk out to the Presidio to be gone all day.
|
|
|
|
But Trina rapped on Miss Baker's door in vain that morning.
|
|
She was out. Perhaps she was gone to the florist's to buy
|
|
some geranium seeds. However, Old Grannis's door stood a
|
|
little ajar, and on hearing Trina at Miss Baker's room, the
|
|
old Englishman came out into the hall.
|
|
|
|
"She's gone out," he said, uncertainly, and in a half
|
|
whisper, "went out about half an hour ago. I--I think she
|
|
went to the drug store to get some wafers for the goldfish."
|
|
|
|
"Don't you go to your dog hospital any more, Mister
|
|
Grannis?" said Trina, leaning against the balustrade in the
|
|
hall, willing to talk a moment.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis stood in the doorway of his room, in his carpet
|
|
slippers and faded corduroy jacket that he wore when at
|
|
home.
|
|
|
|
"Why--why," he said, hesitating, tapping his chin
|
|
thoughtfully. "You see I'm thinking of giving up the little
|
|
hospital."
|
|
|
|
"Giving it up?"
|
|
|
|
"You see, the people at the book store where I buy my
|
|
pamphlets have found out--I told them of my contrivance for
|
|
binding books, and one of the members of the firm came up to
|
|
look at it. He offered me quite a sum if I would sell him
|
|
the right of it--the--patent of it--quite a sum. In fact--
|
|
in fact--yes, quite a sum, quite." He rubbed his chin
|
|
tremulously and looked about him on the floor.
|
|
|
|
"Why, isn't that fine?" said Trina, good-naturedly. "I'm
|
|
very glad, Mister Grannis. Is it a good price?"
|
|
|
|
"Quite a sum--quite. In fact, I never dreamed of
|
|
having so much money."
|
|
|
|
"Now, see here, Mister Grannis," said Trina, decisively, "I
|
|
want to give you a good piece of advice. Here are you and
|
|
Miss Baker----" The old Englishman started nervously--"You
|
|
and Miss Baker, that have been in love with each other for----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mrs. McTeague, that subject--if you would please--Miss
|
|
Baker is such an estimable lady."
|
|
|
|
"Fiddlesticks!" said Trina. "You're in love with each
|
|
other, and the whole flat knows it; and you two have been
|
|
living here side by side year in and year out, and you've
|
|
never said a word to each other. It's all nonsense. Now, I
|
|
want you should go right in and speak to her just as soon as
|
|
she comes home, and say you've come into money and you want
|
|
her to marry you."
|
|
|
|
"Impossible--impossible!" exclaimed the old Englishman,
|
|
alarmed and perturbed. "It's quite out of the question. I
|
|
wouldn't presume."
|
|
|
|
"Well, do you love her, or not?"
|
|
|
|
"Really, Mrs. McTeague, I--I--you must excuse me. It's a
|
|
matter so personal--so--I--Oh, yes, I love her. Oh, yes,
|
|
indeed," he exclaimed, suddenly.
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, she loves you. She told me so."
|
|
|
|
"Oh!"
|
|
|
|
"She did. She said those very words."
|
|
|
|
Miss Baker had said nothing of the kind--would have died
|
|
sooner than have made such a confession; but Trina had drawn
|
|
her own conclusions, like every other lodger of the flat,
|
|
and thought the time was come for decided action.
|
|
|
|
"Now you do just as I tell you, and when she comes home, go
|
|
right in and see her, and have it over with. Now, don't say
|
|
another word. I'm going; but you do just as I tell you."
|
|
|
|
Trina turned about and went down-stairs. She had decided,
|
|
since Miss Baker was not at home, that she would run over
|
|
and see Maria; possibly she could have lunch there. At any
|
|
rate, Maria would offer her a cup of tea.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis stood for a long time just as Trina had
|
|
left him, his hands trembling, the blood coming and going in
|
|
his withered cheeks.
|
|
|
|
"She said, she--she--she told her--she said that--that----"
|
|
he could get no farther.
|
|
|
|
Then he faced about and entered his room, closing the door
|
|
behind him. For a long time he sat in his armchair, drawn
|
|
close to the wall in front of the table on which stood his
|
|
piles of pamphlets and his little binding apparatus.
|
|
|
|
"I wonder," said Trina, as she crossed the yard back of
|
|
Zerkow's house, "I wonder what rent Zerkow and Maria pay for
|
|
this place. I'll bet it's cheaper than where Mac and I are."
|
|
|
|
Trina found Maria sitting in front of the kitchen stove, her
|
|
chin upon her breast. Trina went up to her. She was dead.
|
|
And as Trina touched her shoulder, her head rolled sideways
|
|
and showed a fearful gash in her throat under her ear. All
|
|
the front of her dress was soaked through and through.
|
|
|
|
Trina backed sharply away from the body, drawing her hands
|
|
up to her very shoulders, her eyes staring and wide, an
|
|
expression of unutterable horror twisting her face.
|
|
|
|
"Oh-h-h!" she exclaimed in a long breath, her voice hardly
|
|
rising above a whisper. "Oh-h, isn't that horrible!"
|
|
Suddenly she turned and fled through the front part of the
|
|
house to the street door, that opened upon the little alley.
|
|
She looked wildly about her. Directly across the way a
|
|
butcher's boy was getting into his two-wheeled cart drawn up
|
|
in front of the opposite house, while near by a peddler of
|
|
wild game was coming down the street, a brace of ducks in
|
|
his hand.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, say--say," gasped Trina, trying to get her voice, "say,
|
|
come over here quick."
|
|
|
|
The butcher's boy paused, one foot on the wheel, and stared.
|
|
Trina beckoned frantically.
|
|
|
|
"Come over here, come over here quick."
|
|
|
|
The young fellow swung himself into his seat.
|
|
|
|
"What's the matter with that woman?" he said, half aloud.
|
|
|
|
"There's a murder been done," cried Trina, swaying in
|
|
the doorway.
|
|
|
|
The young fellow drove away, his head over his shoulder,
|
|
staring at Trina with eyes that were fixed and absolutely
|
|
devoid of expression.
|
|
|
|
"What's the matter with that woman?" he said again to
|
|
himself as he turned the corner.
|
|
|
|
Trina wondered why she didn't scream, how she could keep
|
|
from it--how, at such a moment as this, she could remember
|
|
that it was improper to make a disturbance and create a
|
|
scene in the street. The peddler of wild game was looking
|
|
at her suspiciously. It would not do to tell him. He would
|
|
go away like the butcher's boy.
|
|
|
|
"Now, wait a minute," Trina said to herself, speaking aloud.
|
|
She put her hands to her head. "Now, wait a minute. It
|
|
won't do for me to lose my wits now. What must I do?" She
|
|
looked about her. There was the same familiar aspect of
|
|
Polk Street. She could see it at the end of the alley. The
|
|
big market opposite the flat, the delivery carts rattling up
|
|
and down, the great ladies from the avenue at their morning
|
|
shopping, the cable cars trundling past, loaded with
|
|
passengers. She saw a little boy in a flat leather cap
|
|
whistling and calling for an unseen dog, slapping his small
|
|
knee from time to time. Two men came out of Frenna's
|
|
saloon, laughing heartily. Heise the harness-maker stood in
|
|
the vestibule of his shop, a bundle of whittlings in his
|
|
apron of greasy ticking. And all this was going on, people
|
|
were laughing and living, buying and selling, walking about
|
|
out there on the sunny sidewalks, while behind her in there
|
|
--in there--in there----
|
|
|
|
Heise started back from the sudden apparition of a white-
|
|
lipped woman in a blue dressing-gown that seemed to rise up
|
|
before him from his very doorstep.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Mrs. McTeague, you did scare me, for----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, come over here quick." Trina put her hand to her neck;
|
|
swallowing something that seemed to be choking her.
|
|
"Maria's killed--Zerkow's wife--I found her."
|
|
|
|
"Get out!" exclaimed Heise, "you're joking."
|
|
|
|
"Come over here--over into the house--I found her--she's
|
|
dead."
|
|
|
|
Heise dashed across the street on the run, with Trina at his
|
|
heels, a trail of spilled whittlings marking his course.
|
|
The two ran down the alley. The wild-game peddler, a woman
|
|
who had been washing down the steps in a neighboring house,
|
|
and a man in a broad-brimmed hat stood at Zerkow's doorway,
|
|
looking in from time to time, and talking together. They
|
|
seemed puzzled.
|
|
|
|
"Anything wrong in here?" asked the wild-game peddler as
|
|
Heise and Trina came up. Two more men stopped on the corner
|
|
of the alley and Polk Street and looked at the group. A
|
|
woman with a towel round her head raised a window opposite
|
|
Zerkow's house and called to the woman who had been washing
|
|
the steps, "What is it, Mrs. Flint?"
|
|
|
|
Heise was already inside the house. He turned to Trina,
|
|
panting from his run.
|
|
|
|
"Where did you say--where was it--where?"
|
|
|
|
"In there," said Trina, "farther in--the next room." They
|
|
burst into the kitchen.
|
|
|
|
"LORD!" ejaculated Heise, stopping a yard or so from the
|
|
body, and bending down to peer into the gray face with its
|
|
brown lips.
|
|
|
|
"By God! he's killed her."
|
|
|
|
"Who?"
|
|
|
|
"Zerkow, by God! he's killed her. Cut her throat. He
|
|
always said he would."
|
|
|
|
"Zerkow?"
|
|
|
|
"He's killed her. Her throat's cut. Good Lord, how she did
|
|
bleed! By God! he's done for her in good shape this time."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I told her--I TOLD her," cried Trina.
|
|
|
|
"He's done for her SURE this time."
|
|
|
|
"She said she could always manage--Oh-h! It's horrible."
|
|
|
|
"He's done for her sure this trip. Cut her throat.
|
|
LORD, how she has BLED! Did you ever see so much--
|
|
that's murder--that's cold-blooded murder. He's killed
|
|
her. Say, we must get a policeman. Come on."
|
|
|
|
They turned back through the house. Half a dozen people--
|
|
the wild-game peddler, the man with the broad-brimmed hat,
|
|
the washwoman, and three other men--were in the front room
|
|
of the junk shop, a bank of excited faces surged at the
|
|
door. Beyond this, outside, the crowd was packed solid from
|
|
one end of the alley to the other. Out in Polk Street the
|
|
cable cars were nearly blocked and were bunting a way slowly
|
|
through the throng with clanging bells. Every window had
|
|
its group. And as Trina and the harness-maker tried to
|
|
force the way from the door of the junk shop the throng
|
|
suddenly parted right and left before the passage of two
|
|
blue-coated policemen who clove a passage through the press,
|
|
working their elbows energetically. They were accompanied
|
|
by a third man in citizen's clothes.
|
|
|
|
Heise and Trina went back into the kitchen with the two
|
|
policemen, the third man in citizen's clothes cleared the
|
|
intruders from the front room of the junk shop and kept the
|
|
crowd back, his arm across the open door.
|
|
|
|
"Whew!" whistled one of the officers as they came out into
|
|
the kitchen, "cutting scrape? By George! SOMEBODY'S
|
|
been using his knife all right." He turned to the other
|
|
officer. "Better get the wagon. There's a box on the
|
|
second corner south. Now, then," he continued, turning to
|
|
Trina and the harness-maker and taking out his note-book and
|
|
pencil, "I want your names and addresses."
|
|
|
|
It was a day of tremendous excitement for the entire street.
|
|
Long after the patrol wagon had driven away, the crowd
|
|
remained. In fact, until seven o'clock that evening groups
|
|
collected about the door of the junk shop, where a policeman
|
|
stood guard, asking all manner of questions, advancing all
|
|
manner of opinions.
|
|
|
|
"Do you think they'll get him?" asked Ryer of the policeman.
|
|
A dozen necks craned forward eagerly.
|
|
|
|
"Hoh, we'll get him all right, easy enough," answered the
|
|
other, with a grand air.
|
|
|
|
"What? What's that? What did he say?" asked the
|
|
people on the outskirts of the group. Those in front passed
|
|
the answer back.
|
|
|
|
"He says they'll get him all right, easy enough."
|
|
|
|
The group looked at the policeman admiringly.
|
|
|
|
"He's skipped to San Jose."
|
|
|
|
Where the rumor started, and how, no one knew. But every
|
|
one seemed persuaded that Zerkow had gone to San Jose.
|
|
|
|
"But what did he kill her for? Was he drunk?"
|
|
|
|
"No, he was crazy, I tell you--crazy in the head. Thought
|
|
she was hiding some money from him."
|
|
|
|
Frenna did a big business all day long. The murder was the
|
|
one subject of conversation. Little parties were made up in
|
|
his saloon--parties of twos and threes--to go over and have
|
|
a look at the outside of the junk shop. Heise was the most
|
|
important man the length and breadth of Polk Street; almost
|
|
invariably he accompanied these parties, telling again and
|
|
again of the part he had played in the affair.
|
|
|
|
"It was about eleven o'clock. I was standing in front of
|
|
the shop, when Mrs. McTeague--you know, the dentist's wife--
|
|
came running across the street," and so on and so on.
|
|
|
|
The next day came a fresh sensation. Polk Street read of it
|
|
in the morning papers. Towards midnight on the day of the
|
|
murder Zerkow's body had been found floating in the bay near
|
|
Black Point. No one knew whether he had drowned himself or
|
|
fallen from one of the wharves. Clutched in both his hands
|
|
was a sack full of old and rusty pans, tin dishes--fully a
|
|
hundred of them--tin cans, and iron knives and forks,
|
|
collected from some dump heap.
|
|
|
|
"And all this," exclaimed Trina, "on account of a set of
|
|
gold dishes that never existed."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 17
|
|
|
|
One day, about a fortnight after the coroner's inquest had
|
|
been held, and when the excitement of the terrible affair
|
|
was calming down and Polk Street beginning to resume its
|
|
monotonous routine, Old Grannis sat in his clean, well-kept
|
|
little room, in his cushioned armchair, his hands lying idly
|
|
upon his knees. It was evening; not quite time to light the
|
|
lamps. Old Grannis had drawn his chair close to the wall--
|
|
so close, in fact, that he could hear Miss Baker's grenadine
|
|
brushing against the other side of the thin partition, at
|
|
his very elbow, while she rocked gently back and forth, a
|
|
cup of tea in her hands.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis's occupation was gone. That morning the book-
|
|
selling firm where he had bought his pamphlets had taken his
|
|
little binding apparatus from him to use as a model. The
|
|
transaction had been concluded. Old Grannis had received
|
|
his check. It was large enough, to be sure, but when all
|
|
was over, he returned to his room and sat there sad and
|
|
unoccupied, looking at the pattern in the carpet and
|
|
counting the heads of the tacks in the zinc guard that was
|
|
fastened to the wall behind his little stove. By and by he
|
|
heard Miss Baker moving about. It was five o'clock, the time
|
|
when she was accustomed to make her cup of tea and "keep
|
|
company" with him on her side of the partition. Old Grannis
|
|
drew up his chair to the wall near where he knew she was
|
|
sitting. The minutes passed; side by side, and separated by
|
|
only a couple of inches of board, the two old people sat
|
|
there together, while the afternoon grew darker.
|
|
|
|
But for Old Grannis all was different that evening. There
|
|
was nothing for him to do. His hands lay idly in his lap.
|
|
His table, with its pile of pamphlets, was in a far corner
|
|
of the room, and, from time to time, stirred with an
|
|
uncertain trouble, he turned his head and looked at it
|
|
sadly, reflecting that he would never use it again. The
|
|
absence of his accustomed work seemed to leave something out
|
|
of his life. It did not appear to him that he could be the
|
|
same to Miss Baker now; their little habits were
|
|
disarranged, their customs broken up. He could no longer
|
|
fancy himself so near to her. They would drift apart now,
|
|
and she would no longer make herself a cup of tea and "keep
|
|
company" with him when she knew that he would never again
|
|
sit before his table binding uncut pamphlets. He had sold
|
|
his happiness for money; he had bartered all his tardy
|
|
romance for some miserable banknotes. He had not foreseen
|
|
that it would be like this. A vast regret welled up within
|
|
him. What was that on the back of his hand? He wiped it
|
|
dry with his ancient silk handkerchief.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis leant his face in his hands. Not only did an
|
|
inexplicable regret stir within him, but a certain great
|
|
tenderness came upon him. The tears that swam in his faded
|
|
blue eyes were not altogether those of unhappiness. No,
|
|
this long-delayed affection that had come upon him in his
|
|
later years filled him with a joy for which tears seemed to
|
|
be the natural expression. For thirty years his eyes had
|
|
not been wet, but tonight he felt as if he were young again.
|
|
He had never loved before, and there was still a part of him
|
|
that was only twenty years of age. He could not tell
|
|
whether he was profoundly sad or deeply happy; but he was
|
|
not ashamed of the tears that brought the smart to his eyes
|
|
and the ache to his throat. He did not hear the timid
|
|
rapping on his door, and it was not until the door itself
|
|
opened that he looked up quickly and saw the little retired
|
|
dressmaker standing on the threshold, carrying a cup of tea
|
|
on a tiny Japanese tray. She held it toward him.
|
|
|
|
"I was making some tea," she said, "and I thought you would
|
|
like to have a cup."
|
|
|
|
Never after could the little dressmaker understand how she
|
|
had brought herself to do this thing. One moment she had
|
|
been sitting quietly on her side of the partition, stirring
|
|
her cup of tea with one of her Gorham spoons. She was
|
|
quiet, she was peaceful. The evening was closing down
|
|
tranquilly. Her room was the picture of calmness and order.
|
|
The geraniums blooming in the starch boxes in the window,
|
|
the aged goldfish occasionally turning his iridescent flank
|
|
to catch a sudden glow of the setting sun. The next moment
|
|
she had been all trepidation. It seemed to her the most
|
|
natural thing in the world to make a steaming cup of tea and
|
|
carry it in to Old Grannis next door. It seemed to her that
|
|
he was wanting her, that she ought to go to him. With the
|
|
brusque resolve and intrepidity that sometimes seizes upon
|
|
very timid people--the courage of the coward greater than
|
|
all others--she had presented herself at the old
|
|
Englishman's half-open door, and, when he had not heeded her
|
|
knock, had pushed it open, and at last, after all these
|
|
years, stood upon the threshold of his room. She had found
|
|
courage enough to explain her intrusion.
|
|
|
|
"I was making some tea, and I thought you would like to have
|
|
a cup."
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis dropped his hands upon either arm of his chair,
|
|
and, leaning forward a little, looked at her blankly. He
|
|
did not speak.
|
|
|
|
The retired dressmaker's courage had carried her thus far;
|
|
now it deserted her as abruptly as it had come. Her cheeks
|
|
became scarlet; her funny little false curls trembled with
|
|
her agitation. What she had done seemed to her indecorous
|
|
beyond expression. It was an enormity. Fancy, she had gone
|
|
into his room, INTO HIS ROOM--Mister Grannis's room.
|
|
She had done this--she who could not pass him on the stairs
|
|
without a qualm. What to do she did not know. She stood, a
|
|
fixture, on the threshold of his room, without even
|
|
resolution enough to beat a retreat. Helplessly, and with a
|
|
little quaver in her voice, she repeated obstinately:
|
|
|
|
"I was making some tea, and I thought you would like to have
|
|
a cup of tea." Her agitation betrayed itself in the
|
|
repetition of the word. She felt that she could not hold
|
|
the tray out another instant. Already she was trembling so
|
|
that half the tea was spilled.
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis still kept silence, still bending forward,
|
|
with wide eyes, his hands gripping the arms of his chair.
|
|
|
|
Then with the tea-tray still held straight before her, the
|
|
little dressmaker exclaimed tearfully:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I didn't mean--I didn't mean--I didn't know it would
|
|
seem like this. I only meant to be kind and bring you some
|
|
tea; and now it seems SO improper. I--I--I'm SO
|
|
ashamed! I don't know what you will think of me. I--" she
|
|
caught her breath--"improper"--she managed to exclaim,
|
|
"unlady-like--you can never think well of me--I'll go. I'll
|
|
go." She turned about.
|
|
|
|
"Stop," cried Old Grannis, finding his voice at last. Miss
|
|
Baker paused, looking at him over her shoulder, her eyes
|
|
very wide open, blinking through her tears, for all the
|
|
world like a frightened child.
|
|
|
|
"Stop," exclaimed the old Englishman, rising to his feet.
|
|
"I didn't know it was you at first. I hadn't dreamed--I
|
|
couldn't believe you would be so good, so kind to me. Oh,"
|
|
he cried, with a sudden sharp breath, "oh, you ARE kind.
|
|
I--I--you have--have made me very happy."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," exclaimed Miss Baker, ready to sob. "It was
|
|
unlady-like. You will--you must think ill of me." She
|
|
stood in the hall. The tears were running down her cheeks,
|
|
and she had no free hand to dry them.
|
|
|
|
"Let me--I'll take the tray from you," cried Old Grannis,
|
|
coming forward. A tremulous joy came upon him. Never in
|
|
his life had he been so happy. At last it had come--come
|
|
when he had least expected it. That which he had longed for
|
|
and hoped for through so many years, behold, it was come to-
|
|
night. He felt his awkwardness leaving him. He was almost
|
|
certain that the little dressmaker loved him, and the
|
|
thought gave him boldness. He came toward her and took the
|
|
tray from her hands, and, turning back into the room with
|
|
it, made as if to set it upon his table. But the piles of
|
|
his pamphlets were in the way. Both of his hands were
|
|
occupied with the tray; he could not make a place for it on
|
|
the table. He stood for a moment uncertain, his
|
|
embarrassment returning.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, won't you--won't you please--" He turned his head,
|
|
looking appealingly at the little old dressmaker.
|
|
|
|
"Wait, I'll help you," she said. She came into the room, up
|
|
to the table, and moved the pamphlets to one side.
|
|
|
|
"Thanks, thanks," murmured Old Grannis, setting down the
|
|
tray.
|
|
|
|
"Now--now--now I will go back," she exclaimed, hurriedly.
|
|
|
|
"No--no," returned the old Englishman. "Don't go, don't go.
|
|
I've been so lonely to-night--and last night too--all this
|
|
year--all my life," he suddenly cried.
|
|
|
|
"I--I--I've forgotten the sugar."
|
|
|
|
"But I never take sugar in my tea."
|
|
|
|
"But it's rather cold, and I've spilled it--almost all of
|
|
it."
|
|
|
|
"I'll drink it from the saucer." Old Grannis had drawn up
|
|
his armchair for her.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I shouldn't. This is--this is SO--You must think
|
|
ill of me." Suddenly she sat down, and resting her elbows
|
|
on the table, hid her face in her hands.
|
|
|
|
"Think ILL of you?" cried Old Grannis, "think ILL of
|
|
you? Why, you don't know--you have no idea--all these
|
|
years--living so close to you, I--I--" he paused suddenly.
|
|
It seemed to him as if the beating of his heart was choking
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
"I thought you were binding your books to-night," said Miss
|
|
Baker, suddenly, "and you looked tired. I thought you
|
|
looked tired when I last saw you, and a cup of tea, you
|
|
know, it--that--that does you so much good when you're
|
|
tired. But you weren't binding books."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," returned Old Grannis, drawing up a chair and
|
|
sitting down. "No, I--the fact is, I've sold my apparatus;
|
|
a firm of booksellers has bought the rights of it."
|
|
|
|
"And aren't you going to bind books any more?" exclaimed the
|
|
little dressmaker, a shade of disappointment in her manner.
|
|
"I thought you always did about four o'clock. I used to
|
|
hear you when I was making tea."
|
|
|
|
It hardly seemed possible to Miss Baker that she was
|
|
actually talking to Old Grannis, that the two were really
|
|
chatting together, face to face, and without the dreadful
|
|
embarrassment that used to overwhelm them both when they met
|
|
on the stairs. She had often dreamed of this, but had always
|
|
put it off to some far-distant day. It was to come
|
|
gradually, little by little, instead of, as now, abruptly
|
|
and with no preparation. That she should permit herself the
|
|
indiscretion of actually intruding herself into his room had
|
|
never so much as occurred to her. Yet here she was, IN
|
|
HIS ROOM, and they were talking together, and little by
|
|
little her embarrassment was wearing away.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, I always heard you when you were making tea,"
|
|
returned the old Englishman; "I heard the tea things. Then
|
|
I used to draw my chair and my work-table close to the wall
|
|
on my side, and sit there and work while you drank your tea
|
|
just on the other side; and I used to feel very near to you
|
|
then. I used to pass the whole evening that way."
|
|
|
|
"And, yes--yes--I did too," she answered. "I used to make
|
|
tea just at that time and sit there for a whole hour."
|
|
|
|
"And didn't you sit close to the partition on your side?
|
|
Sometimes I was sure of it. I could even fancy that I could
|
|
hear your dress brushing against the wall-paper close beside
|
|
me. Didn't you sit close to the partition?"
|
|
|
|
"I--I don't know where I sat."
|
|
|
|
Old Grannis shyly put out his hand and took hers as it lay
|
|
upon her lap.
