McTeague Frank Norris (the best books of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Frank Norris
Book online «McTeague Frank Norris (the best books of all time TXT) đ». Author Frank Norris
Ah, no, it was not very gay, that life of hers, when one had to rustle for two, cook and work and wash, to say nothing of paying the rent. What odds was it if she was slatternly, dirty, coarse? Was there time to make herself look otherwise, and who was there to be pleased when she was all prinked out? Surely not a great brute of a husband who bit you like a dog, and kicked and pounded you as though you were made of iron. Ah, no, better let things go, and take it as easy as you could. Hump your back, and it was soonest over.
The one room grew abominably dirty, reeking with the odors of cooking and of ânonpoisonousâ paint. The bed was not made until late in the afternoon, sometimes not at all. Dirty, unwashed crockery, greasy knives, sodden fragments of yesterdayâs meals cluttered the table, while in one corner was the heap of evil-smelling, dirty linen. Cockroaches appeared in the crevices of the woodwork, the wallpaper bulged from the damp walls and began to peel. Trina had long ago ceased to dust or to wipe the furniture with a bit of rag. The grime grew thick upon the window panes and in the corners of the room. All the filth of the alley invaded their quarters like a rising muddy tide.
Between the windows, however, the faded photograph of the couple in their wedding finery looked down upon the wretchedness, Trina still holding her set bouquet straight before her, McTeague standing at her side, his left foot forward, in the attitude of a Secretary of State; while near by hung the canary, the one thing the dentist clung to obstinately, piping and chittering all day in its little gilt prison.
And the tooth, the gigantic golden molar of French gilt, enormous and ungainly, sprawled its branching prongs in one corner of the room, by the footboard of the bed. The McTeagueâs had come to use it as a sort of substitute for a table. After breakfast and supper Trina piled the plates and greasy dishes upon it to have them out of the way.
One afternoon the Other Dentist, McTeagueâs old-time rival, the wearer of marvellous waistcoats, was surprised out of all countenance to receive a visit from McTeague. The Other Dentist was in his operating room at the time, at work upon a plaster-of-paris mould. To his call of âCome right in. Donât you see the sign, âEnter without knockingâ?â McTeague came in. He noted at once how airy and cheerful was the room. A little fire coughed and tittered on the hearth, a brindled greyhound sat on his haunches watching it intently, a great mirror over the mantle offered to view an array of actressesâ pictures thrust between the glass and the frame, and a big bunch of freshly-cut violets stood in a glass bowl on the polished cherrywood table. The Other Dentist came forward briskly, exclaiming cheerfully:
âOh, Doctorâ âMister McTeague, how do? how do?â
The fellow was actually wearing a velvet smoking jacket. A cigarette was between his lips; his patent leather boots reflected the firelight. McTeague wore a black surah negligee shirt without a cravat; huge buckled brogans, hobnailed, gross, encased his feet; the hems of his trousers were spotted with mud; his coat was frayed at the sleeves and a button was gone. In three days he had not shaved; his shock of heavy blond hair escaped from beneath the visor of his woollen cap and hung low over his forehead. He stood with awkward, shifting feet and uncertain eyes before the dapper young fellow who reeked of the barber shop, and whom he had once ordered from his rooms.
âWhat can I do for you this morning, Mister McTeague? Something wrong with the teeth, eh?â
âNo, no.â McTeague, floundering in the difficulties of his speech, forgot the carefully rehearsed words with which he had intended to begin this interview.
âI want to sell you my sign,â he said, stupidly. âThat big tooth of French giltâ âyou knowâ âthat you made an offer for once.â
âOh, I donât want that now,â said the other loftily. âI prefer a little quiet signboard, nothing pretentiousâ âjust the name, and âDentistâ after it. These big signs are vulgar. No, I donât want it.â
McTeague remained, looking about on the floor, horribly embarrassed, not knowing whether to go or to stay.
âBut I donât know,â said the Other Dentist, reflectively. âIf it will help you out anyâ âI guess youâre pretty hard upâ âIâllâ âwell, I tell you whatâ âIâll give you five dollars for it.â
âAll right, all right.â
On the following Thursday morning McTeague woke to hear the eaves dripping and the prolonged rattle of the rain upon the roof.
âRaining,â he growled, in deep disgust, sitting up in bed, and winking at the blurred window.
âItâs been raining all night,â said Trina. She was already up and dressed, and was cooking breakfast on the oil stove.
McTeague dressed himself, grumbling, âWell, Iâll go, anyhow. The fish will bite all the better for the rain.â
âLook here, Mac,â said Trina, slicing a bit of bacon as thinly as she could. âLook here, why donât you bring some of your fish home sometime?â
âHuh!â snorted the dentist, âsoâs we could have âem for breakfast. Might save you a nickel, mightnât it?â
âWell, and if it did! Or you might fish for the market. The fisherman across the street would buy âem of you.â
âShut up!â exclaimed the dentist, and Trina obediently subsided.
âLook here,â continued her husband, fumbling in his trousers pocket and bringing out a dollar, âIâm sick and tired of coffee and bacon and mashed potatoes. Go
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