McTeague Frank Norris (the best books of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Frank Norris
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âItâs me, Maria Macapa;â then in a lower voice, and as if speaking to herself, âhad a flying squirrel anâ let him go.â
âAh, Maria,â cried Zerkow, obsequiously opening the door. âCome in, come in, my girl; youâre always welcome, even as late as this. No junk, hey? But youâre welcome for all that. Youâll have a drink, wonât you?â 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 âtape.â Zerkowâs 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.
âAh, ah, ah!â he exclaimed, âgive it here, give it here; give it to me, Maria. Thatâs a good girl, come give it to me.â
They haggled as usual over the price, but tonight Maria was too excited over other matters to spend much time in bickering over a few cents.
âLook here, Zerkow,â she said as soon as the transfer was made, âI 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 eveningâs papers. How much do you suppose that girl has won?â
âI donât know. How much? How much?â
âFive thousand dollars.â
It was as though a knife had been run through the Jew; a spasm of an almost physical pain twisted his faceâ âhis entire body. He raised his clenched fists into the air, his eyes shut, his teeth gnawing his lip.
âFive thousand dollars,â he whispered; âfive 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 couldnât it have come to me?â he cried, his voice choking, the tears starting to his eyes; âwhy couldnât it have come to me? To come so close, so close, and yet to miss meâ âme 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 piecesâ ââ
âBright as a sunset,â interrupted Maria, her chin propped on her hands. âSuch 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 aloneâ ââ
âAnd it rang when you hit it with your knuckles, didnât it?â prompted Zerkow, eagerly, his lips trembling, his fingers hooking themselves into claws.
âSweeterân any church bell,â continued Maria.
âGo on, go on, go on,â cried Zerkow, drawing his chair closer, and shutting his eyes in ecstasy.
âThere were more than a hundred pieces, and every one of them goldâ ââ
âAh, every one of them gold.â
âYou should have seen the sight when the leather trunk was opened. There waânât a piece that was so much as scratched; every one was like a mirror, smooth and bright, polished so that it looked blackâ âyou know how I mean.â
âOh, I know, I know,â cried Zerkow, moistening his lips.
Then he plied her with questionsâ âquestions that covered every detail of that service of plate. It was soft, wasnât 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 noiseâ âthese gold knives and forks clinking together upon these gold plates.
âNow, letâs have it all over again, Maria,â pleaded Zerkow. âBegin now with âThere were more than a hundred pieces, and every one of them gold.â Go on, begin, begin, begin!â
The redheaded Pole was in a fever of excitement. Mariaâs 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 storyâ âinto a third. The more his mind dwelt upon it, the sharper grew his desire. Then, with Mariaâs 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 nearâ âso near, to see it in oneâs 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 oneâs own, own; to have it to oneself, hugged to the breast; and then to start, to wake, to come down to the horrible reality.
âAnd you, you had it once,â gasped Zerkow, clawing at her arm; âyou had it once, all your own. Think of it, and now itâs gone.â
âGone for good and all.â
âPerhaps itâs buried near your old place somewhere.â
âItâs goneâ âgoneâ âgone,â chanted Maria in a monotone.
Zerkow dug his nails into his scalp, tearing at his red hair.
âYes, yes, itâs gone, itâs goneâ âlost forever! Lost forever!â
Marcus and the dentist walked up the silent street and reached the little dog hospital. They had hardly spoken on the way. McTeagueâs 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 lifeâ âhis life and Trinaâs. 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
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