|
|
|
|
"Didn't you sit close to the partition on your side?" he
|
|
insisted.
|
|
|
|
"No--I don't know--perhaps--sometimes. Oh, yes," she
|
|
exclaimed, with a little gasp, "Oh, yes, I often did."
|
|
|
|
Then Old Grannis put his arm about her, and kissed her faded
|
|
cheek, that flushed to pink upon the instant.
|
|
|
|
After that they spoke but little. The day lapsed slowly
|
|
into twilight, and the two old people sat there in the gray
|
|
evening, quietly, quietly, their hands in each other's
|
|
hands, "keeping company," but now with nothing to separate
|
|
them. It had come at last. After all these years they
|
|
were together; they understood each other. They stood at
|
|
length in a little Elysium of their own creating. They
|
|
walked hand in hand in a delicious garden where it was
|
|
always autumn. Far from the world and together they entered
|
|
upon the long retarded romance of their commonplace and
|
|
uneventful lives.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 18
|
|
|
|
|
|
That same night McTeague was awakened by a shrill scream,
|
|
and woke to find Trina's arms around his neck. She was
|
|
trembling so that the bed-springs creaked.
|
|
|
|
"Huh?" cried the dentist, sitting up in bed, raising his
|
|
clinched fists. "Huh? What? What? What is it? What is
|
|
it?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac," gasped his wife, "I had such an awful dream. I
|
|
dreamed about Maria. I thought she was chasing me, and I
|
|
couldn't run, and her throat was--Oh, she was all covered
|
|
with blood. Oh-h, I am so frightened!"
|
|
|
|
Trina had borne up very well for the first day or so after
|
|
the affair, and had given her testimony to the coroner with
|
|
far greater calmness than Heise. It was only a week later
|
|
that the horror of the thing came upon her again. She was
|
|
so nervous that she hardly dared to be alone in the daytime,
|
|
and almost every night woke with a cry of terror, trembling
|
|
with the recollection of some dreadful nightmare. The
|
|
dentist was irritated beyond all expression by her
|
|
nervousness, and especially was he exasperated when her
|
|
cries woke him suddenly in the middle of the night. He
|
|
would sit up in bed, rolling his eyes wildly, throwing out
|
|
his huge fists--at what, he did not know--exclaiming, "What
|
|
what--" bewildered and hopelessly confused. Then when
|
|
he realized that it was only Trina, his anger kindled
|
|
abruptly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you and your dreams! You go to sleep, or I'll give you
|
|
a dressing down." Sometimes he would hit her a great thwack
|
|
with his open palm, or catch her hand and bite the tips of
|
|
her fingers. Trina would lie awake for hours afterward,
|
|
crying softly to herself. Then, by and by, "Mac," she would
|
|
say timidly.
|
|
|
|
"Huh?"
|
|
|
|
"Mac, do you love me?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What? Go to sleep."
|
|
|
|
"Don't you love me any more, Mac?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, go to sleep. Don't bother me."
|
|
|
|
"Well, do you LOVE me, Mac?"
|
|
|
|
"I guess so."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mac, I've only you now, and if you don't love me, what
|
|
is going to become of me?"
|
|
|
|
"Shut up, an' let me go to sleep."
|
|
|
|
"Well, just tell me that you love me."
|
|
|
|
The dentist would turn abruptly away from her, burying his
|
|
big blond head in the pillow, and covering up his ears with
|
|
the blankets. Then Trina would sob herself to sleep.
|
|
|
|
The dentist had long since given up looking for a job.
|
|
Between breakfast and supper time Trina saw but little of
|
|
him. Once the morning meal over, McTeague bestirred
|
|
himself, put on his cap--he had given up wearing even a hat
|
|
since his wife had made him sell his silk hat--and went out.
|
|
He had fallen into the habit of taking long and solitary
|
|
walks beyond the suburbs of the city. Sometimes it was to
|
|
the Cliff House, occasionally to the Park (where he would
|
|
sit on the sun-warmed benches, smoking his pipe and reading
|
|
ragged ends of old newspapers), but more often it was to the
|
|
Presidio Reservation. McTeague would walk out to the end of
|
|
the Union Street car line, entering the Reservation at the
|
|
terminus, then he would work down to the shore of the bay,
|
|
follow the shore line to the Old Fort at the Golden Gate,
|
|
and, turning the Point here, come out suddenly upon the full
|
|
sweep of the Pacific. Then he would follow the beach
|
|
down to a certain point of rocks that he knew. Here he
|
|
would turn inland, climbing the bluffs to a rolling grassy
|
|
down sown with blue iris and a yellow flower that he did not
|
|
know the name of. On the far side of this down was a broad,
|
|
well-kept road. McTeague would keep to this road until he
|
|
reached the city again by the way of the Sacramento Street
|
|
car line. The dentist loved these walks. He liked to be
|
|
alone. He liked the solitude of the tremendous, tumbling
|
|
ocean; the fresh, windy downs; he liked to feel the gusty
|
|
Trades flogging his face, and he would remain for hours
|
|
watching the roll and plunge of the breakers with the
|
|
silent, unreasoned enjoyment of a child. All at once he
|
|
developed a passion for fishing. He would sit all day
|
|
nearly motionless upon a point of rocks, his fish-line
|
|
between his fingers, happy if he caught three perch in
|
|
twelve hours. At noon he would retire to a bit of level
|
|
turf around an angle of the shore and cook his fish, eating
|
|
them without salt or knife or fork. He thrust a pointed
|
|
stick down the mouth of the perch, and turned it slowly over
|
|
the blaze. When the grease stopped dripping, he knew that
|
|
it was done, and would devour it slowly and with tremendous
|
|
relish, picking the bones clean, eating even the head. He
|
|
remembered how often he used to do this sort of thing when
|
|
he was a boy in the mountains of Placer County, before he
|
|
became a car-boy at the mine. The dentist enjoyed himself
|
|
hugely during these days. The instincts of the old-time
|
|
miner were returning. In the stress of his misfortune
|
|
McTeague was lapsing back to his early estate.
|
|
|
|
One evening as he reached home after such a tramp, he was
|
|
surprised to find Trina standing in front of what had been
|
|
Zerkow's house, looking at it thoughtfully, her finger on
|
|
her lips.
|
|
|
|
"What you doing here'?" growled the dentist as he came up.
|
|
There was a "Rooms-to-let" sign on the street door of the
|
|
house.
|
|
|
|
"Now we've found a place to move to," exclaimed Trina.
|
|
|
|
"What?" cried McTeague. "There, in that dirty house, where
|
|
you found Maria?"
|
|
|
|
"I can't afford that room in the flat any more, now that you
|
|
can't get any work to do."
|
|
|
|
"But there's where Zerkow killed Maria--the very house
|
|
--an' you wake up an' squeal in the night just thinking of
|
|
it."
|
|
|
|
"I know. I know it will be bad at first, but I'll get used
|
|
to it, an' it's just half again as cheap as where we are
|
|
now. I was looking at a room; we can have it dirt cheap.
|
|
It's a back room over the kitchen. A German family are
|
|
going to take the front part of the house and sublet the
|
|
rest. I'm going to take it. It'll be money in my pocket."
|
|
|
|
"But it won't be any in mine," vociferated the dentist,
|
|
angrily. "I'll have to live in that dirty rat hole just
|
|
so's you can save money. I ain't any the better off for
|
|
it."
|
|
|
|
"Find work to do, and then we'll talk," declared Trina.
|
|
"I'M going to save up some money against a rainy day; and if
|
|
I can save more by living here I'm going to do it, even if
|
|
it is the house Maria was killed in. I don't care."
|
|
|
|
"All right," said McTeague, and did not make any further
|
|
protest. His wife looked at him surprised. She could not
|
|
understand this sudden acquiescence. Perhaps McTeague was
|
|
so much away from home of late that he had ceased to care
|
|
where or how he lived. But this sudden change troubled her
|
|
a little for all that.
|
|
|
|
The next day the McTeagues moved for a second time. It did
|
|
not take them long. They were obliged to buy the bed from
|
|
the landlady, a circumstance which nearly broke Trina's
|
|
heart; and this bed, a couple of chairs, Trina's trunk, an
|
|
ornament or two, the oil stove, and some plates and kitchen
|
|
ware were all that they could call their own now; and this
|
|
back room in that wretched house with its grisly memories,
|
|
the one window looking out into a grimy maze of back yards
|
|
and broken sheds, was what they now knew as their home.
|
|
|
|
The McTeagues now began to sink rapidly lower and lower.
|
|
They became accustomed to their surroundings. Worst of all,
|
|
Trina lost her pretty ways and her good looks. The combined
|
|
effects of hard work, avarice, poor food, and her husband's
|
|
brutalities told on her swiftly. Her charming little figure
|
|
grew coarse, stunted, and dumpy. She who had once been of a
|
|
catlike neatness, now slovened all day about the room
|
|
in a dirty flannel wrapper, her slippers clap-clapping after
|
|
her as she walked. At last she even neglected her hair, the
|
|
wonderful swarthy tiara, the coiffure of a queen, that
|
|
shaded her little pale forehead. In the morning she braided
|
|
it before it was half combed, and piled and coiled it about
|
|
her head in haphazard fashion. It came down half a dozen
|
|
times a day; by evening it was an unkempt, tangled mass, a
|
|
veritable rat's nest.
|
|
|
|
Ah, no, it was not very gay, that life of hers, when one had
|
|
to rustle for two, cook and work and wash, to say nothing of
|
|
paying the rent. What odds was it if she was slatternly,
|
|
dirty, coarse? Was there time to make herself look
|
|
otherwise, and who was there to be pleased when she was all
|
|
prinked out? Surely not a great brute of a husband who bit
|
|
you like a dog, and kicked and pounded you as though you
|
|
were made of iron. Ah, no, better let things go, and take
|
|
it as easy as you could. Hump your back, and it was soonest
|
|
over.
|
|
|
|
The one room grew abominably dirty, reeking with the odors
|
|
of cooking and of "non-poisonous" paint. The bed was not
|
|
made until late in the afternoon, sometimes not at all.
|
|
Dirty, unwashed crockery, greasy knives, sodden fragments of
|
|
yesterday's meals cluttered the table, while in one corner
|
|
was the heap of evil-smelling, dirty linen. Cockroaches
|
|
appeared in the crevices of the woodwork, the wall-paper
|
|
bulged from the damp walls and began to peel. Trina had
|
|
long ago ceased to dust or to wipe the furniture with a bit
|
|
of rag. The grime grew thick upon the window panes and in
|
|
the corners of the room. All the filth of the alley invaded
|
|
their quarters like a rising muddy tide.
|
|
|
|
Between the windows, however, the faded photograph of the
|
|
couple in their wedding finery looked down upon the
|
|
wretchedness, Trina still holding her set bouquet straight
|
|
before her, McTeague standing at her side, his left foot
|
|
forward, in the attitude of a Secretary of State; while near
|
|
by hung the canary, the one thing the dentist clung to
|
|
obstinately, piping and chittering all day in its little
|
|
gilt prison.
|
|
|
|
And the tooth, the gigantic golden molar of French gilt,
|
|
enormous and ungainly, sprawled its branching prongs in
|
|
one corner of the room, by the footboard of the bed. The
|
|
McTeague's had come to use it as a sort of substitute for a
|
|
table. After breakfast and supper Trina piled the plates
|
|
and greasy dishes upon it to have them out of the way.
|
|
|
|
One afternoon the Other Dentist, McTeague's old-time rival,
|
|
the wearer of marvellous waistcoats, was surprised out of
|
|
all countenance to receive a visit from McTeague. The Other
|
|
Dentist was in his operating room at the time, at work upon
|
|
a plaster-of-paris mould. To his call of "'Come right in.
|
|
Don't you see the sign, 'Enter without knocking'?" McTeague
|
|
came in. He noted at once how airy and cheerful was the
|
|
room. A little fire coughed and tittered on the hearth, a
|
|
brindled greyhound sat on his haunches watching it intently,
|
|
a great mirror over the mantle offered to view an array of
|
|
actresses' pictures thrust between the glass and the frame,
|
|
and a big bunch of freshly-cut violets stood in a glass bowl
|
|
on the polished cherrywood table. The Other Dentist came
|
|
forward briskly, exclaiming cheerfully:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Doctor--Mister McTeague, how do? how do?"
|
|
|
|
The fellow was actually wearing a velvet smoking jacket. A
|
|
cigarette was between his lips; his patent leather boots
|
|
reflected the firelight. McTeague wore a black surah
|
|
neglige shirt without a cravat; huge buckled brogans, hob-
|
|
nailed, gross, encased his feet; the hems of his trousers
|
|
were spotted with mud; his coat was frayed at the sleeves
|
|
and a button was gone. In three days he had not shaved; his
|
|
shock of heavy blond hair escaped from beneath the visor of
|
|
his woollen cap and hung low over his forehead. He stood
|
|
with awkward, shifting feet and uncertain eyes before the
|
|
dapper young fellow who reeked of the barber shop, and whom
|
|
he had once ordered from his rooms.
|
|
|
|
"What can I do for you this morning, Mister McTeague?
|
|
Something wrong with the teeth, eh?"
|
|
|
|
"No, no." McTeague, floundering in the difficulties of his
|
|
speech, forgot the carefully rehearsed words with which he
|
|
had intended to begin this interview.
|
|
|
|
"I want to sell you my sign," he said, stupidly. "That big
|
|
tooth of French gilt--YOU know--that you made an
|
|
offer for once."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I don't want that now," said the other loftily. "I
|
|
prefer a little quiet signboard, nothing pretentious--just
|
|
the name, and "Dentist" after it. These big signs are
|
|
vulgar. No, I don't want it."
|
|
|
|
McTeague remained, looking about on the floor, horribly
|
|
embarrassed, not knowing whether to go or to stay.
|
|
|
|
"But I don't know," said the Other Dentist, reflectively.
|
|
"If it will help you out any--I guess you're pretty hard up
|
|
--I'll--well, I tell you what--I'll give you five dollars for
|
|
it."
|
|
|
|
"All right, all right."
|
|
|
|
On the following Thursday morning McTeague woke to hear the
|
|
eaves dripping and the prolonged rattle of the rain upon the
|
|
roof.
|
|
|
|
"Raining," he growled, in deep disgust, sitting up in bed,
|
|
and winking at the blurred window.
|
|
|
|
"It's been raining all night," said Trina. She was already
|
|
up and dressed, and was cooking breakfast on the oil stove.
|
|
|
|
McTeague dressed himself, grumbling, "Well, I'll go, anyhow.
|
|
The fish will bite all the better for the rain."
|
|
|
|
"Look here, Mac," said Trina, slicing a bit of bacon as
|
|
thinly as she could. "Look here, why don't you bring some
|
|
of your fish home sometime?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh!" snorted the dentist, "so's we could have 'em for
|
|
breakfast. Might save you a nickel, mightn't it?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, and if it did! Or you might fish for the market.
|
|
The fisherman across the street would buy 'em of you."
|
|
|
|
"Shut up!" exclaimed the dentist, and Trina obediently
|
|
subsided.
|
|
|
|
"Look here," continued her husband, fumbling in his trousers
|
|
pocket and bringing out a dollar, "I'm sick and tired of
|
|
coffee and bacon and mashed potatoes. Go over to the market
|
|
and get some kind of meat for breakfast. Get a steak, or
|
|
chops, or something.
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mac, that's a whole dollar, and he only gave you five
|
|
for your sign. We can't afford it. Sure, Mac. Let me put
|
|
that money away against a rainy day. You're just as
|
|
well off without meat for breakfast."
|
|
|
|
"You do as I tell you. Get some steak, or chops, or
|
|
something."
|
|
|
|
"Please, Mac, dear."
|
|
|
|
"Go on, now. I'll bite your fingers again pretty soon."
|
|
|
|
"But----"
|
|
|
|
The dentist took a step towards her, snatching at her hand.
|
|
|
|
"All right, I'll go," cried Trina, wincing and shrinking.
|
|
"I'll go."
|
|
|
|
She did not get the chops at the big market, however.
|
|
Instead, she hurried to a cheaper butcher shop on a side
|
|
street two blocks away, and bought fifteen cents' worth of
|
|
chops from a side of mutton some two or three days old. She
|
|
was gone some little time.
|
|
|
|
"Give me the change," exclaimed the dentist as soon as she
|
|
returned. Trina handed him a quarter; and when McTeague was
|
|
about to protest, broke in upon him with a rapid stream of
|
|
talk that confused him upon the instant. But for that
|
|
matter, it was never difficult for Trina to deceive the
|
|
dentist. He never went to the bottom of things. He would
|
|
have believed her if she had told him the chops had cost a
|
|
dollar.
|
|
|
|
"There's sixty cents saved, anyhow," thought Trina, as she
|
|
clutched the money in her pocket to keep it from rattling.
|
|
|
|
Trina cooked the chops, and they breakfasted in silence.
|
|
"Now," said McTeague as he rose, wiping the coffee from his
|
|
thick mustache with the hollow of his palm, "now I'm going
|
|
fishing, rain or no rain. I'm going to be gone all day."
|
|
|
|
He stood for a moment at the door, his fish-line in his
|
|
hand, swinging the heavy sinker back and forth. He looked
|
|
at Trina as she cleared away the breakfast things.
|
|
|
|
"So long," said he, nodding his huge square-cut head. This
|
|
amiability in the matter of leave taking was unusual. Trina
|
|
put the dishes down and came up to him, her little chin,
|
|
once so adorable, in the air:
|
|
|
|
"Kiss me good-by, Mac," she said, putting her arms around
|
|
his neck. "You DO love me a little yet, don't you,
|
|
Mac? We'll be happy again some day. This is hard times
|
|
now, but we'll pull out. You'll find something to do pretty
|
|
soon."
|
|
|
|
"I guess so," growled McTeague, allowing her to kiss
|
|
him.
|
|
|
|
The canary was stirring nimbly in its cage, and just now
|
|
broke out into a shrill trilling, its little throat bulging
|
|
and quivering. The dentist stared at it. "Say," he remarked
|
|
slowly, "I think I'll take that bird of mine along."
|
|
|
|
"Sell it?" inquired Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, sell it."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you ARE coming to your senses at last," answered
|
|
Trina, approvingly. "But don't you let the bird-store man
|
|
cheat you. That's a good songster; and with the cage, you
|
|
ought to make him give you five dollars. You stick out for
|
|
that at first, anyhow."
|
|
|
|
McTeague unhooked the cage and carefully wrapped it in an
|
|
old newspaper, remarking, "He might get cold. Well, so
|
|
long," he repeated, "so long."
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, Mac."
|
|
|
|
When he was gone, Trina took the sixty cents she had stolen
|
|
from him out of her pocket and recounted it. "It's sixty
|
|
cents, all right," she said proudly. "But I DO believe
|
|
that dime is too smooth." She looked at it critically. The
|
|
clock on the power-house of the Sutter Street cable struck
|
|
eight. "Eight o'clock already," she exclaimed. "I must get
|
|
to work." She cleared the breakfast things from the table,
|
|
and drawing up her chair and her workbox began painting the
|
|
sets of Noah's ark animals she had whittled the day before.
|
|
She worked steadily all the morning. At noon she lunched,
|
|
warming over the coffee left from breakfast, and frying a
|
|
couple of sausages. By one she was bending over her table
|
|
again. Her fingers--some of them lacerated by McTeague's
|
|
teeth--flew, and the little pile of cheap toys in the basket
|
|
at her elbow grew steadily.
|
|
|
|
"Where DO all the toys go to?" she murmured. "The
|
|
thousands and thousands of these Noah's arks that I have
|
|
made--horses and chickens and elephants--and always there
|
|
never seems to be enough. It's a good thing for me that
|
|
children break their things, and that they all have to
|
|
have birthdays and Christmases." She dipped her brush into
|
|
a pot of Vandyke brown and painted one of the whittled toy
|
|
horses in two strokes. Then a touch of ivory black with a
|
|
small flat brush created the tail and mane, and dots of
|
|
Chinese white made the eyes. The turpentine in the paint
|
|
dried it almost immediately, and she tossed the completed
|
|
little horse into the basket.
|
|
|
|
At six o'clock the dentist had not returned. Trina waited
|
|
until seven, and then put her work away, and ate her supper
|
|
alone.
|
|
|
|
"I wonder what's keeping Mac," she exclaimed as the clock
|
|
from the power-house on Sutter Street struck half-past
|
|
seven. "I KNOW he's drinking somewhere," she cried,
|
|
apprehensively. "He had the money from his sign with him."
|
|
|
|
At eight o'clock she threw a shawl over her head and went
|
|
over to the harness shop. If anybody would know where
|
|
McTeague was it would be Heise. But the harness-maker had
|
|
seen nothing of him since the day before.
|
|
|
|
"He was in here yesterday afternoon, and we had a drink or
|
|
two at Frenna's. Maybe he's been in there to-day."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, won't you go in and see?" said Trina. "Mac always came
|
|
home to his supper--he never likes to miss his meals--and
|
|
I'm getting frightened about him."
|
|
|
|
Heise went into the barroom next door, and returned with no
|
|
definite news. Frenna had not seen the dentist since he had
|
|
come in with the harness-maker the previous afternoon.
|
|
Trina even humbled herself to ask of the Ryers--with whom
|
|
they had quarrelled--if they knew anything of the dentist's
|
|
whereabouts, but received a contemptuous negative.
|
|
|
|
"Maybe he's come in while I've been out," said Trina to
|
|
herself. She went down Polk Street again, going towards the
|
|
flat. The rain had stopped, but the sidewalks were still
|
|
glistening. The cable cars trundled by, loaded with
|
|
theatregoers. The barbers were just closing their shops.
|
|
The candy store on the corner was brilliantly lighted and
|
|
was filling up, while the green and yellow lamps from the
|
|
drug store directly opposite threw kaleidoscopic reflections
|
|
deep down into the shining surface of the asphalt. A
|
|
band of Salvationists began to play and pray in front
|
|
of Frenna's saloon. Trina hurried on down the gay street,
|
|
with its evening's brilliancy and small activities, her
|
|
shawl over her head, one hand lifting her faded skirt from
|
|
off the wet pavements. She turned into the alley, entered
|
|
Zerkow's old home by the ever-open door, and ran up-stairs
|
|
to the room. Nobody.
|
|
|
|
"Why, isn't this FUNNY," she exclaimed, half aloud,
|
|
standing on the threshold, her little milk-white forehead
|
|
curdling to a frown, one sore finger on her lips. Then a
|
|
great fear seized upon her. Inevitably she associated the
|
|
house with a scene of violent death.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," she said to the darkness, "Mac is all right.
|
|
HE can take care of himself." But for all that she had a
|
|
clear-cut vision of her husband's body, bloated with sea-
|
|
water, his blond hair streaming like kelp, rolling inertly
|
|
in shifting waters.
|
|
|
|
"He couldn't have fallen off the rocks," she declared
|
|
firmly. "There--THERE he is now." She heaved a great
|
|
sigh of relief as a heavy tread sounded in the hallway
|
|
below. She ran to the banisters, looking over, and calling,
|
|
"Oh, Mac! Is that you, Mac?" It was the German whose
|
|
family occupied the lower floor. The power-house clock
|
|
struck nine.
|
|
|
|
"My God, where is Mac?" cried Trina, stamping her foot.
|
|
|
|
She put the shawl over her head again, and went out and
|
|
stood on the corner of the alley and Polk Street, watching
|
|
and waiting, craning her neck to see down the street. Once,
|
|
even, she went out upon the sidewalk in front of the flat
|
|
and sat down for a moment upon the horse-block there. She
|
|
could not help remembering the day when she had been driven
|
|
up to that horse-block in a hack. Her mother and father and
|
|
Owgooste and the twins were with her. It was her wedding
|
|
day. Her wedding dress was in a huge tin trunk on the
|
|
driver's seat. She had never been happier before in all her
|
|
life. She remembered how she got out of the hack and stood
|
|
for a moment upon the horse-block, looking up at McTeague's
|
|
windows. She had caught a glimpse of him at his shaving,
|
|
the lather still on his cheek, and they had waved their
|
|
hands at each other. Instinctively Trina looked up at the
|
|
flat behind her; looked up at the bay window where her
|
|
husband's "Dental Parlors" had been. It was all dark; the
|
|
windows had the blind, sightless appearance imparted by
|
|
vacant, untenanted rooms. A rusty iron rod projected
|
|
mournfully from one of the window ledges.
|
|
|
|
"There's where our sign hung once," said Trina. She turned
|
|
her head and looked down Polk Street towards where the Other
|
|
Dentist had his rooms, and there, overhanging the street
|
|
from his window, newly furbished and brightened, hung the
|
|
huge tooth, her birthday present to her husband, flashing
|
|
and glowing in the white glare of the electric lights like a
|
|
beacon of defiance and triumph.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, no; ah, no," whispered Trina, choking back a sob.
|
|
"Life isn't so gay. But I wouldn't mind, no I wouldn't mind
|
|
anything, if only Mac was home all right." She got up from
|
|
the horse-block and stood again on the corner of the alley,
|
|
watching and listening.
