McTeague Frank Norris (the best books of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Frank Norris
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âSay, for Godâs sake,â he vociferated, âchoke off on that pipe! If youâve got to smoke rope like that, smoke it in a crowd of muckers; donât come here amongst gentlemen.â
âShut up, Schouler!â 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 harnessmaker, 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 companionâs 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:
âAll I know is that Iâve been soldiered out of five thousand dollars.â
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.
âIf I had my rights,â cried Marcus, bitterly, âIâd have part of that money. Itâs my dueâ âitâs only justice.â The dentist still kept silence.
âIf it hadnât been for me,â Marcus continued, addressing himself directly to McTeague, âyou wouldnât have had a cent of itâ âno, not a cent. Whereâs my share, Iâd like to know? Where do I come in? No, I ainât in it any more. Iâve been played for a sucker, anâ now that youâve got all you can out of me, now that youâve done me out of my girl and out of my money, you give me the go-by. Why, where would you have been today if it hadnât been for me?â Marcus shouted in a sudden exasperation, âYouâd a been plugging teeth at two bits an hour. Ainât you got any gratitude? Ainât you got any sense of decency?â
âAh, hold up, Schouler,â grumbled Heise. âYou donât want to get into a row.â
âNo, I donât, Heise,â returned Marcus, with a plaintive, aggrieved air. âBut itâs too much sometimes when you think of it. He stole away my girlâs affections, and now that heâs rich and prosperous, and has got five thousand dollars that I might have had, he gives me the go-by; heâs played me for a sucker. Look here,â he cried, turning again to McTeague, âdo I get any of that money?â
âIt ainât mine to give,â answered McTeague. âYouâre drunk, thatâs what you are.â
âDo I get any of that money?â cried Marcus, persistently.
The dentist shook his head. âNo, you donât get any of it.â
âNowâ ânow,â clamored the other, turning to the harnessmaker, as though this explained everything. âLook at that, look at that. Well, Iâve done with you from now on.â 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 McTeagueâs face, moving off again as he spoke the last words, in order to give them better effect.
âThis settles it right here. Iâve done with you. Donât you ever dare speak to me againââ âhis voice was shaking with furyâ ââand donât you sit at my table in the restaurant again. Iâm sorry I ever lowered myself to keep company with such dirt. Ah, one-horse dentist! Ah, ten-cent zinc-pluggerâ âhoodlumâ âmucker! Get your damn smoke outa my face.â
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 Schoulerâs 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 Schoulerâs 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 jackknife lay open in his palm; it shot forward as he flung it, glinted sharply by McTeagueâs 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.
âHe would have knifed you.â
âNarrow escape.â
âWhat kind of a man do you call that?â
âââTainât his fault he ainât a murderer.â
âIâd have him up for it.â
âAnd they two have been the greatest kind of friends.â
âHe didnât touch you, did he?â
âNoâ ânoâ âno.â
âWhat aâ âwhat a devil! What treachery! A regular greaser trick!â
âLook out he donât stab you in the back. If thatâs the kind of man he is, you never can tell.â
Frenna drew the knife from the wall.
âGuess Iâll keep this toad-stabber,â he observed. âThat fellow wonât come round for it in a hurry; goodsized blade, too.â The group examined it with intense interest.
âBig enough to let the life out of any man,â observed Heise.
âWhatâ âwhatâ âwhat did he
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