McTeague Frank Norris (the best books of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Frank Norris
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âYou go on anâ get to bed, Mac,â observed Marcus. âIâll take a look at the dogs before I turn in.â
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:
âYou fool, you fool, Marcus Schouler! If youâd kept Trina youâd have had that money. You might have had it yourself. Youâve thrown away your chance in lifeâ âto give up the girl, yesâ âbut this,â he stamped his foot with rageâ ââto throw five thousand dollars out of the windowâ âto stuff it into the pockets of someone else, when it might have been yours, when you might have had Trina and the moneyâ âand all for what? Because we were pals. Oh, âpalsâ is all rightâ âbut five thousand dollarsâ âto have played it right into his handsâ âGod the damn luck!â
VIIIThe 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 oâclock 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 motherâs net reticule stuffed to bursting. Once in their tiny private room, she would drop into her chair with a little groan.
âOh, Mac, I am so tired; Iâve just been all over town. Oh, itâs 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 Iâve bought. Just things and things. Look, thereâs some dotted veiling I got for myself; see now, do you think it looks pretty?ââ âshe spread it over her faceâ ââand I got a box of writing paper, and a roll of crepe paper to make a lamp shade for the front parlor; andâ âwhat do you supposeâ âI saw a pair of Nottingham lace curtains for forty-nine cents; isnât 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?â Trina took off her hat and veil and rearranged her hair before the looking-glass.
âNo, noâ ânot yet. I went down to the sign painterâs yesterday afternoon to see about that big gold tooth for a sign. It costs too much; I canât get it yet a while. Thereâs two kinds, one German gilt and the other French gilt; but the German gilt is no good.â
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 dentistâs practice was fairly good, and they could count upon the interest of Trinaâs five thousand dollars. To McTeagueâs 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 luxuryâ âluxury that implied red velvet carpets and continued feasting. The oldtime minerâs idea of wealth easily gained and quickly spent persisted in his mind. But when Trina had begun to talk of investments and interests and percents, 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.
âBut donât you see, Mac,â explained Trina, âitâs ours just the same. We could get it back whenever we wanted it; and then itâs the reasonable way to do. We mustnât let it turn our heads, Mac, dear, like that man that spent all he won in buying more tickets. How foolish weâd feel after weâd spent it all! We ought to go on just the same as before; as if we hadnât won. We must be sensible about it, mustnât we?â
âWell, well, I guess perhaps thatâs right,â 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 percent, but Trinaâs parents believed that something better could be got.
âThereâs Uncle Oelbermann,â Trina had suggested, remembering the rich relative who had the wholesale toy store in the Mission.
Mr. Sieppe
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