|
|
|
|
It grew later. The hours passed. Trina kept at her post.
|
|
The noise of approaching footfalls grew less and less
|
|
frequent. Little by little Polk Street dropped back into
|
|
solitude. Eleven o'clock struck from the power-house clock;
|
|
lights were extinguished; at one o'clock the cable stopped,
|
|
leaving an abrupt and numbing silence in the air. All at
|
|
once it seemed very still. The only noises were the
|
|
occasional footfalls of a policeman and the persistent
|
|
calling of ducks and geese in the closed market across the
|
|
way. The street was asleep.
|
|
|
|
When it is night and dark, and one is awake and alone, one's
|
|
thoughts take the color of the surroundings; become gloomy,
|
|
sombre, and very dismal. All at once an idea came to Trina,
|
|
a dark, terrible idea; worse, even, than the idea of
|
|
McTeague's death.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no," she cried. "Oh, no. It isn't true. But suppose
|
|
--suppose."
|
|
|
|
She left her post and hurried back to the house.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," she was saying under her breath, "it isn't
|
|
possible. Maybe he's even come home already by another way.
|
|
But suppose--suppose--suppose."
|
|
|
|
She ran up the stairs, opened the door of the room, and
|
|
paused, out of breath. The room was dark and empty. With
|
|
cold, trembling fingers she lighted the lamp, and, turning
|
|
about, looked at her trunk. The lock was burst.
|
|
|
|
"No, no, no," cried Trina, "it's not true; it's not true."
|
|
She dropped on her knees before the trunk, and tossed back
|
|
the lid, and plunged her hands down into the corner
|
|
underneath her wedding dress, where she always kept the
|
|
savings. The brass match-safe and the chamois-skin bag were
|
|
there. They were empty.
|
|
|
|
Trina flung herself full length upon the floor, burying her
|
|
face in her arms, rolling her head from side to side. Her
|
|
voice rose to a wail.
|
|
|
|
"No, no, no, it's not true; it's not true; it's not true.
|
|
Oh, he couldn't have done it. Oh, how could he have done
|
|
it? All my money, all my little savings--and deserted me.
|
|
He's gone, my money's gone, my dear money--my dear, dear
|
|
gold pieces that I've worked so hard for. Oh, to have
|
|
deserted me--gone for good--gone and never coming back--gone
|
|
with my gold pieces. Gone-gone--gone. I'll never see them
|
|
again, and I've worked so hard, so so hard for him--for
|
|
them. No, no, NO, it's not true. It IS true. What
|
|
will become of me now? Oh, if you'll only come back you can
|
|
have all the money--half of it. Oh, give me back my money.
|
|
Give me back my money, and I'll forgive you. You can leave
|
|
me then if you want to. Oh, my money. Mac, Mac, you've
|
|
gone for good. You don't love me any more, and now I'm a
|
|
beggar. My money's gone, my husband's gone, gone, gone,
|
|
gone!"
|
|
|
|
Her grief was terrible. She dug her nails into her scalp,
|
|
and clutching the heavy coils of her thick black hair tore
|
|
it again and again. She struck her forehead with her
|
|
clenched fists. Her little body shook from head to foot with
|
|
the violence of her sobbing. She ground her small teeth
|
|
together and beat her head upon the floor with all her
|
|
strength.
|
|
|
|
Her hair was uncoiled and hanging a tangled, dishevelled
|
|
mass far below her waist; her dress was torn; a spot of
|
|
blood was upon her forehead; her eyes were swollen; her
|
|
cheeks flamed vermilion from the fever that raged in
|
|
her veins. Old Miss Baker found her thus towards five
|
|
o'clock the next morning.
|
|
|
|
What had happened between one o'clock and dawn of that
|
|
fearful night Trina never remembered. She could only recall
|
|
herself, as in a picture, kneeling before her broken and
|
|
rifled trunk, and then--weeks later, so it seemed to her--
|
|
she woke to find herself in her own bed with an iced bandage
|
|
about her forehead and the little old dressmaker at her
|
|
side, stroking her hot, dry palm.
|
|
|
|
The facts of the matter were that the German woman who lived
|
|
below had been awakened some hours after midnight by the
|
|
sounds of Trina's weeping. She had come upstairs and into
|
|
the room to find Trina stretched face downward upon the
|
|
floor, half-conscious and sobbing, in the throes of an
|
|
hysteria for which there was no relief. The woman,
|
|
terrified, had called her husband, and between them they had
|
|
got Trina upon the bed. Then the German woman happened to
|
|
remember that Trina had friends in the big flat near by, and
|
|
had sent her husband to fetch the retired dressmaker, while
|
|
she herself remained behind to undress Trina and put her to
|
|
bed. Miss Baker had come over at once, and began to cry
|
|
herself at the sight of the dentist's poor little wife. She
|
|
did not stop to ask what the trouble was, and indeed it
|
|
would have been useless to attempt to get any coherent
|
|
explanation from Trina at that time. Miss Baker had sent
|
|
the German woman's husband to get some ice at one of the
|
|
"all-night" restaurants of the street; had kept cold, wet
|
|
towels on Trina's head; had combed and recombed her
|
|
wonderful thick hair; and had sat down by the side of the
|
|
bed, holding her hot hand, with its poor maimed fingers,
|
|
waiting patiently until Trina should be able to speak.
|
|
|
|
Towards morning Trina awoke--or perhaps it was a mere
|
|
regaining of consciousness--looked a moment at Miss Baker,
|
|
then about the room until her eyes fell upon her trunk with
|
|
its broken lock. Then she turned over upon the pillow and
|
|
began to sob again. She refused to answer any of the little
|
|
dressmaker's questions, shaking her head violently, her face
|
|
hidden in the pillow.
|
|
|
|
By breakfast time her fever had increased to such a point
|
|
that Miss Baker took matters into her own hands and had the
|
|
German woman call a doctor. He arrived some twenty
|
|
minutes later. He was a big, kindly fellow who lived over
|
|
the drug store on the corner. He had a deep voice and a
|
|
tremendous striding gait less suggestive of a physician than
|
|
of a sergeant of a cavalry troop.
|
|
|
|
By the time of his arrival little Miss Baker had divined
|
|
intuitively the entire trouble. She heard the doctor's
|
|
swinging tramp in the entry below, and heard the German
|
|
woman saying:
|
|
|
|
"Righd oop der stairs, at der back of der halle. Der room
|
|
mit der door oppen."
|
|
|
|
Miss Baker met the doctor at the landing, she told him in a
|
|
whisper of the trouble.
|
|
|
|
"Her husband's deserted her, I'm afraid, doctor, and took
|
|
all of her money--a good deal of it. It's about killed the
|
|
poor child. She was out of her head a good deal of the
|
|
night, and now she's got a raging fever."
|
|
|
|
The doctor and Miss Baker returned to the room and entered,
|
|
closing the door. The big doctor stood for a moment looking
|
|
down at Trina rolling her head from side to side upon the
|
|
pillow, her face scarlet, her enormous mane of hair spread
|
|
out on either side of her. The little dressmaker remained
|
|
at his elbow, looking from him to Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Poor little woman!" said the doctor; "poor little woman!"
|
|
|
|
Miss Baker pointed to the trunk, whispering:
|
|
|
|
"See, there's where she kept her savings. See, he broke the
|
|
lock."
|
|
|
|
"Well, Mrs. McTeague," said the doctor, sitting down by the
|
|
bed, and taking Trina's wrist, "a little fever, eh?"
|
|
|
|
Trina opened her eyes and looked at him, and then at Miss
|
|
Baker. She did not seem in the least surprised at the
|
|
unfamiliar faces. She appeared to consider it all as a
|
|
matter of course.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," she said, with a long, tremulous breath, "I have a
|
|
fever, and my head--my head aches and aches."
|
|
|
|
The doctor prescribed rest and mild opiates. Then his eye
|
|
fell upon the fingers of Trina's right hand. He looked at
|
|
them sharply. A deep red glow, unmistakable to a
|
|
physician's eyes, was upon some of them, extending from
|
|
the finger tips up to the second knuckle.
|
|
|
|
"Hello," he exclaimed, "what's the matter here?" In fact
|
|
something was very wrong indeed. For days Trina had noticed
|
|
it. The fingers of her right hand had swollen as never
|
|
before, aching and discolored. Cruelly lacerated by
|
|
McTeague's brutality as they were, she had nevertheless gone
|
|
on about her work on the Noah's ark animals, constantly in
|
|
contact with the "non-poisonous" paint. She told as much to
|
|
the doctor in answer to his questions. He shook his head
|
|
with an exclamation.
|
|
|
|
"Why, this is blood-poisoning, you know," he told her; "the
|
|
worst kind. You'll have to have those fingers amputated,
|
|
beyond a doubt, or lose the entire hand--or even worse."
|
|
|
|
"And my work!" exclaimed Trina.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 19
|
|
|
|
|
|
One can hold a scrubbing-brush with two good fingers and the
|
|
stumps of two others even if both joints of the thumb are
|
|
gone, but it takes considerable practice to get used to it.
|
|
|
|
Trina became a scrub-woman. She had taken council of
|
|
Selina, and through her had obtained the position of care-
|
|
taker in a little memorial kindergarten over on Pacific
|
|
Street. Like Polk Street, it was an accommodation street,
|
|
but running through a much poorer and more sordid quarter.
|
|
Trina had a little room over the kindergarten schoolroom.
|
|
It was not an unpleasant room. It looked out upon a sunny
|
|
little court floored with boards and used as the children's
|
|
playground. Two great cherry trees grew here, the leaves
|
|
almost brushing against the window of Trina's room and
|
|
filtering the sunlight so that it fell in round golden spots
|
|
upon the floor of the room. "Like gold pieces," Trina said
|
|
to herself.
|
|
|
|
Trina's work consisted in taking care of the kindergarten
|
|
rooms, scrubbing the floors, washing the windows, dusting
|
|
and airing, and carrying out the ashes. Besides this she
|
|
earned some five dollars a month by washing down the front
|
|
steps of some big flats on Washington Street, and by
|
|
cleaning out vacant houses after the tenants had left. She
|
|
saw no one. Nobody knew her. She went about her work from
|
|
dawn to dark, and often entire days passed when she did not
|
|
hear the sound of her own voice. She was alone, a solitary,
|
|
abandoned woman, lost in the lowest eddies of the great
|
|
city's tide--the tide that always ebbs.
|
|
|
|
When Trina had been discharged from the hospital after the
|
|
operation on her fingers, she found herself alone in the
|
|
world, alone with her five thousand dollars. The interest
|
|
of this would support her, and yet allow her to save a
|
|
little.
|
|
|
|
But for a time Trina had thought of giving up the fight
|
|
altogether and of joining her family in the southern part of
|
|
the State. But even while she hesitated about this she
|
|
received a long letter from her mother, an answer to one she
|
|
herself had written just before the amputation of her right-
|
|
hand fingers--the last letter she would ever be able to
|
|
write. Mrs. Sieppe's letter was one long lamentation; she
|
|
had her own misfortunes to bewail as well as those of her
|
|
daughter. The carpet-cleaning and upholstery business had
|
|
failed. Mr. Sieppe and Owgooste had left for New Zealand
|
|
with a colonization company, whither Mrs. Sieppe and the
|
|
twins were to follow them as soon as the colony established
|
|
itself. So far from helping Trina in her ill fortune, it
|
|
was she, her mother, who might some day in the near future
|
|
be obliged to turn to Trina for aid. So Trina had given up
|
|
the idea of any help from her family. For that matter she
|
|
needed none. She still had her five thousand, and Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann paid her the interest with a machine-like
|
|
regularity. Now that McTeague had left her, there was one
|
|
less mouth to feed; and with this saving, together with the
|
|
little she could earn as scrub-woman, Trina could
|
|
almost manage to make good the amount she lost by being
|
|
obliged to cease work upon the Noah's ark animals.
|
|
|
|
Little by little her sorrow over the loss of her precious
|
|
savings overcame the grief of McTeague's desertion of her.
|
|
Her avarice had grown to be her one dominant passion; her
|
|
love of money for the money's sake brooded in her heart,
|
|
driving out by degrees every other natural affection. She
|
|
grew thin and meagre; her flesh clove tight to her small
|
|
skeleton; her small pale mouth and little uplifted chin grew
|
|
to have a certain feline eagerness of expression; her long,
|
|
narrow eyes glistened continually, as if they caught and
|
|
held the glint of metal. One day as she sat in her room,
|
|
the empty brass match-box and the limp chamois bag in her
|
|
hands, she suddenly exclaimed:
|
|
|
|
"I could have forgiven him if he had only gone away and left
|
|
me my money. I could have--yes, I could have forgiven him
|
|
even THIS"--she looked at the stumps of her fingers.
|
|
"But now," her teeth closed tight and her eyes flashed,
|
|
"now--I'll--never--forgive--him--as-long--as--I--live."
|
|
|
|
The empty bag and the hollow, light match-box troubled her.
|
|
Day after day she took them from her trunk and wept over
|
|
them as other women weep over a dead baby's shoe. Her four
|
|
hundred dollars were gone, were gone, were gone. She would
|
|
never see them again. She could plainly see her husband
|
|
spending her savings by handfuls; squandering her beautiful
|
|
gold pieces that she had been at such pains to polish with
|
|
soap and ashes. The thought filled her with an unspeakable
|
|
anguish. She would wake at night from a dream of McTeague
|
|
revelling down her money, and ask of the darkness, "How much
|
|
did he spend to-day? How many of the gold pieces are left?
|
|
Has he broken either of the two twenty-dollar pieces yet?
|
|
What did he spend it for?"
|
|
|
|
The instant she was out of the hospital Trina had begun to
|
|
save again, but now it was with an eagerness that amounted
|
|
at times to a veritable frenzy. She even denied herself
|
|
lights and fuel in order to put by a quarter or so, grudging
|
|
every penny she was obliged to spend. She did her own
|
|
washing and cooking. Finally she sold her wedding dress,
|
|
that had hitherto lain in the bottom of her trunk.
|
|
|
|
The day she moved from Zerkow's old house, she came suddenly
|
|
upon the dentist's concertina under a heap of old clothes in
|
|
the closet. Within twenty minutes she had sold it to the
|
|
dealer in second-hand furniture, returning to her room with
|
|
seven dollars in her pocket, happy for the first time since
|
|
McTeague had left her.
|
|
|
|
But for all that the match-box and the bag refused to fill
|
|
up; after three weeks of the most rigid economy they
|
|
contained but eighteen dollars and some small change. What
|
|
was that compared with four hundred? Trina told herself
|
|
that she must have her money in hand. She longed to see
|
|
again the heap of it upon her work-table, where she could
|
|
plunge her hands into it, her face into it, feeling the
|
|
cool, smooth metal upon her cheeks. At such moments she
|
|
would see in her imagination her wonderful five thousand
|
|
dollars piled in columns, shining and gleaming somewhere at
|
|
the bottom of Uncle Oelbermann's vault. She would look at
|
|
the paper that Uncle Oelbermann had given her, and tell
|
|
herself that it represented five thousand dollars. But in
|
|
the end this ceased to satisfy her, she must have the money
|
|
itself. She must have her four hundred dollars back again,
|
|
there in her trunk, in her bag and her match-box, where she
|
|
could touch it and see it whenever she desired.
|
|
|
|
At length she could stand it no longer, and one day
|
|
presented herself before Uncle Oelbermann as he sat in his
|
|
office in the wholesale toy store, and told him she wanted
|
|
to have four hundred dollars of her money.
|
|
|
|
"But this is very irregular, you know, Mrs. McTeague," said
|
|
the great man. "Not business-like at all."
|
|
|
|
But his niece's misfortunes and the sight of her poor maimed
|
|
hand appealed to him. He opened his check-book. "You
|
|
understand, of course," he said, "that this will reduce the
|
|
amount of your interest by just so much."
|
|
|
|
"I know, I know. I've thought of that," said Trina.
|
|
|
|
"Four hundred, did you say?" remarked Uncle Oelbermann,
|
|
taking the cap from his fountain pen.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, four hundred," exclaimed Trina, quickly, her eyes
|
|
glistening.
|
|
|
|
Trina cashed the check and returned home with the money--all
|
|
in twenty-dollar pieces as she had desired--in an ecstasy of
|
|
delight. For half of that night she sat up playing with her
|
|
money, counting it and recounting it, polishing the duller
|
|
pieces until they shone. Altogether there were twenty
|
|
twenty-dollar gold pieces.
|
|
|
|
"Oh-h, you beauties!" murmured Trina, running her palms over
|
|
them, fairly quivering with pleasure. "You beauties!
|
|
IS there anything prettier than a twenty-dollar gold piece?
|
|
You dear, dear money! Oh, don't I LOVE you! Mine, mine,
|
|
mine--all of you mine."
|
|
|
|
She laid them out in a row on the ledge of the table, or
|
|
arranged them in patterns--triangles, circles, and squares--
|
|
or built them all up into a pyramid which she afterward
|
|
overthrew for the sake of hearing the delicious clink of the
|
|
pieces tumbling against each other. Then at last she put
|
|
them away in the brass match-box and chamois bag, delighted
|
|
beyond words that they were once more full and heavy.
|
|
|
|
Then, a few days after, the thought of the money still
|
|
remaining in Uncle Oelbermann's keeping returned to her. It
|
|
was hers, all hers--all that four thousand six hundred. She
|
|
could have as much of it or as little of it as she chose.
|
|
She only had to ask. For a week Trina resisted, knowing
|
|
very well that taking from her capital was proportionately
|
|
reducing her monthly income. Then at last she yielded.
|
|
|
|
"Just to make it an even five hundred, anyhow," she told
|
|
herself. That day she drew a hundred dollars more, in
|
|
twenty-dollar gold pieces as before. From that time Trina
|
|
began to draw steadily upon her capital, a little at a time.
|
|
It was a passion with her, a mania, a veritable mental
|
|
disease; a temptation such as drunkards only know.
|
|
|
|
It would come upon her all of a sudden. While she was about
|
|
her work, scrubbing the floor of some vacant house; or in
|
|
her room, in the morning, as she made her coffee on the oil
|
|
stove, or when she woke in the night, a brusque access
|
|
of cupidity would seize upon her. Her cheeks flushed, her
|
|
eyes glistened, her breath came short. At times she would
|
|
leave her work just as it was, put on her old bonnet of
|
|
black straw, throw her shawl about her, and go straight to
|
|
Uncle Oelbermann's store and draw against her money. Now it
|
|
would be a hundred dollars, now sixty; now she would content
|
|
herself with only twenty; and once, after a fortnight's
|
|
abstinence, she permitted herself a positive debauch of five
|
|
hundred. Little by little she drew her capital from Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann, and little by little her original interest of
|
|
twenty-five dollars a month dwindled.
|
|
|
|
One day she presented herself again in the office of the
|
|
whole-sale toy store.
|
|
|
|
"Will you let me have a check for two hundred dollars, Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann?" she said.
|
|
|
|
The great man laid down his fountain pen and leaned back in
|
|
his swivel chair with great deliberation.
|
|
|
|
"I don't understand, Mrs. McTeague," he said. "Every week
|
|
you come here and draw out a little of your money. I've told
|
|
you that it is not at all regular or business-like for me to
|
|
let you have it this way. And more than this, it's a great
|
|
inconvenience to me to give you these checks at unstated
|
|
times. If you wish to draw out the whole amount let's have
|
|
some understanding. Draw it in monthly installments of,
|
|
say, five hundred dollars, or else," he added, abruptly,
|
|
"draw it all at once, now, to-day. I would even prefer it
|
|
that way. Otherwise it's--it's annoying. Come, shall I
|
|
draw you a check for thirty-seven hundred, and have it over
|
|
and done with?"
|
|
|
|
"No, no," cried Trina, with instinctive apprehension,
|
|
refusing, she did not know why. "No, I'll leave it with
|
|
you. I won't draw out any more."
|
|
|
|
She took her departure, but paused on the pavement outside
|
|
the store, and stood for a moment lost in thought, her eyes
|
|
beginning to glisten and her breath coming short. Slowly
|
|
she turned about and reentered the store; she came back into
|
|
the office, and stood trembling at the corner of Uncle
|
|
Oelbermann's desk. He looked up sharply. Twice Trina
|
|
tried to get her voice, and when it did come to her, she
|
|
could hardly recognize it. Between breaths she said:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, all right--I'll--you can give me--will you give me a
|
|
check for thirty-seven hundred? Give me ALL of my
|
|
money."
|
|
|
|
A few hours later she entered her little room over the
|
|
kindergarten, bolted the door with shaking fingers, and
|
|
emptied a heavy canvas sack upon the middle of her bed.
|
|
Then she opened her trunk, and taking thence the brass
|
|
match-box and chamois-skin bag added their contents to the
|
|
pile. Next she laid herself upon the bed and gathered the
|
|
gleaming heaps of gold pieces to her with both arms, burying
|
|
her face in them with long sighs of unspeakable delight.
|
|
|
|
It was a little past noon, and the day was fine and warm.
|
|
The leaves of the huge cherry trees threw off a certain
|
|
pungent aroma that entered through the open window, together
|
|
with long thin shafts of golden sunlight. Below, in the
|
|
kindergarten, the children were singing gayly and marching
|
|
to the jangling of the piano. Trina heard nothing, saw
|
|
nothing. She lay on her bed, her eyes closed, her face
|
|
buried in a pile of gold that she encircled with both her
|
|
arms.
|
|
|
|
Trina even told herself at last that she was happy once
|
|
more. McTeague became a memory--a memory that faded a little
|
|
every day--dim and indistinct in the golden splendor of five
|
|
thousand dollars.
|
|
|
|
"And yet," Trina would say, "I did love Mac, loved him
|
|
dearly, only a little while ago. Even when he hurt me, it
|
|
only made me love him more. How is it I've changed so
|
|
sudden? How COULD I forget him so soon? It must be
|
|
because he stole my money. That is it. I couldn't forgive
|
|
anyone that--no, not even my MOTHER. And I never--
|
|
never--will forgive him."
|
|
|
|
What had become of her husband Trina did not know. She
|
|
never saw any of the old Polk Street people. There was no
|
|
way she could have news of him, even if she had cared to
|
|
have it. She had her money, that was the main thing. Her
|
|
passion for it excluded every other sentiment. There it was
|
|
in the bottom of her trunk, in the canvas sack, the
|
|
chamois-skin bag, and the little brass match-safe. Not a
|
|
day passed that Trina did not have it out where she could
|
|
see and touch it. One evening she had even spread all the
|
|
gold pieces between the sheets, and had then gone to bed,
|
|
stripping herself, and had slept all night upon the money,
|
|
taking a strange and ecstatic pleasure in the touch of the
|
|
smooth flat pieces the length of her entire body.
|
|
|
|
One night, some three months after she had come to live at
|
|
the kindergarten, Trina was awakened by a sharp tap on the
|
|
pane of the window. She sat up quickly in bed, her heart
|
|
beating thickly, her eyes rolling wildly in the direction of
|
|
her trunk. The tap was repeated. Trina rose and went
|
|
fearfully to the window. The little court below was bright
|
|
with moonlight, and standing just on the edge of the shadow
|
|
thrown by one of the cherry trees was McTeague. A bunch of
|
|
half-ripe cherries was in his hand. He was eating them and
|
|
throwing the pits at the window. As he caught sight of her,
|
|
he made an eager sign for her to raise the sash. Reluctant
|
|
and wondering, Trina obeyed, and the dentist came quickly
|
|
forward. He was wearing a pair of blue overalls; a navy-
|
|
blue flannel shirt without a cravat; an old coat, faded,
|
|
rain-washed, and ripped at the seams; and his woollen cap.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Trina," he exclaimed, his heavy bass voice pitched
|
|
just above a whisper, "let me in, will you, huh? Say, will
|
|
you? I'm regularly starving, and I haven't slept in a
|
|
Christian bed for two weeks."
|
|
|
|
At sight at him standing there in the moonlight, Trina could
|
|
only think of him as the man who had beaten and bitten her,
|
|
had deserted her and stolen her money, had made her suffer
|
|
as she had never suffered before in all her life. Now that
|
|
he had spent the money that he had stolen from her, he was
|
|
whining to come back--so that he might steal more, no doubt.
|
|
Once in her room he could not help but smell out her five
|
|
thousand dollars. Her indignation rose.
|
|
|
|
"No," she whispered back at him. "No, I will not let you
|
|
in."
|
|
|
|
"But listen here, Trina, I tell you I am starving,
|
|
regularly----"
|
|
|
|
"Hoh!" interrupted Trina scornfully. "A man can't
|
|
starve with four hundred dollars, I guess."
|
|
|
|
"Well--well--I--well--" faltered the dentist. "Never mind
|
|
now. Give me something to eat, an' let me in an' sleep.
|
|
I've been sleeping in the Plaza for the last ten nights, and
|
|
say, I--Damn it, Trina, I ain't had anything to eat since--"
|
|
|
|
"Where's the four hundred dollars you robbed me of when you
|
|
deserted me?" returned Trina, coldly.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I've spent it," growled the dentist. "But you
|
|
CAN'T see me starve, Trina, no matter what's happened.
|
|
Give me a little money, then."
|
|
|
|
"I'll see you starve before you get any more of MY
|
|
money."
|
|
|
|
The dentist stepped back a pace and stared up at her wonder-
|
|
stricken. His face was lean and pinched. Never had the jaw
|
|
bone looked so enormous, nor the square-cut head so huge.
|
|
The moonlight made deep black shadows in the shrunken
|
|
cheeks.
|
|
|
|
"Huh?" asked the dentist, puzzled. "What did you say?"
|
|
|
|
"I won't give you any money--never again--not a cent."
|
|
|
|
"But do you know that I'm hungry?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I've been hungry myself. Besides, I DON'T
|
|
believe you."
|
|
|
|
"Trina, I ain't had a thing to eat since yesterday morning;
|
|
that's God's truth. Even if I did get off with your money,
|
|
you CAN'T see me starve, can you? You can't see me walk
|
|
the streets all night because I ain't got a place to sleep.
|
|
Will you let me in? Say, will you? Huh?"
