McTeague Frank Norris (the best books of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Frank Norris
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âWhat gold plate?â said Maria, frowning at him as she drank her whiskey. âWhat gold plate? I donâ know what youâre talking about, Zerkow.â
Zerkow sat back in his chair, staring at her.
âWhy, your peopleâs gold dishes, what they used to eat off of. Youâve told me about it a hundred times.â
âYouâre crazy, Zerkow,â said Maria. âPush the bottle here, will you?â
âCome, now,â insisted Zerkow, sweating with desire, âcome, now, my girl, donât be a fool; letâs have it, letâs have it. Begin now, âThere were moreân a hundred pieces, and every one of âem gold.â Oh, you know; come on, come on.â
âI donât remember nothing of the kind,â protested Maria, reaching for the bottle. Zerkow snatched it from her.
âYou fool!â he wheezed, trying to raise his broken voice to a shout. âYou fool! Donât you dare try anâ cheat me, or Iâll do for you. You know about the gold plate, and you know where it is.â 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.
âI believe youâve got it!â he yelled. âI believe youâve got it, anâ are hiding it from me. Where is it, where is it? Is it here?â he rolled his eyes wildly about the room. âHey? hey?â he went on, shaking Maria by the shoulders. âWhere is it? Is it here? Tell me where it is. Tell me, or Iâll do for you!â
âIt ainât here,â cried Maria, wrenching from him. âIt ainât anywhere. What gold plate? What are you talking about? I donât remember nothing about no gold plate at all.â
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 cityâs 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 Zerkowâs 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, didnât it, that Maria could not have described it with such wonderful accuracy and such careful detail unless she had seen it recentlyâ âthe day before, perhaps, or that very day, or that very hour, that very hour?
âLook out for yourself,â he whispered, hoarsely, to his wife. âLook out for yourself, my girl. Iâll hunt for it, and hunt for it, and hunt for it, and some day Iâll find itâ âI will, youâll seeâ âIâll find it, Iâll find it; and if I donât, Iâll find a way thatâll make you tell me where it is. Iâll make you speakâ âbelieve me, I will, I will, my girlâ âtrust me for that.â
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: âThere were moreân a hundred pieces, and every one of âem goldâ âwhen the leather trunk was opened it fair dazzled your eyesâ âwhy, just that punchbowl was worth a fortune, I guess; solid, solid, heavy, rich, pure gold, nothun but gold, gold, heaps and heaps of itâ âwhat a glory! Iâll find it yet, Iâll find it. Itâs here somewheres, hid somewheres in this house.â
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, âWhere is it, you beast? Where is it? Tell me where it is; Iâll make you speak.â
âI donâ know, I donâ know,â cried Maria, dodging his blows. âIâd tell you, Zerkow, if I knew; but I donâ know nothing about it. How can I tell you if I donâ know?â
Then one evening matters reached a crisis. Marcus Schouler was in his room, the room in the flat just over McTeagueâs Parlors which he had always occupied. It was between eleven and twelve oâclock. 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 hatbox 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.
âIâve tried you so, and Iâve tried you so,â he exclaimed fiercely, between his teeth, âand you wonât go.â He began to swear horribly, grabbing at the boots with his free hand. âPretty soon I wonât take you at all; I wonât, for a fact.â
He was interrupted by a rush of feet upon the back stairs and a clamorous
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