McTeague Frank Norris (the best books of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Frank Norris
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âHuh?â growled McTeague, looking at her with a puzzled frown.
âTheyâll arrest you. Youâll go to prison. You canât workâ âcanât work any more. Weâre ruined.â
Vanovitch was pounding on the door of the sitting-room.
âHeâll be gone in a minute,â exclaimed McTeague.
âWell, let him go. Tell him to go; tell him to come again.â
âWhy, heâs got an appointment with me,â exclaimed McTeague, his hand upon the door.
Trina caught him back. âBut, Mac, you ainât a dentist any longer; you ainât a doctor. You havenât the right to work. You never went to a dental college.â
âWell, suppose I never went to a college, ainât I a dentist just the same? Listen, heâs pounding there again. No, Iâm going, sure.â
âWell, of course, go,â said Trina, with sudden reaction. âIt ainât possible theyâll make you stop. If youâre a good dentist, thatâs all thatâs wanted. Go on, Mac; hurry, before he goes.â
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.
âItâs Marcus thatâs done it,â 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 couldnât understand. What had a clerk at the City Hall to do with him? Why couldnât they let him alone?
âOh, whatâs to become of us now?â wailed Trina. âWhatâs to become of us now? Weâre paupers, beggarsâ âand all so sudden.â 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, âOh, if youâd only killed Marcus Schouler that time he fought you!â
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.
âMaybe Marcus was only trying to scare us,â Trina had said. âHow are they going to know whether youâre practising or not?â
âI got a mould to make tomorrow,â McTeague said, âand Vanovitch, that plumber round on Sutter Street, heâs coming again at three.â
âWell, you go right ahead,â Trina told him, decisively; âyou go right ahead and make the mould, and pull every tooth in Vanovitchâs head if you want to. Whoâs going to know? Maybe they just sent that notice as a matter of form. Maybe Marcus got that paper and filled it in himself.â
The two would lie awake all night long, staring up into the dark, talking, talking, talking.
âHavenât you got any right to practise if youâve not been to a dental college, Mac? Didnât you ever go?â Trina would ask again and again.
âNo, no,â answered the dentist, âI never went. I learnt from the fellow I was apprenticed to. I donâ know anything about a dental college. Ainât I got a right to do as I like?â he suddenly exclaimed.
âIf you know your profession, isnât that enough?â cried Trina.
âSure, sure,â growled McTeague. âI ainât going to stop for them.â
âYou go right on,â Trina said, âand I bet you wonât hear another word about it.â
âSuppose I go round to the City Hall and see them,â hazarded McTeague.
âNo, no, donât you do it, Mac,â exclaimed Trina. âBecause, if Marcus has done this just to scare you, they wonât know anything about it there at the City Hall; but theyâll begin to ask you questions, and find out that you never had graduated from a dental college, and youâd be just as bad off as ever.â
âWell, I ainât going to quit for just a piece of paper,â 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: âI ainât going to quit for just a piece of paper. No, I ainât going to quit for just a piece of paper. Sure not.â
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 McTeagueâs 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 Noahâs 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. âI guess weâre all right, Mac,â Trina allowed herself to say. âIt looks as though we were all right. How are they going to tell whether youâre practising or not?â
That day a second and much more peremptory notice was served upon McTeague by an official in person. Then suddenly Trina was seized with
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