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"Well, will you give me some money then--just a little?
|
|
Give me a dollar. Give me half a dol--Say, give me a
|
|
DIME, an' I can get a cup of coffee."
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
The dentist paused and looked at her with curious
|
|
intentness, bewildered, nonplussed.
|
|
|
|
"Say, you--you must be crazy, Trina. I--I--wouldn't let a
|
|
DOG go hungry."
|
|
|
|
"Not even if he'd bitten you, perhaps."
|
|
|
|
The dentist stared again.
|
|
|
|
There was another pause. McTeague looked up at her in
|
|
silence, a mean and vicious twinkle coming into his small
|
|
eyes. He uttered a low exclamation, and then checked
|
|
himself.
|
|
|
|
"Well, look here, for the last time. I'm starving. I've got
|
|
nowhere to sleep. Will you give me some money, or something
|
|
to eat? Will you let me in?"
|
|
|
|
"No--no--no."
|
|
|
|
Trina could fancy she almost saw the brassy glint in her
|
|
husband's eyes. He raised one enormous lean fist. Then he
|
|
growled:
|
|
|
|
"If I had hold of you for a minute, by God, I'd make you
|
|
dance. An' I will yet, I will yet. Don't you be afraid of
|
|
that."
|
|
|
|
He turned about, the moonlight showing like a layer of snow
|
|
upon his massive shoulders. Trina watched him as he passed
|
|
under the shadow of the cherry trees and crossed the little
|
|
court. She heard his great feet grinding on the board
|
|
flooring. He disappeared.
|
|
|
|
Miser though she was, Trina was only human, and the echo of
|
|
the dentist's heavy feet had not died away before she began
|
|
to he sorry for what she had done. She stood by the open
|
|
window in her nightgown, her finger upon her lips.
|
|
|
|
"He did looked pinched," she said half aloud. "Maybe he
|
|
WAS hungry. I ought to have given him something. I wish I
|
|
had, I WISH I had. Oh," she cried, suddenly, with a
|
|
frightened gesture of both hands, "what have I come to be
|
|
that I would see Mac--my husband--that I would see him
|
|
starve rather than give him money? No, no. It's too
|
|
dreadful. I WILL give him some. I'll send it to him
|
|
to-morrow. Where?--well, he'll come back." She leaned from
|
|
the window and called as loudly as she dared, "Mac, oh,
|
|
Mac." There was no answer.
|
|
|
|
When McTeague had told Trina he had been without food for
|
|
nearly two days he was speaking the truth. The week before
|
|
he had spent the last of the four hundred dollars in the bar
|
|
of a sailor's lodging-house near the water front, and since
|
|
that time had lived a veritable hand-to-mouth existence.
|
|
|
|
He had spent her money here and there about the city in
|
|
royal fashion, absolutely reckless of the morrow, feasting
|
|
and drinking for the most part with companions he
|
|
picked up heaven knows where, acquaintances of twenty-four
|
|
hours, whose names he forgot in two days. Then suddenly he
|
|
found himself at the end of his money. He no longer had any
|
|
friends. Hunger rode him and rowelled him. He was no
|
|
longer well fed, comfortable. There was no longer a warm
|
|
place for him to sleep. He went back to Polk Street in the
|
|
evening, walking on the dark side of the street, lurking in
|
|
the shadows, ashamed to have any of his old-time friends see
|
|
him. He entered Zerkow's old house and knocked at the door
|
|
of the room Trina and he had occupied. It was empty.
|
|
|
|
Next day he went to Uncle Oelbermann's store and asked news
|
|
of Trina. Trina had not told Uncle Oelbermann of McTeague's
|
|
brutalities, giving him other reasons to explain the loss of
|
|
her fingers; neither had she told him of her husband's
|
|
robbery. So when the dentist had asked where Trina could be
|
|
found, Uncle Oelbermann, believing that McTeague was seeking
|
|
a reconciliation, had told him without hesitation, and, he
|
|
added:
|
|
|
|
"She was in here only yesterday and drew out the balance of
|
|
her money. She's been drawing against her money for the
|
|
last month or so. She's got it all now, I guess."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, she's got it all."
|
|
|
|
The dentist went away from his bootless visit to his wife
|
|
shaking with rage, hating her with all the strength of a
|
|
crude and primitive nature. He clenched his fists till his
|
|
knuckles whitened, his teeth ground furiously upon one
|
|
another.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, if I had hold of you once, I'd make you dance. She had
|
|
five thousand dollars in that room, while I stood there, not
|
|
twenty feet away, and told her I was starving, and she
|
|
wouldn't give me a dime to get a cup of coffee with; not a
|
|
dime to get a cup of coffee. Oh, if I once get my hands on
|
|
you!" His wrath strangled him. He clutched at the darkness
|
|
in front of him, his breath fairly whistling between his
|
|
teeth.
|
|
|
|
That night he walked the streets until the morning,
|
|
wondering what now he was to do to fight the wolf away. The
|
|
morning of the next day towards ten o'clock he was on
|
|
Kearney Street, still walking, still tramping the streets,
|
|
since there was nothing else for him to do. By and by
|
|
he paused on a corner near a music store, finding a
|
|
momentary amusement in watching two or three men loading a
|
|
piano upon a dray. Already half its weight was supported by
|
|
the dray's backboard. One of the men, a big mulatto, almost
|
|
hidden under the mass of glistening rosewood, was guiding
|
|
its course, while the other two heaved and tugged in the
|
|
rear. Something in the street frightened the horses and they
|
|
shied abruptly. The end of the piano was twitched sharply
|
|
from the backboard. There was a cry, the mulatto staggered
|
|
and fell with the falling piano, and its weight dropped
|
|
squarely upon his thigh, which broke with a resounding
|
|
crack.
|
|
|
|
An hour later McTeague had found his job. The music store
|
|
engaged him as handler at six dollars a week. McTeague's
|
|
enormous strength, useless all his life, stood him in good
|
|
stead at last.
|
|
|
|
He slept in a tiny back room opening from the storeroom of
|
|
the music store. He was in some sense a watchman as well as
|
|
handler, and went the rounds of the store twice every night.
|
|
His room was a box of a place that reeked with odors of
|
|
stale tobacco smoke. The former occupant had papered the
|
|
walls with newspapers and had pasted up figures cut out from
|
|
the posters of some Kiralfy ballet, very gaudy. By the one
|
|
window, chittering all day in its little gilt prison, hung
|
|
the canary bird, a tiny atom of life that McTeague still
|
|
clung to with a strange obstinacy.
|
|
|
|
McTeague drank a good deal of whiskey in these days, but the
|
|
only effect it had upon him was to increase the viciousness
|
|
and bad temper that had developed in him since the beginning
|
|
of his misfortunes. He terrorized his fellow-handlers,
|
|
powerful men though they were. For a gruff word, for an
|
|
awkward movement in lading the pianos, for a surly look or a
|
|
muttered oath, the dentist's elbow would crook and his hand
|
|
contract to a mallet-like fist. As often as not the blow
|
|
followed, colossal in its force, swift as the leap of the
|
|
piston from its cylinder.
|
|
|
|
His hatred of Trina increased from day to day. He'd make
|
|
her dance yet. Wait only till he got his hands upon her.
|
|
She'd let him starve, would she? She'd turn him out of
|
|
doors while she hid her five thousand dollars in the bottom
|
|
of her trunk. Aha, he would see about that some day.
|
|
She couldn't make small of him. Ah, no. She'd dance all
|
|
right--all right. McTeague was not an imaginative man by
|
|
nature, but he would lie awake nights, his clumsy wits
|
|
galloping and frisking under the lash of the alcohol, and
|
|
fancy himself thrashing his wife, till a sudden frenzy of
|
|
rage would overcome him, and he would shake all over,
|
|
rolling upon the bed and biting the mattress.
|
|
|
|
On a certain day, about a week after Christmas of that year,
|
|
McTeague was on one of the top floors of the music store,
|
|
where the second-hand instruments were kept, helping to move
|
|
about and rearrange some old pianos. As he passed by one of
|
|
the counters he paused abruptly, his eye caught by an object
|
|
that was strangely familiar.
|
|
|
|
"Say," he inquired, addressing the clerk in charge, "say,
|
|
where'd this come from?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, let's see. We got that from a second-hand store up on
|
|
Polk Street, I guess. It's a fairly good machine; a little
|
|
tinkering with the stops and a bit of shellac, and we'll
|
|
make it about's good as new. Good tone. See." And the
|
|
clerk drew a long, sonorous wail from the depths of
|
|
McTeague's old concertina.
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's mine," growled the dentist.
|
|
|
|
The other laughed. "It's yours for eleven dollars."
|
|
|
|
"It's mine," persisted McTeague. "I want it."
|
|
|
|
"Go 'long with you, Mac. What do you mean?"
|
|
|
|
"I mean that it's mine, that's what I mean. You got no
|
|
right to it. It was STOLEN from me, that's what I
|
|
mean," he added, a sullen anger flaming up in his little
|
|
eyes.
|
|
|
|
The clerk raised a shoulder and put the concertina on an
|
|
upper shelf.
|
|
|
|
"You talk to the boss about that; t'ain't none of my affair.
|
|
If you want to buy it, it's eleven dollars."
|
|
|
|
The dentist had been paid off the day before and had four
|
|
dollars in his wallet at the moment. He gave the money to
|
|
the clerk.
|
|
|
|
"Here, there's part of the money. You--you put that
|
|
concertina aside for me, an' I'll give you the rest in a
|
|
week or so--I'll give it to you tomorrow," he
|
|
exclaimed, struck with a sudden idea.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had sadly missed his concertina. Sunday afternoons
|
|
when there was no work to be done, he was accustomed to lie
|
|
flat on his back on his springless bed in the little room in
|
|
the rear of the music store, his coat and shoes off, reading
|
|
the paper, drinking steam beer from a pitcher, and smoking
|
|
his pipe. But he could no longer play his six lugubrious
|
|
airs upon his concertina, and it was a deprivation. He
|
|
often wondered where it was gone. It had been lost, no
|
|
doubt, in the general wreck of his fortunes. Once, even,
|
|
the dentist had taken a concertina from the lot kept by the
|
|
music store. It was a Sunday and no one was about. But he
|
|
found he could not play upon it. The stops were arranged
|
|
upon a system he did not understand.
|
|
|
|
Now his own concertina was come back to him. He would buy
|
|
it back. He had given the clerk four dollars. He knew
|
|
where he would get the remaining seven.
|
|
|
|
The clerk had told him the concertina had been sold on Polk
|
|
Street to the second-hand store there. Trina had sold it.
|
|
McTeague knew it. Trina had sold his concertina--had stolen
|
|
it and sold it--his concertina, his beloved concertina, that
|
|
he had had all his life. Why, barring the canary, there was
|
|
not one of all his belongings that McTeague had cherished
|
|
more dearly. His steel engraving of "Lorenzo de' Medici and
|
|
his Court" might be lost, his stone pug dog might go, but
|
|
his concertina!
|
|
|
|
"And she sold it--stole it from me and sold it. Just
|
|
because I happened to forget to take it along with me. Well,
|
|
we'll just see about that. You'll give me the money to buy
|
|
it back, or----"
|
|
|
|
His rage loomed big within him. His hatred of Trina came
|
|
back upon him like a returning surge. He saw her small,
|
|
prim mouth, her narrow blue eyes, her black mane of hair,
|
|
and up-tilted chin, and hated her the more because of them.
|
|
Aha, he'd show her; he'd make her dance. He'd get that
|
|
seven dollars from her, or he'd know the reason why. He
|
|
went through his work that day, heaving and hauling at the
|
|
ponderous pianos, handling them with the ease of a lifting
|
|
crane, impatient for the coming of evening, when he could be
|
|
left to his own devices. As often as he had a moment
|
|
to spare he went down the street to the nearest saloon and
|
|
drank a pony of whiskey. Now and then as he fought and
|
|
struggled with the vast masses of ebony, rosewood, and
|
|
mahogany on the upper floor of the music store, raging and
|
|
chafing at their inertness and unwillingness, while the
|
|
whiskey pirouetted in his brain, he would mutter to himself:
|
|
|
|
"An' I got to do this. I got to work like a dray horse
|
|
while she sits at home by her stove and counts her money--
|
|
and sells my concertina."
|
|
|
|
Six o'clock came. Instead of supper, McTeague drank some
|
|
more whiskey, five ponies in rapid succession. After supper
|
|
he was obliged to go out with the dray to deliver a concert
|
|
grand at the Odd Fellows' Hall, where a piano "recital" was
|
|
to take place.
|
|
|
|
"Ain't you coming back with us?" asked one of the handlers
|
|
as he climbed upon the driver's seat after the piano had
|
|
been put in place.
|
|
|
|
"No, no," returned the dentist; "I got something else to
|
|
do." The brilliant lights of a saloon near the City Hall
|
|
caught his eye. He decided he would have another drink of
|
|
whiskey. It was about eight o'clock.
|
|
|
|
The following day was to be a fete day at the
|
|
kindergarten, the Christmas and New Year festivals combined.
|
|
All that afternoon the little two-story building on Pacific
|
|
Street had been filled with a number of grand ladies of the
|
|
Kindergarten Board, who were hanging up ropes of evergreen
|
|
and sprays of holly, and arranging a great Christmas tree
|
|
that stood in the centre of the ring in the schoolroom. The
|
|
whole place was pervaded with a pungent, piney odor. Trina
|
|
had been very busy since the early morning, coming and going
|
|
at everybody's call, now running down the street after
|
|
another tack-hammer or a fresh supply of cranberries, now
|
|
tying together the ropes of evergreen and passing them up to
|
|
one of the grand ladies as she carefully balanced herself on
|
|
a step-ladder. By evening everything was in place. As the
|
|
last grand lady left the school, she gave Trina an extra
|
|
dollar for her work, and said:
|
|
|
|
"Now, if you'll just tidy up here, Mrs. McTeague, I think
|
|
that will be all. Sweep up the pine needles here--you
|
|
see they are all over the floor--and look through all the
|
|
rooms, and tidy up generally. Good night--and a Happy New
|
|
Year," she cried pleasantly as she went out.
|
|
|
|
Trina put the dollar away in her trunk before she did
|
|
anything else and cooked herself a bit of supper. Then she
|
|
came downstairs again.
|
|
|
|
The kindergarten was not large. On the lower floor were but
|
|
two rooms, the main schoolroom and another room, a
|
|
cloakroom, very small, where the children hung their hats
|
|
and coats. This cloakroom opened off the back of the main
|
|
schoolroom. Trina cast a critical glance into both of these
|
|
rooms. There had been a great deal of going and coming in
|
|
them during the day, and she decided that the first thing to
|
|
do would be to scrub the floors. She went up again to her
|
|
room overhead and heated some water over her oil stove;
|
|
then, re-descending, set to work vigorously.
|
|
|
|
By nine o'clock she had almost finished with the schoolroom.
|
|
She was down on her hands and knees in the midst of a
|
|
steaming muck of soapy water. On her feet were a pair of
|
|
man's shoes fastened with buckles; a dirty cotton gown, damp
|
|
with the water, clung about her shapeless, stunted figure.
|
|
From time to time she sat back on her heels to ease the
|
|
strain of her position, and with one smoking hand, white and
|
|
parboiled with the hot water, brushed her hair, already
|
|
streaked with gray, out of her weazened, pale face and the
|
|
corners of her mouth.
|
|
|
|
It was very quiet. A gas-jet without a globe lit up the
|
|
place with a crude, raw light. The cat who lived on the
|
|
premises, preferring to be dirty rather than to be wet, had
|
|
got into the coal scuttle, and over its rim watched her
|
|
sleepily with a long, complacent purr.
|
|
|
|
All at once he stopped purring, leaving an abrupt silence in
|
|
the air like the sudden shutting off of a stream of water,
|
|
while his eyes grew wide, two lambent disks of yellow in the
|
|
heap of black fur.
|
|
|
|
"Who is there?" cried Trina, sitting back on her heels. In
|
|
the stillness that succeeded, the water dripped from her
|
|
hands with the steady tick of a clock. Then a brutal
|
|
fist swung open the street door of the schoolroom and
|
|
McTeague came in. He was drunk; not with that drunkenness
|
|
which is stupid, maudlin, wavering on its feet, but with
|
|
that which is alert, unnaturally intelligent, vicious,
|
|
perfectly steady, deadly wicked. Trina only had to look
|
|
once at him, and in an instant, with some strange sixth
|
|
sense, born of the occasion, knew what she had to expect.
|
|
|
|
She jumped up and ran from him into the little cloakroom.
|
|
She locked and bolted the door after her, and leaned her
|
|
weight against it, panting and trembling, every nerve
|
|
shrinking and quivering with the fear of him.
|
|
|
|
McTeague put his hand on the knob of the door outside and
|
|
opened it, tearing off the lock and bolt guard, and sending
|
|
her staggering across the room.
|
|
|
|
"Mac," she cried to him, as he came in, speaking with horrid
|
|
rapidity, cringing and holding out her hands, "Mac, listen.
|
|
Wait a minute--look here--listen here. It wasn't my fault.
|
|
I'll give you some money. You can come back. I'll do
|
|
ANYTHING you want. Won't you just LISTEN to me? Oh,
|
|
don't! I'll scream. I can't help it, you know. The people
|
|
will hear."
|
|
|
|
McTeague came towards her slowly, his immense feet dragging
|
|
and grinding on the floor; his enormous fists, hard as
|
|
wooden mallets, swinging at his sides. Trina backed from him
|
|
to the corner of the room, cowering before him, holding her
|
|
elbow crooked in front of her face, watching him with
|
|
fearful intentness, ready to dodge.
|
|
|
|
"I want that money," he said, pausing in front of her.
|
|
|
|
"What money?" cried Trina.
|
|
|
|
"I want that money. You got it--that five thousand dollars.
|
|
I want every nickel of it! You understand?"
|
|
|
|
"I haven't it. It isn't here. Uncle Oelbermann's got it."
|
|
|
|
"That's a lie. He told me that you came and got it. You've
|
|
had it long enough; now I want it. Do you hear?"
|
|
|
|
"Mac, I can't give you that money. I--I WON'T give it
|
|
to you," Trina cried, with sudden resolution.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, you will. You'll give me every nickel of it."
|
|
|
|
"No, NO."
|
|
|
|
"You ain't going to make small of me this time. Give me
|
|
that money."
|
|
|
|
"NO."
|
|
|
|
"For the last time, will you give me that money?"
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"You won't, huh? You won't give me it? For the last time."
|
|
|
|
"No, NO."
|
|
|
|
Usually the dentist was slow in his movements, but now the
|
|
alcohol had awakened in him an ape-like agility. He kept
|
|
his small eyes upon her, and all at once sent his fist into
|
|
the middle of her face with the suddenness of a relaxed
|
|
spring.
|
|
|
|
Beside herself with terror, Trina turned and fought him
|
|
back; fought for her miserable life with the exasperation
|
|
and strength of a harassed cat; and with such energy and
|
|
such wild, unnatural force, that even McTeague for the
|
|
moment drew back from her. But her resistance was the one
|
|
thing to drive him to the top of his fury. He came back at
|
|
her again, his eyes drawn to two fine twinkling points, and
|
|
his enormous fists, clenched till the knuckles whitened,
|
|
raised in the air.
|
|
|
|
Then it became abominable.
|
|
|
|
In the schoolroom outside, behind the coal scuttle, the cat
|
|
listened to the sounds of stamping and struggling and the
|
|
muffled noise of blows, wildly terrified, his eyes bulging
|
|
like brass knobs. At last the sounds stopped on a sudden;
|
|
he heard nothing more. Then McTeague came out, closing the
|
|
door. The cat followed him with distended eyes as he
|
|
crossed the room and disappeared through the street door.
|
|
|
|
The dentist paused for a moment on the sidewalk, looking
|
|
carefully up and down the street. It was deserted and
|
|
quiet. He turned sharply to the right and went down a narrow
|
|
passage that led into the little court yard behind the
|
|
school. A candle was burning in Trina's room. He went up
|
|
by the outside stairway and entered.
|
|
|
|
The trunk stood locked in one corner of the room. The
|
|
dentist took the lid-lifter from the little oil stove, put
|
|
it underneath the lock-clasp and wrenched it open.
|
|
Groping beneath a pile of dresses he found the chamois-skin
|
|
bag, the little brass match-box, and, at the very bottom,
|
|
carefully thrust into one corner, the canvas sack crammed to
|
|
the mouth with twenty-dollar gold pieces. He emptied the
|
|
chamois-skin bag and the matchbox into the pockets of his
|
|
trousers. But the canvas sack was too bulky to hide about
|
|
his clothes. "I guess I'll just naturally have to carry
|
|
YOU," he muttered. He blew out the candle, closed the
|
|
door, and gained the street again.
|
|
|
|
The dentist crossed the city, going back to the music store.
|
|
It was a little after eleven o'clock. The night was
|
|
moonless, filled with a gray blur of faint light that seemed
|
|
to come from all quarters of the horizon at once. From time
|
|
to time there were sudden explosions of a southeast wind at
|
|
the street corners. McTeague went on, slanting his head
|
|
against the gusts, to keep his cap from blowing off,
|
|
carrying the sack close to his side. Once he looked
|
|
critically at the sky.
|
|
|
|
"I bet it'll rain to-morrow," he muttered, "if this wind
|
|
works round to the south."
|
|
|
|
Once in his little den behind the music store, he washed his
|
|
hands and forearms, and put on his working clothes, blue
|
|
overalls and a jumper, over cheap trousers and vest. Then
|
|
he got together his small belongings--an old campaign hat, a
|
|
pair of boots, a tin of tobacco, and a pinchbeck bracelet
|
|
which he had found one Sunday in the Park, and which he
|
|
believed to be valuable. He stripped his blanket from his
|
|
bed and rolled up in it all these objects, together with the
|
|
canvas sack, fastening the roll with a half hitch such as
|
|
miners use, the instincts of the old-time car-boy coming
|
|
back to him in his present confusion of mind. He changed his
|
|
pipe and his knife--a huge jackknife with a yellowed bone
|
|
handle--to the pockets of his overalls.
|
|
|
|
Then at last he stood with his hand on the door, holding up
|
|
the lamp before blowing it out, looking about to make sure
|
|
he was ready to go. The wavering light woke his canary. It
|
|
stirred and began to chitter feebly, very sleepy and cross
|
|
at being awakened. McTeague started, staring at it, and
|
|
reflecting. He believed that it would be a long time before
|
|
anyone came into that room again. The canary would be days
|
|
without food; it was likely it would starve, would die
|
|
there, hour by hour, in its little gilt prison. McTeague
|
|
resolved to take it with him. He took down the cage,
|
|
touching it gently with his enormous hands, and tied a
|
|
couple of sacks about it to shelter the little bird from the
|
|
sharp night wind.
|
|
|
|
Then he went out, locking all the doors behind him, and
|
|
turned toward the ferry slips. The boats had ceased running
|
|
hours ago, but he told himself that by waiting till four
|
|
o'clock he could get across the bay on the tug that took
|
|
over the morning papers.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Trina lay unconscious, just as she had fallen under the last
|
|
of McTeague's blows, her body twitching with an occasional
|
|
hiccough that stirred the pool of blood in which she lay
|
|
face downward. Towards morning she died with a rapid series
|
|
of hiccoughs that sounded like a piece of clockwork running
|
|
down.
|
|
|
|
The thing had been done in the cloakroom where the
|
|
kindergarten children hung their hats and coats. There was
|
|
no other entrance except by going through the main
|
|
schoolroom. McTeague going out had shut the door of the
|
|
cloakroom, but had left the street door open; so when the
|
|
children arrived in the morning, they entered as usual.
|
|
|
|
About half-past eight, two or three five-year-olds, one a
|
|
little colored girl, came into the schoolroom of the
|
|
kindergarten with a great chatter of voices, going across to
|
|
the cloakroom to hang up their hats and coats as they had
|
|
been taught.
|
|
|
|
Half way across the room one of them stopped and put her
|
|
small nose in the air, crying, "Um-o-o, what a funnee
|
|
smell!" The others began to sniff the air as well, and one,
|
|
the daughter of a butcher, exclaimed, "'Tsmells like my pa's
|
|
shop," adding in the next breath, "Look, what's the matter
|
|
with the kittee?"
|
|
|
|
In fact, the cat was acting strangely. He lay quite flat on
|
|
the floor, his nose pressed close to the crevice under the
|
|
door of the little cloakroom, winding his tail slowly
|
|
back and forth, excited, very eager. At times he would draw
|
|
back and make a strange little clacking noise down in his
|
|
throat.
|
|
|
|
"Ain't he funnee?" said the little girl again. The cat
|
|
slunk swiftly away as the children came up. Then the
|
|
tallest of the little girls swung the door of the little
|
|
cloakroom wide open and they all ran in.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 20
|
|
|
|
|
|
The day was very hot, and the silence of high noon lay close
|
|
and thick between the steep slopes of the canyons like an
|
|
invisible, muffling fluid. At intervals the drone of an
|
|
insect bored the air and trailed slowly to silence again.
|
|
Everywhere were pungent, aromatic smells. The vast,
|
|
moveless heat seemed to distil countless odors from the
|
|
brush--odors of warm sap, of pine needles, and of tar-weed,
|
|
and above all the medicinal odor of witch hazel. As far as
|
|
one could look, uncounted multitudes of trees and manzanita
|
|
bushes were quietly and motionlessly growing, growing,
|
|
growing. A tremendous, immeasurable Life pushed steadily
|
|
heavenward without a sound, without a motion. At turns of
|
|
the road, on the higher points, canyons disclosed themselves
|
|
far away, gigantic grooves in the landscape, deep blue in
|
|
the distance, opening one into another, ocean-deep, silent,
|
|
huge, and suggestive of colossal primeval forces held in
|
|
reserve. At their bottoms they were solid, massive; on
|
|
their crests they broke delicately into fine serrated edges
|
|
where the pines and redwoods outlined their million of tops
|
|
against the high white horizon. Here and there the
|
|
mountains lifted themselves out of the narrow river
|
|
beds in groups like giant lions rearing their heads after
|
|
drinking. The entire region was untamed. In some places
|
|
east of the Mississippi nature is cosey, intimate, small,
|
|
and homelike, like a good-natured housewife. In Placer
|
|
County, California, she is a vast, unconquered brute of the
|
|
Pliocene epoch, savage, sullen, and magnificently
|
|
indifferent to man.
|
|
|
|
But there were men in these mountains, like lice on
|
|
mammoths' hides, fighting them stubbornly, now with
|
|
hydraulic "monitors," now with drill and dynamite, boring
|
|
into the vitals of them, or tearing away great yellow
|
|
gravelly scars in the flanks of them, sucking their blood,
|
|
extracting gold.
|
|
|
|
Here and there at long distances upon the canyon sides rose
|
|
the headgear of a mine, surrounded with its few unpainted
|
|
houses, and topped by its never-failing feather of black
|
|
smoke. On near approach one heard the prolonged thunder of
|
|
the stamp-mill, the crusher, the insatiable monster,
|
|
gnashing the rocks to powder with its long iron teeth,
|
|
vomiting them out again in a thin stream of wet gray mud.
|
|
Its enormous maw, fed night and day with the car-boys'
|
|
loads, gorged itself with gravel, and spat out the gold,
|
|
grinding the rocks between its jaws, glutted, as it were,
|
|
with the very entrails of the earth, and growling over its
|
|
endless meal, like some savage animal, some legendary
|
|
dragon, some fabulous beast, symbol of inordinate and
|
|
monstrous gluttony.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had left the Overland train at Colfax, and the same
|
|
afternoon had ridden some eight miles across the mountains
|
|
in the stage that connects Colfax with Iowa Hill. Iowa Hill
|
|
was a small one-street town, the headquarters of the mines
|
|
of the district. Originally it had been built upon the
|
|
summit of a mountain, but the sides of this mountain have
|
|
long since been "hydrau-licked" away, so that the town now
|
|
clings to a mere back bone, and the rear windows of the
|
|
houses on both sides of the street look down over sheer
|
|
precipices, into vast pits hundreds of feet deep.
|
|
|
|
The dentist stayed over night at the Hill, and the next
|
|
morning started off on foot farther into the mountains. He
|
|
still wore his blue overalls and jumper; his woollen
|
|
cap was pulled down over his eye; on his feet were hob-
|
|
nailed boots he had bought at the store in Colfax; his
|
|
blanket roll was over his back; in his left hand swung the
|
|
bird cage wrapped in sacks.
|
|
|
|
Just outside the town he paused, as if suddenly remembering
|
|
something.
|
|
|
|
"There ought to be a trail just off the road here," he
|
|
muttered. "There used to be a trail--a short cut."
|
|
|
|
The next instant, without moving from his position, he saw
|
|
where it opened just before him. His instinct had halted
|
|
him at the exact spot. The trail zigzagged down the abrupt
|
|
descent of the canyon, debouching into a gravelly river bed.
|
|
|
|
"Indian River," muttered the dentist. "I remember--I
|
|
remember. I ought to hear the Morning Star's stamps from
|
|
here." He cocked his head. A low, sustained roar, like a
|
|
distant cataract, came to his ears from across the river.
|
|
"That's right," he said, contentedly. He crossed the river
|
|
and regained the road beyond. The slope rose under his
|
|
feet; a little farther on he passed the Morning Star mine,
|
|
smoking and thundering. McTeague pushed steadily on. The
|
|
road rose with the rise of the mountain, turned at a sharp
|
|
angle where a great live-oak grew, and held level for nearly
|
|
a quarter of a mile. Twice again the dentist left the road
|
|
and took to the trail that cut through deserted hydraulic
|
|
pits. He knew exactly where to look for these trails; not
|
|
once did his instinct deceive him. He recognized familiar
|
|
points at once. Here was Cold Canyon, where invariably,
|
|
winter and summer, a chilly wind was blowing; here was where
|
|
the road to Spencer's branched off; here was Bussy's old
|
|
place, where at one time there were so many dogs; here was
|
|
Delmue's cabin, where unlicensed whiskey used to be sold;
|
|
here was the plank bridge with its one rotten board; and
|
|
here the flat overgrown with manzanita, where he once had
|
|
shot three quail.
|
|
|
|
At noon, after he had been tramping for some two hours, he
|
|
halted at a point where the road dipped suddenly. A little
|
|
to the right of him, and flanking the road, an enormous
|
|
yellow gravel-pit like an emptied lake gaped to heaven.
|
|
Farther on, in the distance, a canyon zigzagged toward
|
|
the horizon, rugged with pine-clad mountain crests. Nearer
|
|
at hand, and directly in the line of the road, was an
|
|
irregular cluster of unpainted cabins. A dull, prolonged
|
|
roar vibrated in the air. McTeague nodded his head as if
|
|
satisfied.
|
|
|
|
"That's the place," he muttered.
|
|
|
|
He reshouldered his blanket roll and descended the road. At
|
|
last he halted again. He stood before a low one-story
|
|
building, differing from the others in that it was painted.
|
|
A verandah, shut in with mosquito netting, surrounded it.
|
|
McTeague dropped his blanket roll on a lumber pile outside,
|
|
and came up and knocked at the open door. Some one called
|
|
to him to come in.
|
|
|
|
McTeague entered, rolling his eyes about him, noting the
|
|
changes that had been made since he had last seen this
|
|
place. A partition had been knocked down, making one big
|
|
room out of the two former small ones. A counter and
|
|
railing stood inside the door. There was a telephone on the
|
|
wall. In one corner he also observed a stack of surveyor's
|
|
instruments; a big drawing-board straddled on spindle legs
|
|
across one end of the room, a mechanical drawing of some
|
|
kind, no doubt the plan of the mine, unrolled upon it; a
|
|
chromo representing a couple of peasants in a ploughed field
|
|
(Millet's "Angelus") was nailed unframed upon the wall, and
|
|
hanging from the same wire nail that secured one of its
|
|
corners in place was a bullion bag and a cartridge belt with
|
|
a loaded revolver in the pouch.
|
|
|
|
The dentist approached the counter and leaned his elbows
|
|
upon it. Three men were in the room--a tall, lean young
|
|
man, with a thick head of hair surprisingly gray, who was
|
|
playing with a half-grown great Dane puppy; another fellow
|
|
about as young, but with a jaw almost as salient as
|
|
McTeague's, stood at the letter-press taking a copy of a
|
|
letter; a third man, a little older than the other two, was
|
|
pottering over a transit. This latter was massively built,
|
|
and wore overalls and low boots streaked and stained and
|
|
spotted in every direction with gray mud. The dentist
|
|
looked slowly from one to the other; then at length, "Is the
|
|
foreman about?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
The man in the muddy overalls came forward.
|
|
|
|
"What you want?"
|
|
|
|
He spoke with a strong German accent.
|
|
|
|
The old invariable formula came back to McTeague on the
|
|
instant.
|
|
|
|
"What's the show for a job?"
|
|
|
|
At once the German foreman became preoccupied, looking
|
|
aimlessly out of the window. There was a silence.
|
|
|
|
"You hev been miner alretty?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes."
|
|
|
|
"Know how to hendle pick'n shov'le?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I know."
|
|
|
|
The other seemed unsatisfied. "Are you a 'cousin Jack'?"
|
|
|
|
The dentist grinned. This prejudice against Cornishmen he
|
|
remembered too.
|
|
|
|
"No. American."
|
|
|
|
"How long sence you mine?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, year or two."
|
|
|
|
"Show your hends." McTeague exhibited his hard, callused
|
|
palms.
|
|
|
|
"When ken you go to work? I want a chuck-tender on der
|
|
night-shift."
|
|
|
|
"I can tend a chuck. I'll go on to-night."
|
|
|
|
"What's your name?"
|
|
|
|
The dentist started. He had forgotten to be prepared for
|
|
this.
|
|
|
|
"Huh? What?"
|
|
|
|
"What's the name?"
|
|
|
|
McTeague's eye was caught by a railroad calendar hanging
|
|
over the desk. There was no time to think.
|
|
|
|
"Burlington," he said, loudly.
|
|
|
|
The German took a card from a file and wrote it down.
|
|
|
|
"Give dis card to der boarding-boss, down at der boarding-
|
|
haus, den gome find me bei der mill at sex o'clock, und I
|
|
set you to work."
|
|
|
|
Straight as a homing pigeon, and following a blind and
|
|
unreasoned instinct, McTeague had returned to the Big Dipper
|
|
mine. Within a week's time it seemed to him as though
|
|
he had never been away. He picked up his life again exactly
|
|
where he had left it the day when his mother had sent him
|
|
away with the travelling dentist, the charlatan who had set
|
|
up his tent by the bunk house. The house McTeague had once
|
|
lived in was still there, occupied by one of the shift
|
|
bosses and his family. The dentist passed it on his way to
|
|
and from the mine.
|
|
|
|
He himself slept in the bunk house with some thirty others
|
|
of his shift. At half-past five in the evening the cook at
|
|
the boarding-house sounded a prolonged alarm upon a crowbar
|
|
bent in the form of a triangle, that hung upon the porch of
|
|
the boarding-house. McTeague rose and dressed, and with his
|
|
shift had supper. Their lunch-pails were distributed to
|
|
them. Then he made his way to the tunnel mouth, climbed
|
|
into a car in the waiting ore train, and was hauled into the
|
|
mine.
|
|
|
|
Once inside, the hot evening air turned to a cool dampness,
|
|
and the forest odors gave place to the smell of stale
|
|
dynamite smoke, suggestive of burning rubber. A cloud of
|
|
steam came from McTeague's mouth; underneath, the water
|
|
swashed and rippled around the car-wheels, while the light
|
|
from the miner's candlesticks threw wavering blurs of pale
|
|
yellow over the gray rotting quartz of the roof and walls.
|
|
Occasionally McTeague bent down his head to avoid the
|
|
lagging of the roof or the projections of an overhanging
|
|
shute. From car to car all along the line the miners called
|
|
to one another as the train trundled along, joshing and
|
|
laughing.
|
|
|
|
A mile from the entrance the train reached the breast where
|
|
McTeague's gang worked. The men clambered from the cars and
|
|
took up the labor where the day shift had left it, burrowing
|
|
their way steadily through a primeval river bed.
|
|
|
|
The candlesticks thrust into the crevices of the gravel
|
|
strata lit up faintly the half dozen moving figures befouled
|
|
with sweat and with wet gray mould. The picks struck into
|
|
the loose gravel with a yielding shock. The long-handled
|
|
shovels clinked amidst the piles of bowlders and scraped
|
|
dully in the heaps of rotten quartz. The Burly drill boring
|
|
for blasts broke out from time to time in an irregular
|
|
chug-chug, chug-chug, while the engine that pumped the water
|
|
from the mine coughed and strangled at short intervals.
|
|
|
|
McTeague tended the chuck. In a way he was the assistant of
|
|
the man who worked the Burly. It was his duty to replace
|
|
the drills in the Burly, putting in longer ones as the hole
|
|
got deeper and deeper. From time to time he rapped the
|
|
drill with a pole-pick when it stuck fast or fitchered.
|
|
|
|
Once it even occurred to him that there was a resemblance
|
|
between his present work and the profession he had been
|
|
forced to abandon. In the Burly drill he saw a queer
|
|
counterpart of his old-time dental engine; and what were the
|
|
drills and chucks but enormous hoe excavators, hard bits,
|
|
and burrs? It was the same work he had so often performed
|
|
in his "Parlors," only magnified, made monstrous, distorted,
|
|
and grotesqued, the caricature of dentistry.
|
|
|
|
He passed his nights thus in the midst of the play of crude
|
|
and simple forces--the powerful attacks of the Burly drills;
|
|
the great exertions of bared, bent backs overlaid with
|
|
muscle; the brusque, resistless expansion of dynamite; and
|
|
the silent, vast, Titanic force, mysterious and slow, that
|
|
cracked the timbers supporting the roof of the tunnel, and
|
|
that gradually flattened the lagging till it was thin as
|
|
paper.
|
|
|
|
The life pleased the dentist beyond words. The still,
|
|
colossal mountains took him back again like a returning
|
|
prodigal, and vaguely, without knowing why, he yielded to
|
|
their influence--their immensity, their enormous power,
|
|
crude and blind, reflecting themselves in his own nature,
|
|
huge, strong, brutal in its simplicity. And this, though he
|
|
only saw the mountains at night. They appeared far different
|
|
then than in the daytime. At twelve o'clock he came out of
|
|
the mine and lunched on the contents of his dinner-pail,
|
|
sitting upon the embankment of the track, eating with both
|
|
hands, and looking around him with a steady ox-like gaze.
|
|
The mountains rose sheer from every side, heaving their
|
|
gigantic crests far up into the night, the black peaks
|
|
crowding together, and looking now less like beasts than
|
|
like a company of cowled giants. In the daytime they
|
|
were silent; but at night they seemed to stir and rouse
|
|
themselves. Occasionally the stamp-mill stopped, its thunder
|
|
ceasing abruptly. Then one could hear the noises that the
|
|
mountains made in their living. From the canyon, from the
|
|
crowding crests, from the whole immense landscape, there
|
|
rose a steady and prolonged sound, coming from all sides at
|
|
once. It was that incessant and muffled roar which
|
|
disengages itself from all vast bodies, from oceans, from
|
|
cities, from forests, from sleeping armies, and which is
|
|
like the breathing of an infinitely great monster, alive,
|
|
palpitating.
|
|
|
|
McTeague returned to his work. At six in the morning his
|
|
shift was taken off, and he went out of the mine and back to
|
|
the bunk house. All day long he slept, flung at length upon
|
|
the strong-smelling blankets--slept the dreamless sleep of
|
|
exhaustion, crushed and overpowered with the work, flat and
|
|
prone upon his belly, till again in the evening the cook
|
|
sounded the alarm upon the crowbar bent into a triangle.
|
|
|
|
Every alternate week the shifts were changed. The second
|
|
week McTeague's shift worked in the daytime and slept at
|
|
night. Wednesday night of this second week the dentist woke
|
|
suddenly. He sat up in his bed in the bunk house, looking
|
|
about him from side to side; an alarm clock hanging on the
|
|
wall, over a lantern, marked half-past three.
|
|
|
|
"What was it?" muttered the dentist. "I wonder what it
|
|
was." The rest of the shift were sleeping soundly, filling
|
|
the room with the rasping sound of snoring. Everything was
|
|
in its accustomed place; nothing stirred. But for all that
|
|
McTeague got up and lit his miner's candlestick and went
|
|
carefully about the room, throwing the light into the dark
|
|
corners, peering under all the beds, including his own.
|
|
Then he went to the door and stepped outside. The night was
|
|
warm and still; the moon, very low, and canted on her side
|
|
like a galleon foundering. The camp was very quiet; nobody
|
|
was in sight. "I wonder what it was," muttered the dentist.
|
|
"There was something--why did I wake up? Huh?" He made a
|
|
circuit about the bunk house, unusually alert, his small
|
|
eyes twinkling rapidly, seeing everything. All was
|
|
quiet. An old dog who invariably slept on the steps of the
|
|
bunk house had not even wakened. McTeague went back to bed,
|
|
but did not sleep.
|
|
|
|
"There was SOMETHING," he muttered, looking in a puzzled
|
|
way at his canary in the cage that hung from the wall at his
|
|
bedside; "something. What was it? There is something
|
|
NOW. There it is again--the same thing." He sat up in bed
|
|
with eyes and ears strained. "What is it? I don' know what
|
|
it is. I don' hear anything, an' I don' see anything. I
|
|
feel something--right now; feel it now. I wonder--I don'
|
|
know--I don' know."
|
|
|
|
Once more he got up, and this time dressed himself. He made
|
|
a complete tour of the camp, looking and listening, for what
|
|
he did not know. He even went to the outskirts of the camp
|
|
and for nearly half an hour watched the road that led into
|
|
the camp from the direction of Iowa Hill. He saw nothing;
|
|
not even a rabbit stirred. He went to bed.
|
|
|
|
But from this time on there was a change. The dentist grew
|
|
restless, uneasy. Suspicion of something, he could not say
|
|
what, annoyed him incessantly. He went wide around sharp
|
|
corners. At every moment he looked sharply over his
|
|
shoulder. He even went to bed with his clothes and cap on,
|
|
and at every hour during the night would get up and prowl
|
|
about the bunk house, one ear turned down the wind, his eyes
|
|
gimleting the darkness. From time to time he would murmur:
|
|
|
|
"There's something. What is it? I wonder what it is."
|
|
|
|
What strange sixth sense stirred in McTeague at this time?
|
|
What animal cunning, what brute instinct clamored for
|
|
recognition and obedience? What lower faculty was it that
|
|
roused his suspicion, that drove him out into the night a
|
|
score of times between dark and dawn, his head in the air,
|
|
his eyes and ears keenly alert?
|
|
|
|
One night as he stood on the steps of the bunk house,
|
|
peering into the shadows of the camp, he uttered an
|
|
exclamation as of a man suddenly enlightened. He turned
|
|
back into the house, drew from under his bed the blanket
|
|
roll in which he kept his money hid, and took the
|
|
canary down from the wall. He strode to the door and
|
|
disappeared into the night. When the sheriff of Placer
|
|
County and the two deputies from San Francisco reached the
|
|
Big Dipper mine, McTeague had been gone two days.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 21
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Well," said one of the deputies, as he backed the horse
|
|
into the shafts of the buggy in which the pursuers had
|
|
driven over from the Hill, "we've about as good as got him.
|
|
It isn't hard to follow a man who carries a bird cage with
|
|
him wherever he goes."
|
|
|
|
McTeague crossed the mountains on foot the Friday and
|
|
Saturday of that week, going over through Emigrant Gap,
|
|
following the line of the Overland railroad. He reached
|
|
Reno Monday night. By degrees a vague plan of action
|
|
outlined itself in the dentist's mind.
|
|
|
|
"Mexico," he muttered to himself. "Mexico, that's the
|
|
place. They'll watch the coast and they'll watch the Eastern
|
|
trains, but they won't think of Mexico."
|
|
|
|
The sense of pursuit which had harassed him during the last
|
|
week of his stay at the Big Dipper mine had worn off, and he
|
|
believed himself to be very cunning.
|
|
|
|
"I'm pretty far ahead now, I guess," he said. At Reno he
|
|
boarded a south-bound freight on the line of the Carson and
|
|
Colorado railroad, paying for a passage in the caboose.
|
|
"Freights don' run on schedule time," he muttered, "and a
|
|
conductor on a passenger train makes it his business to
|
|
study faces. I'll stay with this train as far as it goes."
|
|
|
|
The freight worked slowly southward, through western
|
|
Nevada, the country becoming hourly more and more desolate
|
|
and abandoned. After leaving Walker Lake the sage-brush
|
|
country began, and the freight rolled heavily over tracks
|
|
that threw off visible layers of heat. At times it stopped
|
|
whole half days on sidings or by water tanks, and the
|
|
engineer and fireman came back to the caboose and played
|
|
poker with the conductor and train crew. The dentist sat
|
|
apart, behind the stove, smoking pipe after pipe of cheap
|
|
tobacco. Sometimes he joined in the poker games. He had
|
|
learned poker when a boy at the mine, and after a few deals
|
|
his knowledge returned to him; but for the most part he was
|
|
taciturn and unsociable, and rarely spoke to the others
|
|
unless spoken to first. The crew recognized the type, and
|
|
the impression gained ground among them that he had "done
|
|
for" a livery-stable keeper at Truckee and was trying to get
|
|
down into Arizona.
|
|
|
|
McTeague heard two brakemen discussing him one night as they
|
|
stood outside by the halted train. "The livery-stable
|
|
keeper called him a bastard; that's what Picachos told me,"
|
|
one of them remarked, "and started to draw his gun; an' this
|
|
fellar did for him with a hayfork. He's a horse doctor,
|
|
this chap is, and the livery-stable keeper had got the law
|
|
on him so's he couldn't practise any more, an' he was sore
|
|
about it."
|
|
|
|
Near a place called Queen's the train reentered California,
|
|
and McTeague observed with relief that the line of track
|
|
which had hitherto held westward curved sharply to the south
|
|
again. The train was unmolested; occasionally the crew
|
|
fought with a gang of tramps who attempted to ride the brake
|
|
beams, and once in the northern part of Inyo County, while
|
|
they were halted at a water tank, an immense Indian buck,
|
|
blanketed to the ground, approached McTeague as he stood on
|
|
the roadbed stretching his legs, and without a word
|
|
presented to him a filthy, crumpled letter. The letter was
|
|
to the effect that the buck Big Jim was a good Indian and
|
|
deserving of charity; the signature was illegible. The
|
|
dentist stared at the letter, returned it to the buck, and
|
|
regained the train just as it started. Neither had spoken;
|
|
the buck did not move from his position, and fully five
|
|
minutes afterward, when the slow-moving freight was
|
|
miles away, the dentist looked back and saw him still
|
|
standing motionless between the rails, a forlorn and
|
|
solitary point of red, lost in the immensity of the
|
|
surrounding white blur of the desert.
|
|
|
|
At length the mountains began again, rising up on either
|
|
side of the track; vast, naked hills of white sand and red
|
|
rock, spotted with blue shadows. Here and there a patch of
|
|
green was spread like a gay table-cloth over the sand. All
|
|
at once Mount Whitney leaped over the horizon. Independence
|
|
was reached and passed; the freight, nearly emptied by now,
|
|
and much shortened, rolled along the shores of Owen Lake.
|
|
At a place called Keeler it stopped definitely. It was the
|
|
terminus of the road.
|
|
|
|
The town of Keeler was a one-street town, not unlike Iowa
|
|
Hill--the post-office, the bar and hotel, the Odd Fellows'
|
|
Hall, and the livery stable being the principal buildings.
|
|
|
|
"Where to now?" muttered McTeague to himself as he sat on
|
|
the edge of the bed in his room in the hotel. He hung the
|
|
canary in the window, filled its little bathtub, and watched
|
|
it take its bath with enormous satisfaction. "Where to
|
|
now?" he muttered again. "This is as far as the railroad
|
|
goes, an' it won' do for me to stay in a town yet a while;
|
|
no, it won' do. I got to clear out. Where to? That's the
|
|
word, where to? I'll go down to supper now"--He went on
|
|
whispering his thoughts aloud, so that they would take more
|
|
concrete shape in his mind--"I'll go down to supper now, an'
|
|
then I'll hang aroun' the bar this evening till I get the
|
|
lay of this land. Maybe this is fruit country, though it
|
|
looks more like a cattle country. Maybe it's a mining
|
|
country. If it's a mining country," he continued, puckering
|
|
his heavy eyebrows, "if it's a mining country, an' the mines
|
|
are far enough off the roads, maybe I'd better get to the
|
|
mines an' lay quiet for a month before I try to get any
|
|
farther south."
|
|
|
|
He washed the cinders and dust of a week's railroading from
|
|
his face and hair, put on a fresh pair of boots, and went
|
|
down to supper. The dining-room was of the invariable type
|
|
of the smaller interior towns of California. There was but
|
|
one table, covered with oilcloth; rows of benches
|
|
answered for chairs; a railroad map, a chromo with a gilt
|
|
frame protected by mosquito netting, hung on the walls,
|
|
together with a yellowed photograph of the proprietor in
|
|
Masonic regalia. Two waitresses whom the guests--all men--
|
|
called by their first names, came and went with large trays.
|
|
|
|
Through the windows outside McTeague observed a great number
|
|
of saddle horses tied to trees and fences. Each one of
|
|
these horses had a riata on the pommel of the saddle. He
|
|
sat down to the table, eating his thick hot soup, watching
|
|
his neighbors covertly, listening to everything that was
|
|
said. It did not take him long to gather that the country
|
|
to the east and south of Keeler was a cattle country.
|
|
|
|
Not far off, across a range of hills, was the Panamint
|
|
Valley, where the big cattle ranges were. Every now and
|
|
then this name was tossed to and fro across the table in the
|
|
flow of conversation--"Over in the Panamint." "Just going
|
|
down for a rodeo in the Panamint." "Panamint brands." "Has
|
|
a range down in the Panamint." Then by and by the remark,
|
|
"Hoh, yes, Gold Gulch, they're down to good pay there.
|
|
That's on the other side of the Panamint Range. Peters came
|
|
in yesterday and told me."
|
|
|
|
McTeague turned to the speaker.
|
|
|
|
"Is that a gravel mine?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
"No, no, quartz."
|
|
|
|
"I'm a miner; that's why I asked."
|
|
|
|
"Well I've mined some too. I had a hole in the ground
|
|
meself, but she was silver; and when the skunks at
|
|
Washington lowered the price of silver, where was I?
|
|
Fitchered, b'God!"
|
|
|
|
"I was looking for a job."
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's mostly cattle down here in the Panamint, but
|
|
since the strike over at Gold Gulch some of the boys have
|
|
gone prospecting. There's gold in them damn Panamint
|
|
Mountains. If you can find a good long 'contact' of country
|
|
rocks you ain't far from it. There's a couple of fellars
|
|
from Redlands has located four claims around Gold Gulch.
|
|
They got a vein eighteen inches wide, an' Peters says
|
|
you can trace it for more'n a thousand feet. Were you
|
|
thinking of prospecting over there?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, I don' know, I don' know."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'm going over to the other side of the range day
|
|
after t'morrow after some ponies of mine, an' I'm going to
|
|
have a look around. You say you've been a miner?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes."
|
|
|
|
"If you're going over that way, you might come along and see
|
|
if we can't find a contact, or copper sulphurets, or
|
|
something. Even if we don't find color we may find silver-
|
|
bearing galena." Then, after a pause, "Let's see, I didn't
|
|
catch your name."
|
|
|
|
"Huh? My name's Carter," answered McTeague, promptly. Why
|
|
he should change his name again the dentist could not say.
|
|
"Carter" came to his mind at once, and he answered without
|
|
reflecting that he had registered as "Burlington" when he
|
|
had arrived at the hotel.
|
|
|
|
"Well, my name's Cribbens," answered the other. The two
|
|
shook hands solemnly.
|
|
|
|
"You're about finished?" continued Cribbens, pushing back.
|
|
"Le's go out in the bar an' have a drink on it."
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," said the dentist.
|
|
|
|
The two sat up late that night in a corner of the barroom
|
|
discussing the probability of finding gold in the Panamint
|
|
hills. It soon became evident that they held differing
|
|
theories. McTeague clung to the old prospector's idea that
|
|
there was no way of telling where gold was until you
|
|
actually saw it. Cribbens had evidently read a good many
|
|
books upon the subject, and had already prospected in
|
|
something of a scientific manner.
|
|
|
|
"Shucks!" he exclaimed. "Gi' me a long distinct contact
|
|
between sedimentary and igneous rocks, an' I'll sink a shaft
|
|
without ever SEEING 'color.'"
|
|
|
|
The dentist put his huge chin in the air. "Gold is where
|
|
you find it," he returned, doggedly.
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's my idea as how pardners ought to work along
|
|
different lines," said Cribbens. He tucked the corners of
|
|
his mustache into his mouth and sucked the tobacco juice
|
|
from them. For a moment he was thoughtful, then he blew
|
|
out his mustache abruptly, and exclaimed:
|
|
|
|
"Say, Carter, le's make a go of this. You got a little cash
|
|
I suppose--fifty dollars or so?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh ? Yes--I--I--"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I got about fifty. We'll go pardners on the
|
|
proposition, an' we'll dally 'round the range yonder an' see
|
|
what we can see. What do you say?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure, sure," answered the dentist.
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's a go then, hey?"
|
|
|
|
"That's the word."
|
|
|
|
"Well, le's have a drink on it."
|
|
|
|
They drank with profound gravity.
|
|
|
|
They fitted out the next day at the general merchandise
|
|
store of Keeler--picks, shovels, prospectors' hammers, a
|
|
couple of cradles, pans, bacon, flour, coffee, and the like,
|
|
and they bought a burro on which to pack their kit.
|
|
|
|
"Say, by jingo, you ain't got a horse," suddenly exclaimed
|
|
Cribbens as they came out of the store. "You can't get
|
|
around this country without a pony of some kind."
|
|
|
|
Cribbens already owned and rode a buckskin cayuse that had
|
|
to be knocked in the head and stunned before it could be
|
|
saddled. "I got an extry saddle an' a headstall at the
|
|
hotel that you can use," he said, "but you'll have to get a
|
|
horse."
|
|
|
|
In the end the dentist bought a mule at the livery stable
|
|
for forty dollars. It turned out to be a good bargain,
|
|
however, for the mule was a good traveller and seemed
|
|
actually to fatten on sage-brush and potato parings. When
|
|
the actual transaction took place, McTeague had been obliged
|
|
to get the money to pay for the mule out of the canvas sack.
|
|
Cribbens was with him at the time, and as the dentist
|
|
unrolled his blankets and disclosed the sack, whistled in
|
|
amazement.
|
|
|
|
"An' me asking you if you had fifty dollars!" he exclaimed.
|
|
"You carry your mine right around with you, don't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh, I guess so," muttered the dentist. "I--I just sold a
|
|
claim I had up in El Dorado County," he added.
|
|
|
|
At five o'clock on a magnificent May morning the
|
|
"pardners" jogged out of Keeler, driving the burro before
|
|
them. Cribbens rode his cayuse, McTeague following in his
|
|
rear on the mule.
|
|
|
|
"Say," remarked Cribbens, "why in thunder don't you leave
|
|
that fool canary behind at the hotel? It's going to be in
|
|
your way all the time, an' it will sure die. Better break
|
|
its neck an' chuck it."
|
|
|
|
"No, no," insisted the dentist. "I've had it too long. I'll
|
|
take it with me."
|
|
|
|
"Well, that's the craziest idea I ever heard of," remarked
|
|
Cribbens, "to take a canary along prospecting. Why not kid
|
|
gloves, and be done with it?"
|
|
|
|
They travelled leisurely to the southeast during the day,
|
|
following a well-beaten cattle road, and that evening camped
|
|
on a spur of some hills at the head of the Panamint Valley
|
|
where there was a spring. The next day they crossed the
|
|
Panamint itself.
|
|
|
|
"That's a smart looking valley," observed the dentist.
|
|
|
|
"NOW you're talking straight talk," returned Cribbens,
|
|
sucking his mustache. The valley was beautiful, wide,
|
|
level, and very green. Everywhere were herds of cattle,
|
|
scarcely less wild than deer. Once or twice cowboys passed
|
|
them on the road, big-boned fellows, picturesque in their
|
|
broad hats, hairy trousers, jingling spurs, and revolver
|
|
belts, surprisingly like the pictures McTeague remembered to
|
|
have seen. Everyone of them knew Cribbens, and almost
|
|
invariably joshed him on his venture.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Crib, ye'd best take a wagon train with ye to bring
|
|
your dust back."
|
|
|
|
Cribbens resented their humor, and after they had passed,
|
|
chewed fiercely on his mustache.
|
|
|
|
"I'd like to make a strike, b'God! if it was only to get
|
|
the laugh on them joshers."
|
|
|
|
By noon they were climbing the eastern slope of the Panamint
|
|
Range. Long since they had abandoned the road; vegetation
|
|
ceased; not a tree was in sight. They followed faint cattle
|
|
trails that led from one water hole to another. By degrees
|
|
these water holes grew dryer and dryer, and at three
|
|
o'clock Cribbens halted and filled their canteens.
|
|
|
|
"There ain't any TOO much water on the other side," he
|
|
observed grimly.
|
|
|
|
"It's pretty hot," muttered the dentist, wiping his
|
|
streaming forehead with the back of his hand.
|
|
|
|
"Huh!" snorted the other more grimly than ever. The
|
|
motionless air was like the mouth of a furnace. Cribbens's
|
|
pony lathered and panted. McTeague's mule began to droop
|
|
his long ears. Only the little burro plodded resolutely on,
|
|
picking the trail where McTeague could see but trackless
|
|
sand and stunted sage. Towards evening Cribbens, who was in
|
|
the lead, drew rein on the summit of the hills.
|
|
|
|
Behind them was the beautiful green Panamint Valley, but
|
|
before and below them for miles and miles, as far as the eye
|
|
could reach, a flat, white desert, empty even of sage-brush,
|
|
unrolled toward the horizon. In the immediate foreground a
|
|
broken system of arroyos, and little canyons tumbled down to
|
|
meet it. To the north faint blue hills shouldered
|
|
themselves above the horizon.
|
|
|
|
"Well," observed Cribbens, "we're on the top of the Panamint
|
|
Range now. It's along this eastern slope, right below us
|
|
here, that we're going to prospect. Gold Gulch"--he pointed
|
|
with the butt of his quirt--"is about eighteen or nineteen
|
|
miles along here to the north of us. Those hills way over
|
|
yonder to the northeast are the Telescope hills."
|
|
|
|
"What do you call the desert out yonder?" McTeague's eyes
|
|
wandered over the illimitable stretch of alkali that
|
|
stretched out forever and forever to the east, to the north,
|
|
and to the south.
|
|
|
|
"That," said Cribbens, "that's Death Valley."
|
|
|
|
There was a long pause. The horses panted irregularly, the
|
|
sweat dripping from their heaving bellies. Cribbens and the
|
|
dentist sat motionless in their saddles, looking out over
|
|
that abominable desolation, silent, troubled.
|
|
|
|
"God!" ejaculated Cribbens at length, under his breath, with
|
|
a shake of his head. Then he seemed to rouse himself.
|
|
"Well," he remarked, "first thing we got to do now is to
|
|
find water."
|
|
|
|
This was a long and difficult task. They descended
|
|
into one little canyon after another, followed the course of
|
|
numberless arroyos, and even dug where there seemed
|
|
indications of moisture, all to no purpose. But at length
|
|
McTeague's mule put his nose in the air and blew once or
|
|
twice through his nostrils.
|
|
|
|
"Smells it, the son of a gun!" exclaimed Cribbens. The
|
|
dentist let the animal have his head, and in a few minutes
|
|
he had brought them to the bed of a tiny canyon where a thin
|
|
stream of brackish water filtered over a ledge of rocks.
|
|
|
|
"We'll camp here," observed Cribbens, "but we can't turn the
|
|
horses loose. We'll have to picket 'em with the lariats. I
|
|
saw some loco-weed back here a piece, and if they get to
|
|
eating that, they'll sure go plum crazy. The burro won't
|
|
eat it, but I wouldn't trust the others."
|
|
|
|
A new life began for McTeague. After breakfast the
|
|
"pardners" separated, going in opposite directions along the
|
|
slope of the range, examining rocks, picking and chipping at
|
|
ledges and bowlders, looking for signs, prospecting.
|
|
McTeague went up into the little canyons where the streams
|
|
had cut through the bed rock, searching for veins of quartz,
|
|
breaking out this quartz when he had found it, pulverizing
|
|
and panning it. Cribbens hunted for "contacts," closely
|
|
examining country rocks and out-crops, continually on the
|
|
lookout for spots where sedimentary and igneous rock came
|
|
together.
|
|
|
|
One day, after a week of prospecting, they met unexpectedly
|
|
on the slope of an arroyo. It was late in the afternoon.
|
|
"Hello, pardner," exclaimed Cribbens as he came down to
|
|
where McTeague was bending over his pan. "What luck?"
|
|
|
|
The dentist emptied his pan and straightened up. "Nothing,
|
|
nothing. You struck anything?"
|
|
|
|
"Not a trace. Guess we might as well be moving towards
|
|
camp." They returned together, Cribbens telling the dentist
|
|
of a group of antelope he had seen.
|
|
|
|
"We might lay off to-morrow, an' see if we can plug a couple
|
|
of them fellers. Antelope steak would go pretty well after
|
|
beans an' bacon an' coffee week in an' week out."
|
|
|
|
McTeague was answering, when Cribbens interrupted him
|
|
with an exclamation of profound disgust. "I thought we were
|
|
the first to prospect along in here, an' now look at that.
|
|
Don't it make you sick?"
|
|
|
|
He pointed out evidences of an abandoned prospector's camp
|
|
just before them--charred ashes, empty tin cans, one or two
|
|
gold-miner's pans, and a broken pick. "Don't that make you
|
|
sick?" muttered Cribbens, sucking his mustache furiously.
|
|
"To think of us mushheads going over ground that's been
|
|
covered already! Say, pardner, we'll dig out of here to-
|
|
morrow. I've been thinking, anyhow, we'd better move to the
|
|
south; that water of ours is pretty low."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, I guess so," assented the dentist. "There ain't
|
|
any gold here."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, there is," protested Cribbens doggedly; "there's gold
|
|
all through these hills, if we could only strike it. I tell
|
|
you what, pardner, I got a place in mind where I'll bet no
|
|
one ain't prospected--least not very many. There don't very
|
|
many care to try an' get to it. It's over on the other side
|
|
of Death Valley. It's called Gold Mountain, an' there's only
|
|
one mine been located there, an' it's paying like a nitrate
|
|
bed. There ain't many people in that country, because it's
|
|
all hell to get into. First place, you got to cross Death
|
|
Valley and strike the Armagosa Range fur off to the south.
|
|
Well, no one ain't stuck on crossing the Valley, not if they
|
|
can help it. But we could work down the Panamint some
|
|
hundred or so miles, maybe two hundred, an' fetch around by
|
|
the Armagosa River, way to the south'erd. We could prospect
|
|
on the way. But I guess the Armagosa'd be dried up at this
|
|
season. Anyhow," he concluded, "we'll move camp to the
|
|
south to-morrow. We got to get new feed an' water for the
|
|
horses. We'll see if we can knock over a couple of antelope
|
|
to-morrow, and then we'll scoot."
|
|
|
|
"I ain't got a gun," said the dentist; "not even a revolver.
|
|
I--"
|
|
|
|
"Wait a second," said Cribbens, pausing in his scramble down
|
|
the side of one of the smaller gulches. "Here's some slate
|
|
here; I ain't seen no slate around here yet. Let's see
|
|
where it goes to."
|
|
|
|
McTeague followed him along the side of the gulch. Cribbens
|
|
went on ahead, muttering to himself from time to time:
|
|
|
|
"Runs right along here, even enough, and here's water too.
|
|
Didn't know this stream was here; pretty near dry, though.
|
|
Here's the slate again. See where it runs, pardner?"
|
|
|
|
"Look at it up there ahead," said McTeague. "It runs right
|
|
up over the back of this hill."
|
|
|
|
"That's right," assented Cribbens. "Hi!" he shouted
|
|
suddenly, "HERE'S A 'CONTACT,' and here it is again, and
|
|
there, and yonder. Oh, look at it, will you? That's grano-
|
|
diorite on slate. Couldn't want it any more distinct than
|
|
that. GOD! if we could only find the quartz between the
|
|
two now."
|
|
|
|
"Well, there it is," exclaimed McTeague. "Look on ahead
|
|
there; ain't that quartz?"
|
|
|
|
"You're shouting right out loud," vociferated Cribbens,
|
|
looking where McTeague was pointing. His face went suddenly
|
|
pale. He turned to the dentist, his eyes wide.
|
|
|
|
"By God, pardner," he exclaimed, breathlessly. "By God--"
|
|
he broke off abruptly.
|
|
|
|
"That's what you been looking for, ain't it?" asked the
|
|
dentist.
|
|
|
|
"LOOKING for! LOOKING for!" Cribbens checked
|
|
himself . "That's SLATE all right, and that's grano-
|
|
diorite, I know"--he bent down and examined the rock--
|
|
"and here's the quartz between 'em; there can't be no
|
|
mistake about that. Gi' me that hammer," he cried,
|
|
excitedly. "Come on, git to work. Jab into the quartz with
|
|
your pick; git out some chunks of it." Cribbens went down on
|
|
his hands and knees, attacking the quartz vein furiously.
|
|
The dentist followed his example, swinging his pick with
|
|
enormous force, splintering the rocks at every stroke.
|
|
Cribbens was talking to himself in his excitement.
|
|
|
|
"Got you THIS time, you son of a gun! By God! I guess
|
|
we got you THIS time, at last. Looks like it, anyhow.
|
|
GET a move on, pardner. There ain't anybody 'round, is
|
|
there? Hey?" Without looking, he drew his revolver and
|
|
threw it to the dentist. "Take the gun an' look around,
|
|
pardner. If you see any son of a gun ANYWHERE, PLUG
|
|
him. This yere's OUR claim. I guess we got it THIS
|
|
tide, pardner. Come on." He gathered up the chunks of
|
|
quartz he had broken out, and put them in his hat and
|
|
started towards their camp. The two went along with great
|
|
strides, hurrying as fast as they could over the uneven
|
|
ground.
|
|
|
|
"I don' know," exclaimed Cribbens, breathlessly, "I don'
|
|
want to say too much. Maybe we're fooled. Lord, that damn
|
|
camp's a long ways off. Oh, I ain't goin' to fool along
|
|
this way. Come on, pardner." He broke into a run.
|
|
McTeague followed at a lumbering gallop. Over the scorched,
|
|
parched ground, stumbling and tripping over sage-brush and
|
|
sharp-pointed rocks, under the palpitating heat of the
|
|
desert sun, they ran and scrambled, carrying the quartz
|
|
lumps in their hats.
|
|
|
|
"See any 'COLOR' in it, pardner?" gasped Cribbens. "I
|
|
can't, can you? 'Twouldn't be visible nohow, I guess.
|
|
Hurry up. Lord, we ain't ever going to get to that camp."
|
|
|
|
Finally they arrived. Cribbens dumped the quartz fragments
|
|
into a pan.
|
|
|
|
"You pestle her, pardner, an' I'll fix the scales."
|
|
McTeague ground the lumps to fine dust in the iron mortar
|
|
while Cribbens set up the tiny scales and got out the
|
|
"spoons" from their outfit.
|
|
|
|
"That's fine enough," Cribbens exclaimed, impatiently. "Now
|
|
we'll spoon her. Gi' me the water."
|
|
|
|
Cribbens scooped up a spoonful of the fine white powder and
|
|
began to spoon it carefully. The two were on their hands
|
|
and knees upon the ground, their heads close together, still
|
|
panting with excitement and the exertion of their run.
|
|
|
|
"Can't do it," exclaimed Cribbens, sitting back on his
|
|
heels, "hand shakes so. YOU take it, pardner. Careful,
|
|
now."
|
|
|
|
McTeague took the horn spoon and began rocking it gently in
|
|
his huge fingers, sluicing the water over the edge a little
|
|
at a time, each movement washing away a little more of the
|
|
powdered quartz. The two watched it with the intensest
|
|
eagerness.
|
|
|
|
"Don't see it yet; don't see it yet," whispered Cribbens,
|
|
chewing his mustache. "LEETLE faster, pardner.
|
|
That's the ticket. Careful, steady, now; leetle more,
|
|
leetle more. Don't see color yet, do you?"
|
|
|
|
The quartz sediment dwindled by degrees as McTeague spooned
|
|
it steadily. Then at last a thin streak of a foreign
|
|
substance began to show just along the edge. It was yellow.
|
|
|
|
Neither spoke. Cribbens dug his nails into the sand, and
|
|
ground his mustache between his teeth. The yellow streak
|
|
broadened as the quartz sediment washed away. Cribbens
|
|
whispered:
|
|
|
|
"We got it, pardner. That's gold."
|
|
|
|
McTeague washed the last of the white quartz dust away, and
|
|
let the water trickle after it. A pinch of gold, fine as
|
|
flour, was left in the bottom of the spoon.
|
|
|
|
"There you are," he said. The two looked at each other.
|
|
Then Cribbens rose into the air with a great leap and a yell
|
|
that could have been heard for half a mile.
|
|
|
|
"Yee-e-ow! We GOT it, we struck it. Pardner, we got
|
|
it. Out of sight. We're millionaires." He snatched up his
|
|
revolver and fired it with inconceivable rapidity. "PUT
|
|
it there, old man," he shouted, gripping McTeague's palm.
|
|
|
|
"That's gold, all right," muttered McTeague, studying the
|
|
contents of the spoon.
|
|
|
|
"You bet your great-grandma's Cochin-China Chessy cat it's
|
|
gold," shouted Cribbens. "Here, now, we got a lot to do.
|
|
We got to stake her out an' put up the location notice.
|
|
We'll take our full acreage, you bet. You--we haven't
|
|
weighed this yet. Where's the scales?" He weighed the pinch
|
|
of gold with shaking hands. "Two grains," he cried.
|
|
"That'll run five dollars to the ton. Rich, it's rich; it's
|
|
the richest kind of pay, pardner. We're millionaires. Why
|
|
don't you say something? Why don't you get excited? Why
|
|
don't you run around an' do something?"
|
|
|
|
"Huh!" said McTeague, rolling his eyes. "Huh! I know, I
|
|
know, we've struck it pretty rich."
|
|
|
|
"Come on," exclaimed Cribbens, jumping up again. "We'll
|
|
stake her out an' put up the location notice. Lord, suppose
|
|
anyone should have come on her while we've been away." He
|
|
reloaded his revolver deliberately. "We'll drop
|
|
HIM all right, if there's anyone fooling round there; I'll
|
|
tell you those right now. Bring the rifle, pardner, an' if
|
|
you see anyone, PLUG him, an' ask him what he wants
|
|
afterward."
|
|
|
|
They hurried back to where they had made their discovery.
|
|
|
|
"To think," exclaimed Cribbens, as he drove the first stake,
|
|
"to think those other mushheads had their camp within
|
|
gunshot of her and never located her. Guess they didn't
|
|
know the meaning of a 'contact.' Oh, I knew I was solid on
|
|
'contacts.'"
|
|
|
|
They staked out their claim, and Cribbens put up the notice
|
|
of location. It was dark before they were through.
|
|
Cribbens broke off some more chunks of quarts in the vein.
|
|
|
|
"I'll spoon this too, just for the fun of it, when I get
|
|
home," he explained, as they tramped back to the camp.
|
|
|
|
"Well," said the dentist, "we got the laugh on those
|
|
cowboys."
|
|
|
|
"Have we?" shouted Cribbens. "HAVE we? Just wait and
|
|
see the rush for this place when we tell 'em about it down
|
|
in Keeler. Say, what'll we call her?"
|
|
|
|
"I don' know, I don' know."
|
|
|
|
"We might call her the 'Last Chance.' 'Twas our last
|
|
chance, wasn't it? We'd 'a' gone antelope shooting
|
|
tomorrow, and the next day we'd 'a'--say, what you stopping
|
|
for?" he added, interrupting himself. "What's up?"
|
|
|
|
The dentist had paused abruptly on the crest of a canyon.
|
|
Cribbens, looking back, saw him standing motionless in his
|
|
tracks.
|
|
|
|
"What's up?" asked Cribbens a second time.
|
|
|
|
McTeague slowly turned his head and looked over one
|
|
shoulder, then over the other. Suddenly he wheeled sharply
|
|
about, cocking the Winchester and tossing it to his
|
|
shoulder. Cribbens ran back to his side, whipping out his
|
|
revolver.
|
|
|
|
"What is it?" he cried. "See anybody?" He peered on ahead
|
|
through the gathering twilight.
|
|
|
|
"No, no."
|
|
|
|
"Hear anything?"
|
|
|
|
"No, didn't hear anything."
|
|
|
|
"What is it then? What's up?"
|
|
|
|
"I don' know, I don' know," muttered the dentist, lowering
|
|
the rifle. "There was something."
|
|
|
|
"What?"
|
|
|
|
"Something--didn't you notice?"
|
|
|
|
"Notice what?"
|
|
|
|
"I don' know. Something--something or other."
|
|
|
|
"Who? What? Notice what? What did you see?"
|
|
|
|
The dentist let down the hammer of the rifle.
|
|
|
|
"I guess it wasn't anything," he said rather foolishly.
|
|
|
|
"What d'you think you saw--anybody on the claim?"
|
|
|
|
"I didn't see anything. I didn't hear anything either. I
|
|
had an idea, that's all; came all of a sudden, like that.
|
|
Something, I don' know what."
|
|
|
|
"I guess you just imagined something. There ain't anybody
|
|
within twenty miles of us, I guess."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I guess so, just imagined it, that's the word."
|
|
|
|
Half an hour later they had the fire going. McTeague was
|
|
frying strips of bacon over the coals, and Cribbens was
|
|
still chattering and exclaiming over their great strike.
|
|
All at once McTeague put down the frying-pan.
|
|
|
|
"What's that?" he growled.
|
|
|
|
"Hey? What's what?" exclaimed Cribbens, getting up.
|
|
|
|
"Didn't you notice something?"
|
|
|
|
"Where?"
|
|
|
|
"Off there." The dentist made a vague gesture toward the
|
|
eastern horizon. "Didn't you hear something--I mean see
|
|
something--I mean--"
|
|
|
|
"What's the matter with you, pardner?"
|
|
|
|
"Nothing. I guess I just imagined it."
|
|
|
|
But it was not imagination. Until midnight the partners lay
|
|
broad awake, rolled in their blankets under the open sky,
|
|
talking and discussing and making plans. At last Cribbens
|
|
rolled over on his side and slept. The dentist could not
|
|
sleep.
|
|
|
|
What! It was warning him again, that strange sixth sense,
|
|
that obscure brute instinct. It was aroused again and
|
|
clamoring to be obeyed. Here, in these desolate barren
|
|
hills, twenty miles from the nearest human being, it stirred
|
|
and woke and rowelled him to be moving on. It had goaded
|
|
him to flight from the Big Dipper mine, and he had obeyed.
|
|
But now it was different; now he had suddenly become rich;
|
|
he had lighted on a treasure--a treasure far more valuable
|
|
than the Big Dipper mine itself. How was he to leave that?
|
|
He could not move on now. He turned about in his blankets.
|
|
No, he would not move on. Perhaps it was his fancy, after
|
|
all. He saw nothing, heard nothing. The emptiness of
|
|
primeval desolation stretched from him leagues and leagues
|
|
upon either hand. The gigantic silence of the night lay
|
|
close over everything, like a muffling Titanic palm. Of what
|
|
was he suspicious? In that treeless waste an object could be
|
|
seen at half a day's journey distant. In that vast silence
|
|
the click of a pebble was as audible as a pistol-shot. And
|
|
yet there was nothing, nothing.
|
|
|
|
The dentist settled himself in his blankets and tried to
|
|
sleep. In five minutes he was sitting up, staring into the
|
|
blue-gray shimmer of the moonlight, straining his ears,
|
|
watching and listening intently. Nothing was in sight. The
|
|
browned and broken flanks of the Panamint hills lay quiet
|
|
and familiar under the moon. The burro moved its head with a
|
|
clinking of its bell; and McTeagues mule, dozing on three
|
|
legs, changed its weight to another foot, with a long
|
|
breath. Everything fell silent again.
|
|
|
|
"What is it?" muttered the dentist. "If I could only see
|
|
something, hear something."
|
|
|
|
He threw off the blankets, and, rising, climbed to the
|
|
summit of the nearest hill and looked back in the direction
|
|
in which he and Cribbens had travelled a fortnight before.
|
|
For half an hour he waited, watching and listening in vain.
|
|
But as he returned to camp, and prepared to roll his
|
|
blankets about him, the strange impulse rose in him again
|
|
abruptly, never so strong, never so insistent. It seemed as
|
|
though he were bitted and ridden; as if some unseen hand
|
|
were turning him toward the east; some unseen heel spurring
|
|
him to precipitate and instant flight.
|
|
|
|
Flight from what? "No," he muttered under his breath. "Go
|
|
now and leave the claim, and leave a fortune! What a fool
|
|
I'd be, when I can't see anything or hear anything. To
|
|
leave a fortune! No, I won't. No, by God!" He drew
|
|
Cribbens's Winchester toward him and slipped a cartridge
|
|
into the magazine.
|
|
|
|
"No," he growled. "Whatever happens, I'm going to stay. If
|
|
anybody comes--" He depressed the lever of the rifle, and
|
|
sent the cartridge clashing into the breech.
|
|
|
|
"I ain't going to sleep," he muttered under his mustache.
|
|
"I can't sleep; I'll watch." He rose a second time,
|
|
clambered to the nearest hilltop and sat down, drawing the
|
|
blanket around him, and laying the Winchester across his
|
|
knees. The hours passed. The dentist sat on the hilltop a
|
|
motionless, crouching figure, inky black against the pale
|
|
blur of the sky. By and by the edge of the eastern horizon
|
|
began to grow blacker and more distinct in out-line. The
|
|
dawn was coming. Once more McTeague felt the mysterious
|
|
intuition of approaching danger; an unseen hand seemed
|
|
reining his head eastward; a spur was in his flanks that
|
|
seemed to urge him to hurry, hurry, hurry. The influence
|
|
grew stronger with every moment. The dentist set his great
|
|
jaws together and held his ground.
|
|
|
|
"No," he growled between his set teeth. "No, I'll stay."
|
|
He made a long circuit around the camp, even going as far as
|
|
the first stake of the new claim, his Winchester cocked, his
|
|
ears pricked, his eyes alert. There was nothing; yet as
|
|
plainly as though it were shouted at the very nape of his
|
|
neck he felt an enemy. It was not fear. McTeague was not
|
|
afraid.
|
|
|
|
"If I could only SEE something--somebody," he muttered,
|
|
as he held the cocked rifle ready, "I--I'd show him."
|
|
|
|
He returned to camp. Cribbens was snoring. The burro had
|
|
come down to the stream for its morning drink. The mule was
|
|
awake and browsing. McTeague stood irresolutely by the cold
|
|
ashes of the camp-fire, looking from side to side with all
|
|
the suspicion and wariness of a tracked stag. Stronger and
|
|
stronger grew the strange impulse. It seemed to him that on
|
|
the next instant he MUST perforce wheel sharply eastward
|
|
and rush away headlong in a clumsy, lumbering gallop. He
|
|
fought against it with all the ferocious obstinacy of his
|
|
simple brute nature.
|
|
|
|
"Go, and leave the mine? Go and leave a million
|
|
dollars? No, NO, I won't go. No, I'll stay. Ah," he
|
|
exclaimed, under his breath, with a shake of his huge head,
|
|
like an exasperated and harassed brute, "ah, show yourself,
|
|
will you?" He brought the rifle to his shoulder and covered
|
|
point after point along the range of hills to the west.
|
|
"Come on, show yourself. Come on a little, all of you. I
|
|
ain't afraid of you; but don't skulk this way. You ain't
|
|
going to drive me away from my mine. I'm going to stay."
|
|
|
|
An hour passed. Then two. The stars winked out, and the
|
|
dawn whitened. The air became warmer. The whole east,
|
|
clean of clouds, flamed opalescent from horizon to zenith,
|
|
crimson at the base, where the earth blackened against it;
|
|
at the top fading from pink to pale yellow, to green, to
|
|
light blue, to the turquoise iridescence of the desert sky.
|
|
The long, thin shadows of the early hours drew backward like
|
|
receding serpents, then suddenly the sun looked over the
|
|
shoulder of the world, and it was day.
|
|
|
|
At that moment McTeague was already eight miles away from
|
|
the camp, going steadily eastward. He was descending the
|
|
lowest spurs of the Panamint hills, following an old and
|
|
faint cattle trail. Before him he drove his mule, laden
|
|
with blankets, provisions for six days, Cribben's rifle, and
|
|
a canteen full of water. Securely bound to the pommel of
|
|
the saddle was the canvas sack with its precious five
|
|
thousand dollars, all in twenty-dollar gold pieces. But
|
|
strange enough in that horrid waste of sand and sage was the
|
|
object that McTeague himself persistently carried--the
|
|
canary in its cage, about which he had carefully wrapped a
|
|
couple of old flour-bags.
|
|
|
|
At about five o'clock that morning McTeague had crossed
|
|
several trails which seemed to be converging, and, guessing
|
|
that they led to a water hole, had followed one of them and
|
|
had brought up at a sort of small sundried sink which
|
|
nevertheless contained a little water at the bottom. He had
|
|
watered the mule here, refilled the canteen, and drank deep
|
|
himself. He had also dampened the old flour-sacks around
|
|
the bird cage to protect the little canary as far as
|
|
possible from the heat that he knew would increase now with
|
|
every hour. He had made ready to go forward again, but
|
|
had paused irresolute again, hesitating for the last time.
|
|
|
|
"I'm a fool," he growled, scowling back at the range behind
|
|
him. "I'm a fool. What's the matter with me? I'm just
|
|
walking right away from a million dollars. I know it's
|
|
there. No, by God!" he exclaimed, savagely, "I ain't going
|
|
to do it. I'm going back. I can't leave a mine like that."
|
|
He had wheeled the mule about, and had started to return on
|
|
his tracks, grinding his teeth fiercely, inclining his head
|
|
forward as though butting against a wind that would beat him
|
|
back. "Go on, go on," he cried, sometimes addressing the
|
|
mule, sometimes himself. "Go on, go back, go back. I
|
|
WILL go back." It was as though he were climbing a hill
|
|
that grew steeper with every stride. The strange impelling
|
|
instinct fought his advance yard by yard. By degrees the
|
|
dentist's steps grew slower; he stopped, went forward again
|
|
cautiously, almost feeling his way, like someone approaching
|
|
a pit in the darkness. He stopped again, hesitating,
|
|
gnashing his teeth, clinching his fists with blind fury.
|
|
Suddenly he turned the mule about, and once more set his
|
|
face to the eastward.
|
|
|
|
"I can't," he cried aloud to the desert; "I can't, I can't.
|
|
It's stronger than I am. I CAN'T go back. Hurry now,
|
|
hurry, hurry, hurry."
|
|
|
|
He hastened on furtively, his head and shoulders bent. At
|
|
times one could almost say he crouched as he pushed forward
|
|
with long strides; now and then he even looked over his
|
|
shoulder. Sweat rolled from him, he lost his hat, and the
|
|
matted mane of thick yellow hair swept over his forehead and
|
|
shaded his small, twinkling eyes. At times, with a vague,
|
|
nearly automatic gesture, he reached his hand forward, the
|
|
fingers prehensile, and directed towards the horizon, as if
|
|
he would clutch it and draw it nearer; and at intervals he
|
|
muttered, "Hurry, hurry, hurry on, hurry on." For now at
|
|
last McTeague was afraid.
|
|
|
|
His plans were uncertain. He remembered what Cribbens had
|
|
said about the Armagosa Mountains in the country on the
|
|
other side of Death Valley. It was all hell to get into
|
|
that country, Cribbens had said, and not many men went
|
|
there, because of the terrible valley of alkali that
|
|
barred the way, a horrible vast sink of white sand and salt
|
|
below even the sea level, the dry bed, no doubt, of some
|
|
prehistoric lake. But McTeague resolved to make a circuit
|
|
of the valley, keeping to the south, until he should strike
|
|
the Armagosa River. He would make a circuit of the valley
|
|
and come up on the other side. He would get into that
|
|
country around Gold Mountain in the Armagosa hills, barred
|
|
off from the world by the leagues of the red-hot alkali of
|
|
Death Valley. "They" would hardly reach him there. He
|
|
would stay at Gold Mountain two or three months, and then
|
|
work his way down into Mexico.
|
|
|
|
McTeague tramped steadily forward, still descending the
|
|
lower irregularities of the Panamint Range. By nine o'clock
|
|
the slope flattened out abruptly; the hills were behind him;
|
|
before him, to the east, all was level. He had reached the
|
|
region where even the sand and sage-brush begin to dwindle,
|
|
giving place to white, powdered alkali. The trails were
|
|
numerous, but old and faint; and they had been made by
|
|
cattle, not by men. They led in all directions but one--
|
|
north, south, and west; but not one, however faint, struck
|
|
out towards the valley.
|
|
|
|
"If I keep along the edge of the hills where these trails
|
|
are," muttered the dentist, "I ought to find water up in the
|
|
arroyos from time to time."
|
|
|
|
At once he uttered an exclamation. The mule had begun to
|
|
squeal and lash out with alternate hoofs, his eyes rolling,
|
|
his ears flattened. He ran a few steps, halted, and
|
|
squealed again. Then, suddenly wheeling at right angles, set
|
|
off on a jog trot to the north, squealing and kicking from
|
|
time to time. McTeague ran after him shouting and swearing,
|
|
but for a long time the mule would not allow himself to be
|
|
caught. He seemed more bewildered than frightened.
|
|
|
|
"He's eatun some of that loco-weed that Cribbens spoke
|
|
about," panted McTeague. "Whoa, there; steady, you." At
|
|
length the mule stopped of his own accord, and seemed to
|
|
come to his senses again. McTeague came up and took the
|
|
bridle rein, speaking to him and rubbing his nose.
|
|
|
|
"There, there, what's the matter with you?" The mule
|
|
was docile again. McTeague washed his mouth and set forward
|
|
once more.
|
|
|
|
The day was magnificent. From horizon to horizon was one
|
|
vast span of blue, whitening as it dipped earthward. Miles
|
|
upon miles to the east and southeast the desert unrolled
|
|
itself, white, naked, inhospitable, palpitating and
|
|
shimmering under the sun, unbroken by so much as a rock or
|
|
cactus stump. In the distance it assumed all manner of
|
|
faint colors, pink, purple, and pale orange. To the west
|
|
rose the Panamint Range, sparsely sprinkled with gray sage-
|
|
brush; here the earths and sands were yellow, ochre, and
|
|
rich, deep red, the hollows and canyons picked out with
|
|
intense blue shadows. It seemed strange that such
|
|
barrenness could exhibit this radiance of color, but nothing
|
|
could have been more beautiful than the deep red of the
|
|
higher bluffs and ridges, seamed with purple shadows,
|
|
standing sharply out against the pale-blue whiteness of the
|
|
horizon.
|
|
|
|
By nine o'clock the sun stood high in the sky. The heat was
|
|
intense; the atmosphere was thick and heavy with it.
|
|
McTeague gasped for breath and wiped the beads of
|
|
perspiration from his forehead, his cheeks, and his neck.
|
|
Every inch and pore of his skin was tingling and pricking
|
|
under the merciless lash of the sun's rays.
|
|
|
|
"If it gets much hotter," he muttered, with a long breath,
|
|
"if it gets much hotter, I--I don' know--" He wagged his
|
|
head and wiped the sweat from his eyelids, where it was
|
|
running like tears.
|
|
|
|
The sun rose higher; hour by hour, as the dentist tramped
|
|
steadily on, the heat increased. The baked dry sand
|
|
crackled into innumerable tiny flakes under his feet. The
|
|
twigs of the sage-brush snapped like brittle pipestems as he
|
|
pushed through them. It grew hotter. At eleven the earth
|
|
was like the surface of a furnace; the air, as McTeague
|
|
breathed it in, was hot to his lips and the roof of his
|
|
mouth. The sun was a disk of molten brass swimming in the
|
|
burnt-out blue of the sky. McTeague stripped off his
|
|
woollen shirt, and even unbuttoned his flannel
|
|
undershirt, tying a handkerchief loosely about his neck.
|
|
|
|
"Lord!" he exclaimed. "I never knew it COULD get as hot
|
|
as this."
|
|
|
|
The heat grew steadily fiercer; all distant objects were
|
|
visibly shimmering and palpitating under it. At noon a
|
|
mirage appeared on the hills to the northwest. McTeague
|
|
halted the mule, and drank from the tepid water in the
|
|
canteen, dampening the sack around the canary's cage. As
|
|
soon as he ceased his tramp and the noise of his crunching,
|
|
grinding footsteps died away, the silence, vast,
|
|
illimitable, enfolded him like an immeasurable tide. From
|
|
all that gigantic landscape, that colossal reach of baking
|
|
sand, there arose not a single sound. Not a twig rattled,
|
|
not an insect hummed, not a bird or beast invaded that huge
|
|
solitude with call or cry. Everything as far as the eye
|
|
could reach, to north, to south, to east, and west, lay
|
|
inert, absolutely quiet and moveless under the remorseless
|
|
scourge of the noon sun. The very shadows shrank away,
|
|
hiding under sage-bushes, retreating to the farthest nooks
|
|
and crevices in the canyons of the hills. All the world was
|
|
one gigantic blinding glare, silent, motionless. "If it
|
|
gets much hotter," murmured the dentist again, moving his
|
|
head from side to side, "if it gets much hotter, I don' know
|
|
what I'll do."
|
|
|
|
Steadily the heat increased. At three o'clock it was even
|
|
more terrible than it had been at noon.
|
|
|
|
"Ain't it EVER going to let up?" groaned the dentist,
|
|
rolling his eyes at the sky of hot blue brass. Then, as he
|
|
spoke, the stillness was abruptly stabbed through and
|
|
through by a shrill sound that seemed to come from all sides
|
|
at once. It ceased; then, as McTeague took another forward
|
|
step, began again with the suddenness of a blow, shriller,
|
|
nearer at hand, a hideous, prolonged note that brought both
|
|
man and mule to an instant halt.
|
|
|
|
"I know what THAT is," exclaimed the dentist. His eyes
|
|
searched the ground swiftly until he saw what he expected he
|
|
should see--the round thick coil, the slowly waving clover-
|
|
shaped head and erect whirring tail with its vibrant
|
|
rattles.
|
|
|
|
For fully thirty seconds the man and snake remained
|
|
looking into each other's eyes. Then the snake uncoiled and
|
|
swiftly wound from sight amidst the sagebrush. McTeague
|
|
drew breath again, and his eyes once more beheld the
|
|
illimitable leagues of quivering sand and alkali.
|
|
|
|
"Good Lord! What a country!" he exclaimed. But his voice
|
|
was trembling as he urged forward the mule once more.
|
|
|
|
Fiercer and fiercer grew the heat as the afternoon advanced.
|
|
At four McTeague stopped again. He was dripping at every
|
|
pore, but there was no relief in perspiration. The very
|
|
touch of his clothes upon his body was unendurable. The
|
|
mule's ears were drooping and his tongue lolled from his
|
|
mouth. The cattle trails seemed to be drawing together
|
|
toward a common point; perhaps a water hole was near by.
|
|
|
|
"I'll have to lay up, sure," muttered the dentist. "I ain't
|
|
made to travel in such heat as this."
|
|
|
|
He drove the mule up into one of the larger canyons and
|
|
halted in the shadow of a pile of red rock. After a long
|
|
search he found water, a few quarts, warm and brackish, at
|
|
the bottom of a hollow of sunwracked mud; it was little more
|
|
than enough to water the mule and refill his canteen. Here
|
|
he camped, easing the mule of the saddle, and turning him
|
|
loose to find what nourishment he might. A few hours later
|
|
the sun set in a cloudless glory of red and gold, and the
|
|
heat became by degrees less intolerable. McTeague cooked
|
|
his supper, chiefly coffee and bacon, and watched the
|
|
twilight come on, revelling in the delicious coolness of the
|
|
evening. As he spread his blankets on the ground he
|
|
resolved that hereafter he would travel only at night,
|
|
laying up in the daytime in the shade of the canyons. He
|
|
was exhausted with his terrible day's march. Never in his
|
|
life had sleep seemed so sweet to him.
|
|
|
|
But suddenly he was broad awake, his jaded senses all alert.
|
|
|
|
"What was that?" he muttered. "I thought I heard something
|
|
--saw something."
|
|
|
|
He rose to his feet, reaching for the Winchester. Desolation
|
|
lay still around him. There was not a sound but his own
|
|
breathing; on the face of the desert not a grain of sand was
|
|
in motion. McTeague looked furtively and quickly from
|
|
side to side, his teeth set, his eyes rolling. Once more
|
|
the rowel was in his flanks, once more an unseen hand reined
|
|
him toward the east. After all the miles of that dreadful
|
|
day's flight he was no better off than when he started. If
|
|
anything, he was worse, for never had that mysterious
|
|
instinct in him been more insistent than now; never had the
|
|
impulse toward precipitate flight been stronger; never had
|
|
the spur bit deeper. Every nerve of his body cried aloud
|
|
for rest; yet every instinct seemed aroused and alive,
|
|
goading him to hurry on, to hurry on.
|
|
|
|
"What IS it, then? What is it?" he cried, between his
|
|
teeth. "Can't I ever get rid of you? Ain't I EVER going
|
|
to shake you off? Don' keep it up this way. Show
|
|
yourselves. Let's have it out right away. Come on. I
|
|
ain't afraid if you'll only come on; but don't skulk this
|
|
way." Suddenly he cried aloud in a frenzy of exasperation,
|
|
"Damn you, come on, will you? Come on and have it out."
|
|
His rifle was at his shoulder, he was covering bush after
|
|
bush, rock after rock, aiming at every denser shadow. All
|
|
at once, and quite involuntarily, his forefinger crooked,
|
|
and the rifle spoke and flamed. The canyons roared back the
|
|
echo, tossing it out far over the desert in a rippling,
|
|
widening wave of sound.
|
|
|
|
McTeague lowered the rifle hastily, with an exclamation of
|
|
dismay.
|
|
|
|
"You fool," he said to himself, "you fool. You've done it
|
|
now. They could hear that miles away. You've done it now."
|
|
|
|
He stood listening intently, the rifle smoking in his hands.
|
|
The last echo died away. The smoke vanished, the vast
|
|
silence closed upon the passing echoes of the rifle as the
|
|
ocean closes upon a ship's wake. Nothing moved; yet
|
|
McTeague bestirred himself sharply, rolling up his blankets,
|
|
resaddling the mule, getting his outfit together again.
|
|
From time to time he muttered:
|
|
|
|
"Hurry now; hurry on. You fool, you've done it now. They
|
|
could hear that miles away. Hurry now. They ain't far off
|
|
now."
|
|
|
|
As he depressed the lever of the rifle to reload it, he
|
|
found that the magazine was empty. He clapped his hands to
|
|
his sides, feeling rapidly first in one pocket, then in
|
|
another. He had forgotten to take extra cartridges
|
|
with him. McTeague swore under his breath as he flung the
|
|
rifle away. Henceforth he must travel unarmed.
|
|
|
|
A little more water had gathered in the mud hole near which
|
|
he had camped. He watered the mule for the last time and
|
|
wet the sacks around the canary's cage. Then once more he
|
|
set forward.
|
|
|
|
But there was a change in the direction of McTeague's
|
|
flight. Hitherto he had held to the south, keeping upon the
|
|
very edge of the hills; now he turned sharply at right
|
|
angles. The slope fell away beneath his hurrying feet; the
|
|
sage-brush dwindled, and at length ceased; the sand gave
|
|
place to a fine powder, white as snow; and an hour after he
|
|
had fired the rifle his mule's hoofs were crisping and
|
|
cracking the sun-baked flakes of alkali on the surface of
|
|
Death Valley.
|
|
|
|
Tracked and harried, as he felt himself to be, from one
|
|
camping place to another, McTeague had suddenly resolved to
|
|
make one last effort to rid himself of the enemy that seemed
|
|
to hang upon his heels. He would strike straight out into
|
|
that horrible wilderness where even the beasts were afraid.
|
|
He would cross Death Valley at once and put its arid wastes
|
|
between him and his pursuer.
|
|
|
|
"You don't dare follow me now," he muttered, as he hurried
|
|
on. "Let's see you come out HERE after me."
|
|
|
|
He hurried on swiftly, urging the mule to a rapid racking
|
|
walk. Towards four o'clock the sky in front of him began to
|
|
flush pink and golden. McTeague halted and breakfasted,
|
|
pushing on again immediately afterward. The dawn flamed and
|
|
glowed like a brazier, and the sun rose a vast red-hot coal
|
|
floating in fire. An hour passed, then another, and another.
|
|
It was about nine o'clock. Once more the dentist paused,
|
|
and stood panting and blowing, his arms dangling, his eyes
|
|
screwed up and blinking as he looked about him.
|
|
|
|
Far behind him the Panamint hills were already but blue
|
|
hummocks on the horizon. Before him and upon either side,
|
|
to the north and to the east and to the south, stretched
|
|
primordial desolation. League upon league the infinite
|
|
reaches of dazzling white alkali laid themselves out like an
|
|
immeasurable scroll unrolled from horizon to horizon; not a
|
|
bush, not a twig relieved that horrible monotony. Even the
|
|
sand of the desert would have been a welcome sight; a single
|
|
clump of sage-brush would have fascinated the eye; but this
|
|
was worse than the desert. It was abominable, this hideous
|
|
sink of alkali, this bed of some primeval lake lying so far
|
|
below the level of the ocean. The great mountains of Placer
|
|
County had been merely indifferent to man; but this awful
|
|
sink of alkali was openly and unreservedly iniquitous and
|
|
malignant.
|
|
|
|
McTeague had told himself that the heat upon the lower
|
|
slopes of the Panamint had been dreadful; here in Death
|
|
Valley it became a thing of terror. There was no longer any
|
|
shadow but his own. He was scorched and parched from head to
|
|
heel. It seemed to him that the smart of his tortured body
|
|
could not have been keener if he had been flayed.
|
|
|
|
"If it gets much hotter," he muttered, wringing the sweat
|
|
from his thick fell of hair and mustache, "if it gets much
|
|
hotter, I don' know what I'll do." He was thirsty, and
|
|
drank a little from his canteen. "I ain't got any too much
|
|
water," he murmured, shaking the canteen. "I got to get out
|
|
of this place in a hurry, sure."
|
|
|
|
By eleven o'clock the heat had increased to such an extent
|
|
that McTeague could feel the burning of the ground come
|
|
pringling and stinging through the soles of his boots.
|
|
Every step he took threw up clouds of impalpable alkali
|
|
dust, salty and choking, so that he strangled and coughed
|
|
and sneezed with it.
|
|
|
|
"LORD! what a country!" exclaimed the dentist.
|
|
|
|
An hour later, the mule stopped and lay down, his jaws wide
|
|
open, his ears dangling. McTeague washed his mouth with a
|
|
handful of water and for a second time since sunrise wetted
|
|
the flour-sacks around the bird cage. The air was quivering
|
|
and palpitating like that in the stoke-hold of a steamship.
|
|
The sun, small and contracted, swam molten overhead.
|
|
|
|
"I can't stand it," said McTeague at length. "I'll have to
|
|
stop and make some kinda shade."
|
|
|
|
The mule was crouched upon the ground, panting rapidly,
|
|
with half-closed eyes. The dentist removed the saddle, and
|
|
unrolling his blanket, propped it up as best he could
|
|
between him and the sun. As he stooped down to crawl
|
|
beneath it, his palm touched the ground. He snatched it
|
|
away with a cry of pain. The surface alkali was oven-hot;
|
|
he was obliged to scoop out a trench in it before he dared
|
|
to lie down.
|
|
|
|
By degrees the dentist began to doze. He had had little or
|
|
no sleep the night before, and the hurry of his flight under
|
|
the blazing sun had exhausted him. But his rest was broken;
|
|
between waking and sleeping, all manner of troublous images
|
|
galloped through his brain. He thought he was back in the
|
|
Panamint hills again with Cribbens. They had just
|
|
discovered the mine and were returning toward camp.
|
|
McTeague saw himself as another man, striding along over the
|
|
sand and sagebrush. At once he saw himself stop and wheel
|
|
sharply about, peering back suspiciously. There was
|
|
something behind him; something was following him. He
|
|
looked, as it were, over the shoulder of this other
|
|
McTeague, and saw down there, in the half light of the
|
|
canyon, something dark crawling upon the ground, an
|
|
indistinct gray figure, man or brute, he did not know. Then
|
|
he saw another, and another; then another. A score of
|
|
black, crawling objects were following him, crawling from
|
|
bush to bush, converging upon him. "THEY" were after
|
|
him, were closing in upon him, were within touch of his
|
|
hand, were at his feet--WERE AT HIS THROAT.
|
|
|
|
McTeague jumped up with a shout, oversetting the blanket.
|
|
There was nothing in sight. For miles around, the alkali
|
|
was empty, solitary, quivering and shimmering under the
|
|
pelting fire of the afternoon's sun.
|
|
|
|
But once more the spur bit into his body, goading him on.
|
|
There was to be no rest, no going back, no pause, no stop.
|
|
Hurry, hurry, hurry on. The brute that in him slept so
|
|
close to the surface was alive and alert, and tugging to be
|
|
gone. There was no resisting that instinct. The brute felt
|
|
an enemy, scented the trackers, clamored and struggled and
|
|
fought, and would not be gainsaid.
|
|
|
|
"I CAN'T go on," groaned McTeague, his eyes
|
|
sweeping the horizon behind him, "I'm beat out. I'm dog
|
|
tired. I ain't slept any for two nights." But for all that
|
|
he roused himself again, saddled the mule, scarcely less
|
|
exhausted than himself, and pushed on once more over the
|
|
scorching alkali and under the blazing sun.
|
|
|
|
From that time on the fear never left him, the spur never
|
|
ceased to bite, the instinct that goaded him to fight never
|
|
was dumb; hurry or halt, it was all the same. On he went,
|
|
straight on, chasing the receding horizon; flagellated with
|
|
heat; tortured with thirst; crouching over; looking
|
|
furtively behind, and at times reaching his hand forward,
|
|
the fingers prehensile, grasping, as it were, toward the
|
|
horizon, that always fled before him.
|
|
|
|
The sun set upon the third day of McTeague's flight, night
|
|
came on, the stars burned slowly into the cool dark purple
|
|
of the sky. The gigantic sink of white alkali glowed like
|
|
snow. McTeague, now far into the desert, held steadily on,
|
|
swinging forward with great strides. His enormous strength
|
|
held him doggedly to his work. Sullenly, with his huge jaws
|
|
gripping stolidly together, he pushed on. At midnight he
|
|
stopped.
|
|
|
|
"Now," he growled, with a certain desperate defiance, as
|
|
though he expected to be heard, "now, I'm going to lay up
|
|
and get some sleep. You can come or not."
|
|
|
|
He cleared away the hot surface alkali, spread out his
|
|
blanket, and slept until the next day's heat aroused him.
|
|
His water was so low that he dared not make coffee now, and
|
|
so breakfasted without it. Until ten o'clock he tramped
|
|
forward, then camped again in the shade of one of the rare
|
|
rock ledges, and "lay up" during the heat of the day. By
|
|
five o'clock he was once more on the march.
|
|
|
|
He travelled on for the greater part of that night, stopping
|
|
only once towards three in the morning to water the mule
|
|
from the canteen. Again the red-hot day burned up over the
|
|
horizon. Even at six o'clock it was hot.
|
|
|
|
"It's going to be worse than ever to-day," he groaned. "I
|
|
wish I could find another rock to camp by. Ain't I ever
|
|
going to get out of this place?"
|
|
|
|
There was no change in the character of the desert.
|
|
Always the same measureless leagues of white-hot alkali
|
|
stretched away toward the horizon on every hand. Here and
|
|
there the flat, dazzling surface of the desert broke and
|
|
raised into long low mounds, from the summit of which
|
|
McTeague could look for miles and miles over its horrible
|
|
desolation. No shade was in sight. Not a rock, not a stone
|
|
broke the monotony of the ground. Again and again he
|
|
ascended the low unevennesses, looking and searching for a
|
|
camping place, shading his eyes from the glitter of sand and
|
|
sky.
|
|
|
|
He tramped forward a little farther, then paused at length
|
|
in a hollow between two breaks, resolving to make camp
|
|
there.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly there was a shout.
|
|
|
|
"Hands up. By damn, I got the drop on you!"
|
|
|
|
McTeague looked up.
|
|
|
|
It was Marcus.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER 22
|
|
|
|
|
|
Within a month after his departure from San Francisco,
|
|
Marcus had "gone in on a cattle ranch" in the Panamint
|
|
Valley with an Englishman, an acquaintance of Mr. Sieppe's.
|
|
His headquarters were at a place called Modoc, at the lower
|
|
extremity of the valley, about fifty miles by trail to the
|
|
south of Keeler.
|
|
|
|
His life was the life of a cowboy. He realized his former
|
|
vision of himself, booted, sombreroed, and revolvered,
|
|
passing his days in the saddle and the better part of his
|
|
nights around the poker tables in Modoc's one saloon. To
|
|
his intense satisfaction he even involved himself in a
|
|
gun fight that arose over a disputed brand, with the result
|
|
that two fingers of his left hand were shot away.
|
|
|
|
News from the outside world filtered slowly into the
|
|
Panamint Valley, and the telegraph had never been built
|
|
beyond Keeler. At intervals one of the local papers of
|
|
Independence, the nearest large town, found its way into the
|
|
cattle camps on the ranges, and occasionally one of the
|
|
Sunday editions of a Sacramento journal, weeks old, was
|
|
passed from hand to hand. Marcus ceased to hear from the
|
|
Sieppes. As for San Francisco, it was as far from him as
|
|
was London or Vienna.
|
|
|
|
One day, a fortnight after McTeague's flight from San
|
|
Francisco, Marcus rode into Modoc, to find a group of men
|
|
gathered about a notice affixed to the outside of the Wells-
|
|
Fargo office. It was an offer of reward for the arrest and
|
|
apprehension of a murderer. The crime had been committed in
|
|
San Francisco, but the man wanted had been traced as far as
|
|
the western portion of Inyo County, and was believed at that
|
|
time to be in hiding in either the Pinto or Panamint hills,
|
|
in the vicinity of Keeler.
|
|
|
|
Marcus reached Keeler on the afternoon of that same day.
|
|
Half a mile from the town his pony fell and died from
|
|
exhaustion. Marcus did not stop even to remove the saddle.
|
|
He arrived in the barroom of the hotel in Keeler just after
|
|
the posse had been made up. The sheriff, who had come down
|
|
from Independence that morning, at first refused his offer
|
|
of assistance. He had enough men already--too many, in
|
|
fact. The country travelled through would be hard, and it
|
|
would be difficult to find water for so many men and horses.
|
|
|
|
"But none of you fellers have ever seen um," vociferated
|
|
Marcus, quivering with excitement and wrath. "I know um
|
|
well. I could pick um out in a million. I can identify um,
|
|
and you fellers can't. And I knew--I knew--good GOD! I
|
|
knew that girl--his wife--in Frisco. She's a cousin of
|
|
mine, she is--she was--I thought once of--This thing's a
|
|
personal matter of mine--an' that money he got away with,
|
|
that five thousand, belongs to me by rights. Oh, never
|
|
mind, I'm going along. Do you hear?" he shouted, his fists
|
|
raised, "I'm going along, I tell you. There ain't a
|
|
man of you big enough to stop me. Let's see you try and
|
|
stop me going. Let's see you once, any two of you." He
|
|
filled the barroom with his clamor.
|
|
|
|
"Lord love you, come along, then," said the sheriff.
|
|
|
|
The posse rode out of Keeler that same night. The keeper of
|
|
the general merchandise store, from whom Marcus had borrowed
|
|
a second pony, had informed them that Cribbens and his
|
|
partner, whose description tallied exactly with that given
|
|
in the notice of reward, had outfitted at his place with a
|
|
view to prospecting in the Panamint hills. The posse
|
|
trailed them at once to their first camp at the head of the
|
|
valley. It was an easy matter. It was only necessary to
|
|
inquire of the cowboys and range riders of the valley if
|
|
they had seen and noted the passage of two men, one of whom
|
|
carried a bird cage.
|
|
|
|
Beyond this first camp the trail was lost, and a week was
|
|
wasted in a bootless search around the mine at Gold Gulch,
|
|
whither it seemed probable the partners had gone. Then a
|
|
travelling peddler, who included Gold Gulch in his route,
|
|
brought in the news of a wonderful strike of gold-bearing
|
|
quartz some ten miles to the south on the western slope of
|
|
the range. Two men from Keeler had made a strike, the
|
|
peddler had said, and added the curious detail that one of
|
|
the men had a canary bird in a cage with him.
|
|
|
|
The posse made Cribbens's camp three days after the
|
|
unaccountable disappearance of his partner. Their man was
|
|
gone, but the narrow hoof prints of a mule, mixed with those
|
|
of huge hob-nailed boots, could be plainly followed in the
|
|
sand. Here they picked up the trail and held to it steadily
|
|
till the point was reached where, instead of tending
|
|
southward it swerved abruptly to the east. The men could
|
|
hardly believe their eyes.
|
|
|
|
"It ain't reason," exclaimed the sheriff. "What in thunder
|
|
is he up to? This beats me. Cutting out into Death Valley
|
|
at this time of year."
|
|
|
|
"He's heading for Gold Mountain over in the Armagosa, sure."
|
|
|
|
The men decided that this conjecture was true. It was the
|
|
only inhabited locality in that direction. A
|
|
discussion began as to the further movements of the posse.
|
|
|
|
"I don't figure on going into that alkali sink with no eight
|
|
men and horses," declared the sheriff. "One man can't carry
|
|
enough water to take him and his mount across, let alone
|
|
EIGHT. No, sir. Four couldn't do it. No, THREE
|
|
couldn't. We've got to make a circuit round the valley and
|
|
come up on the other side and head him off at Gold Mountain.
|
|
That's what we got to do, and ride like hell to do it, too."
|
|
|
|
But Marcus protested with all the strength of his lungs
|
|
against abandoning the trail now that they had found it. He
|
|
argued that they were but a day and a half behind their man
|
|
now. There was no possibility of their missing the trail--
|
|
as distinct in the white alkali as in snow. They could make
|
|
a dash into the valley, secure their man, and return long
|
|
before their water failed them. He, for one, would not give
|
|
up the pursuit, now that they were so close. In the haste
|
|
of the departure from Keeler the sheriff had neglected to
|
|
swear him in. He was under no orders. He would do as he
|
|
pleased.
|
|
|
|
"Go on, then, you darn fool," answered the sheriff. "We'll
|
|
cut on round the valley, for all that. It's a gamble he'll
|
|
be at Gold Mountain before you're half way across. But if
|
|
you catch him, here"--he tossed Marcus a pair of handcuffs--
|
|
"put 'em on him and bring him back to Keeler."
|
|
|
|
Two days after he had left the posse, and when he was
|
|
already far out in the desert, Marcus's horse gave out. In
|
|
the fury of his impatience he had spurred mercilessly
|
|
forward on the trail, and on the morning of the third day
|
|
found that his horse was unable to move. The joints of his
|
|
legs seemed locked rigidly. He would go his own length,
|
|
stumbling and interfering, then collapse helplessly upon the
|
|
ground with a pitiful groan. He was used up.
|
|
|
|
Marcus believed himself to be close upon McTeague now. The
|
|
ashes at his last camp had still been smoldering. Marcus
|
|
took what supplies of food and water he could carry, and
|
|
hurried on. But McTeague was farther ahead than he had
|
|
guessed, and by evening of his third day upon the desert
|
|
Marcus, raging with thirst, had drunk his last mouthful
|
|
of water and had flung away the empty canteen.
|
|
|
|
"If he ain't got water with um," he said to himself as he
|
|
pushed on, "If he ain't got water with um, by damn! I'll be
|
|
in a bad way. I will, for a fact."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
At Marcus's shout McTeague looked up and around him. For the
|
|
instant he saw no one. The white glare of alkali was still
|
|
unbroken. Then his swiftly rolling eyes lighted upon a head
|
|
and shoulder that protruded above the low crest of the break
|
|
directly in front of him. A man was there, lying at full
|
|
length upon the ground, covering him with a revolver. For a
|
|
few seconds McTeague looked at the man stupidly, bewildered,
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confused, as yet without definite thought. Then he noticed
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that the man was singularly like Marcus Schouler. It
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WAS Marcus Schouler. How in the world did Marcus Schouler
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come to be in that desert? What did he mean by pointing a
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pistol at him that way? He'd best look out or the pistol
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would go off. Then his thoughts readjusted themselves with
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a swiftness born of a vivid sense of danger. Here was the
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enemy at last, the tracker he had felt upon his footsteps.
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Now at length he had "come on" and shown himself, after all
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those days of skulking. McTeague was glad of it. He'd show
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him now. They two would have it out right then and there.
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His rifle! He had thrown it away long since. He was
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helpless. Marcus had ordered him to put up his hands. If
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he did not, Marcus would kill him. He had the drop on him.
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McTeague stared, scowling fiercely at the levelled pistol.
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He did not move.
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"Hands up!" shouted Marcus a second time. "I'll give you
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three to do it in. One, two----"
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Instinctively McTeague put his hands above his head.
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Marcus rose and came towards him over the break.
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"Keep 'em up," he cried. "If you move 'em once I'll kill
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you, sure."
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He came up to McTeague and searched him, going through
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his pockets; but McTeague had no revolver; not even a
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hunting knife.
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"What did you do with that money, with that five thousand
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dollars?"
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"It's on the mule," answered McTeague, sullenly.
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Marcus grunted, and cast a glance at the mule, who was
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standing some distance away, snorting nervously, and from
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time to time flattening his long ears.
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"Is that it there on the horn of the saddle, there in that
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canvas sack?" Marcus demanded.
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"Yes, that's it."
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A gleam of satisfaction came into Marcus's eyes, and under
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his breath he muttered:
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"Got it at last."
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He was singularly puzzled to know what next to do. He had
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got McTeague. There he stood at length, with his big hands
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over his head, scowling at him sullenly. Marcus had caught
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his enemy, had run down the man for whom every officer in
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the State had been looking. What should he do with him now?
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He couldn't keep him standing there forever with his hands
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over his head.
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"Got any water?" he demanded.
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"There's a canteen of water on the mule."
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Marcus moved toward the mule and made as if to reach the
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bridle-rein. The mule squealed, threw up his head, and
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galloped to a little distance, rolling his eyes and
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flattening his ears.
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Marcus swore wrathfully.
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"He acted that way once before," explained McTeague, his
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hands still in the air. "He ate some loco-weed back in the
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hills before I started."
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For a moment Marcus hesitated. While he was catching the
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mule McTeague might get away. But where to, in heaven's
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name? A rat could not hide on the surface of that
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glistening alkali, and besides, all McTeague's store of
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provisions and his priceless supply of water were on the
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mule. Marcus ran after the mule, revolver in hand, shouting
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and cursing. But the mule would not be caught. He
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acted as if possessed, squealing, lashing out, and galloping
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in wide circles, his head high in the air.
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"Come on," shouted Marcus, furious, turning back to
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McTeague. "Come on, help me catch him. We got to catch him.
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All the water we got is on the saddle."
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McTeague came up.
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"He's eatun some loco-weed," he repeated. "He went kinda
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crazy once before."
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"If he should take it into his head to bolt and keep on
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running----"
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Marcus did not finish. A sudden great fear seemed to widen
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around and inclose the two men. Once their water gone, the
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end would not be long.
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"We can catch him all right," said the dentist. "I caught
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him once before."
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"Oh, I guess we can catch him," answered Marcus,
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reassuringly.
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Already the sense of enmity between the two had weakened in
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the face of a common peril. Marcus let down the hammer of
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his revolver and slid it back into the holster.
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The mule was trotting on ahead, snorting and throwing up
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great clouds of alkali dust. At every step the canvas sack
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jingled, and McTeague's bird cage, still wrapped in the
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flour-bags, bumped against the saddlepads. By and by the
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mule stopped, blowing out his nostrils excitedly.
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"He's clean crazy," fumed Marcus, panting and swearing.
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"We ought to come up on him quiet," observed McTeague.
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"I'll try and sneak up," said Marcus; "two of us would scare
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him again. You stay here."
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Marcus went forward a step at a time. He was almost within
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arm's length of the bridle when the mule shied from him
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|
abruptly and galloped away.
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Marcus danced with rage, shaking his fists, and swearing
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horribly. Some hundred yards away the mule paused and began
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blowing and snuffing in the alkali as though in search of
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feed. Then, for no reason, he shied again, and started
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off on a jog trot toward the east.
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"We've GOT to follow him," exclaimed Marcus as McTeague
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came up. "There's no water within seventy miles of here."
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Then began an interminable pursuit. Mile after mile, under
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the terrible heat of the desert sun, the two men followed
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the mule, racked with a thirst that grew fiercer every hour.
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A dozen times they could almost touch the canteen of water,
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and as often the distraught animal shied away and fled
|
|
before them. At length Marcus cried:
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"It's no use, we can't catch him, and we're killing
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ourselves with thirst. We got to take our chances." He drew
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his revolver from its holster, cocked it, and crept forward.
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"Steady, now," said McTeague; "it won' do to shoot through
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the canteen."
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Within twenty yards Marcus paused, made a rest of his left
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forearm and fired.
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"You GOT him," cried McTeague. "No, he's up again.
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Shoot him again. He's going to bolt."
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Marcus ran on, firing as he ran. The mule, one foreleg
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trailing, scrambled along, squealing and snorting. Marcus
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fired his last shot. The mule pitched forward upon his
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head, then, rolling sideways, fell upon the canteen,
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bursting it open and spilling its entire contents into the
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sand.
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Marcus and McTeague ran up, and Marcus snatched the battered
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canteen from under the reeking, bloody hide. There was no
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water left. Marcus flung the canteen from him and stood up,
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facing McTeague. There was a pause.
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"We're dead men," said Marcus.
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McTeague looked from him out over the desert. Chaotic
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|
desolation stretched from them on either hand, flaming and
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glaring with the afternoon heat. There was the brazen sky
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and the leagues upon leagues of alkali, leper white. There
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was nothing more. They were in the heart of Death Valley.
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"Not a drop of water," muttered McTeague; "not a drop of
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water."
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"We can drink the mule's blood," said Marcus. "It's
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been done before. But--but--" he looked down at the
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quivering, gory body--"but I ain't thirsty enough for that
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yet."
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"Where's the nearest water?"
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"Well, it's about a hundred miles or more back of us in the
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Panamint hills," returned Marcus, doggedly. "We'd be crazy
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|
long before we reached it. I tell you, we're done for, by
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|
damn, we're DONE for. We ain't ever going to get outa
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|
here."
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|
"Done for?" murmured the other, looking about stupidly.
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|
"Done for, that's the word. Done for? Yes, I guess we're
|
|
done for."
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"What are we going to do NOW?" exclaimed Marcus,
|
|
sharply, after a while.
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"Well, let's--let's be moving along--somewhere."
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"WHERE, I'd like to know? What's the good of moving
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on?"
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"What's the good of stopping here?"
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There was a silence.
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"Lord, it's hot," said the dentist, finally, wiping his
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|
forehead with the back of his hand. Marcus ground his
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|
teeth.
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"Done for," he muttered; "done for."
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"I never WAS so thirsty," continued McTeague. "I'm that
|
|
dry I can hear my tongue rubbing against the roof of my
|
|
mouth."
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"Well, we can't stop here," said Marcus, finally; "we got to
|
|
go somewhere. We'll try and get back, but it ain't no
|
|
manner of use. Anything we want to take along with us from
|
|
the mule? We can----"
|
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|
|
Suddenly he paused. In an instant the eyes of the two
|
|
doomed men had met as the same thought simultaneously rose
|
|
in their minds. The canvas sack with its five thousand
|
|
dollars was still tied to the horn of the saddle.
|
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|
|
Marcus had emptied his revolver at the mule, and though he
|
|
still wore his cartridge belt, he was for the moment as
|
|
unarmed as McTeague.
|
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|
"I guess," began McTeague coming forward a step, "I guess,
|
|
even if we are done for, I'll take--some of my truck along."
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"Hold on," exclaimed Marcus, with rising aggressiveness.
|
|
"Let's talk about that. I ain't so sure about who
|
|
that--who that money belongs to."
|
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|
|
"Well, I AM, you see," growled the dentist.
|
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|
|
The old enmity between the two men, their ancient hate, was
|
|
flaming up again.
|
|
|
|
"Don't try an' load that gun either," cried McTeague, fixing
|
|
Marcus with his little eyes.
|
|
|
|
"Then don't lay your finger on that sack," shouted the
|
|
other. "You're my prisoner, do you understand? You'll do as
|
|
I say." Marcus had drawn the handcuffs from his pocket, and
|
|
stood ready with his revolver held as a club. "You
|
|
soldiered me out of that money once, and played me for a
|
|
sucker, an' it's my turn now. Don't you lay your finger on
|
|
that sack."
|
|
|
|
Marcus barred McTeague's way, white with passion. McTeague
|
|
did not answer. His eyes drew to two fine, twinkling
|
|
points, and his enormous hands knotted themselves into
|
|
fists, hard as wooden mallets. He moved a step nearer to
|
|
Marcus, then another.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly the men grappled, and in another instant were
|
|
rolling and struggling upon the hot white ground. McTeague
|
|
thrust Marcus backward until he tripped and fell over the
|
|
body of the dead mule. The little bird cage broke from the
|
|
saddle with the violence of their fall, and rolled out upon
|
|
the ground, the flour-bags slipping from it. McTeague tore
|
|
the revolver from Marcus's grip and struck out with it
|
|
blindly. Clouds of alkali dust, fine and pungent, enveloped
|
|
the two fighting men, all but strangling them.
|
|
|
|
McTeague did not know how he killed his enemy, but all at
|
|
once Marcus grew still beneath his blows. Then there was a
|
|
sudden last return of energy. McTeague's right wrist was
|
|
caught, something licked upon it, then the struggling body
|
|
fell limp and motionless with a long breath.
|
|
|
|
As McTeague rose to his feet, he felt a pull at his right
|
|
wrist; something held it fast. Looking down, he saw that
|
|
Marcus in that last struggle had found strength to handcuff
|
|
their wrists together. Marcus was dead now; McTeague was
|
|
locked to the body. All about him, vast interminable,
|
|
stretched the measureless leagues of Death Valley.
|
|
|
|
McTeague remained stupidly looking around him, now at the
|
|
distant horizon, now at the ground, now at the half-dead
|
|
canary chittering feebly in its little gilt prison.
|
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The End of Project Gutenberg etext of McTeague by Norris
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