Sure it was, McTeague hastened to reply. Sure, sure.
Oh, and we had an accident, shouted the other, suddenly off on another tack. It was awful. Trina was in the swing therethats my cousin Trina, you know who I meanand she fell out. By damn! I thought shed killed herself; struck her face on a rock and knocked out a front tooth. Its a wonder she didnt kill herself. It IS a wonder; it is, for a fact. Aint it, now? Huh? Aint it? Yought thave seen.
McTeague had a vague idea that Marcus Schouler was stuck on his cousin Trina. They kept company a good deal; Marcus took dinner with the Sieppes every Saturday evening at their home at B Street station, across the bay, and Sunday afternoons he and the family usually made little excursions into the suburbs. McTeague began to wonder dimly how it was that on this occasion Marcus had not gone home with his cousin. As sometimes happens, Marcus furnished the explanation upon the instant.
I promised a duck up here on the avenue Id call for his dog at four this afternoon.
Marcus was Old Granniss assistant in a little dog hospital that the latter had opened in a sort of alley just off Polk Street, some four blocks above Old Grannis lived in one of the back rooms of McTeagues flat. He was an Englishman and an expert dog surgeon, but Marcus Schouler was a bungler in the profession. His father had been a veterinary surgeon who had kept a livery stable near by, on California Street, and Marcuss knowledge of the diseases of domestic animals had been picked up in a haphazard way, much after the manner of McTeagues education. Somehow he managed to impress Old Grannis, a gentle, simple-minded old man, with a sense of his fitness, bewildering him with a torrent of empty phrases that he delivered with fierce gestures and with a manner of the greatest conviction.
Youd better come along with me, Mac, observed Marcus. Well get the ducks dog, and then well take a little walk, huh? You got nothun to do. Come along.
McTeague went out with him, and the two friends proceeded up to the avenue to the house where the dog was to be found. It was a huge mansion-like place, set in an enormous garden that occupied a whole third of the block; and while Marcus tramped up the front steps and rang the doorbell boldly, to show his independence, McTeague remained below on the sidewalk, gazing stupidly at the curtained windows, the marble steps, and the bronze griffins, troubled and a little confused by all this massive luxury.
After they had taken the dog to the hospital and had left him to whimper behind the wire netting, they returned to Polk Street and had a glass of beer in the back room of Joe Frennas corner grocery.
Ever since they had left the huge mansion on the avenue, Marcus had been attacking the capitalists, a class which he pretended to execrate. It was a pose which he often assumed, certain of impressing the dentist. Marcus had picked up a few half-truths of political economyit was impossible to say whereand as soon as the two had settled themselves to their beer in Frennas back room he took up the theme of the labor question. He discussed it at the top of his voice, vociferating, shaking his fists, exciting himself with his own noise. He was continually making use of the stock phrases of the professional politicianphrases he had caught at some of the ward rallies and ratification meetings. These rolled off his tongue with incredible emphasis, appearing at every turn of his conversationOutraged constituencies, cause of labor, wage earners, opinions biased by personal interests, eyes blinded by party prejudice. McTeague listened to him, awestruck.
Theres where the evil lies, Marcus would cry. The masses must learn self-control; it stands to reason. Look at the figures, look at the figures. Decrease the number of wage earners and you increase wages, dont you? dont you?
Absolutely stupid, and understanding never a word, McTeague would answer:
Yes, yes, thats itself-controlthats the word.
Its the capitalists thats ruining the cause of labor, shouted Marcus, banging the table with his fist till the beer glasses danced; white-livered drones, traitors, with their livers white as snow, eatun the bread of widows and orphuns; theres where the evil lies.
Stupefied with his clamor, McTeague answered, wagging his head:
Yes, thats it; I think its their livers.
Suddenly Marcus fell calm again, forgetting his pose all in an instant.
Say, Mac, I told my cousin Trina to come round and see you about that tooth of hers. Shell be in to-morrow, I guess.
CHAPTER 2
After his breakfast the following Monday morning, McTeague looked over the appointments he had written down in the book-slate that hung against the screen. His writing was immense, very clumsy, and very round, with huge, full-bellied ls and hs. He saw that he had made an appointment at one oclock for Miss Baker, the retired dressmaker, a little old maid who had a tiny room a few doors down the hall. It adjoined that of Old Grannis.
Quite an affair had arisen from this circumstance. Miss Baker and Old Grannis were both over sixty, and yet it was current talk amongst the lodgers of the flat that the two were in love with each other. Singularly enough, they were not even acquaintances; never a word had passed between them. At intervals they met on the stairway; he on his way to his little dog hospital, she returning from a bit of marketing in the street. At such times they passed each other with averted eyes, pretending a certain preoccupation, suddenly seized with a great embarrassment, the timidity of a second childhood. He went on about his business, disturbed and thoughtful. She hurried up to her tiny room, her curious little false curls shaking with her agitation, the faintest suggestion of a flush coming and going in her withered cheeks. The emotion of one of these chance meetings remained with them during all the rest of the day.
Was it the first romance in the lives of each? Did Old Grannis ever remember a certain face amongst those that he had known when he was young Grannisthe face of some pale-haired girl, such as one sees in the old cathedral towns of England? Did Miss Baker still treasure up in a seldom opened drawer or box some faded daguerreotype, some strange old-fashioned likeness, with its curling hair and high stock? It was impossible to say.
Maria Macapa, the Mexican woman who took care of the lodgers rooms, had been the first to call the flats attention to the affair, spreading the news of it from room to room, from floor to floor. Of late she had made a great discovery; all the women folk of the flat were yet vibrant with it. Old Grannis came home from his work at four oclock, and between that time and six Miss Baker would sit in her room, her hands idle in her lap, doing nothing, listening, waiting. Old Grannis did the same, drawing his arm-chair near to the wall, knowing that Miss Baker was upon the other side, conscious, perhaps, that she was thinking of him; and there the two would sit through the hours of the afternoon, listening and waiting, they did not know exactly for what, but near to each other, separated only by the thin partition of their rooms. They had come to know each others habits. Old Grannis knew that at quarter of five precisely Miss Baker made a cup of tea over the oil stove on the stand between the bureau and the window. Miss Baker felt instinctively the exact moment when Old Grannis took down his little binding apparatus from the second shelf of his clothes closet and began his favorite occupation of binding pamphletspamphlets that he never read, for all that.
In his Parlors McTeague began his weeks work. He glanced in the glass saucer in which he kept his sponge-gold, and noticing that he had used up all his pellets, set about making some more. In examining Miss Bakers teeth at the preliminary sitting he had found a cavity in one of the incisors. Miss Baker had decided to have it filled with gold. McTeague remembered now that it was what is called a proximate case, where there is not sufficient room to fill with large pieces of gold. He told himself that he should have to use mats in the filling. He made some dozen of these mats from his tape of non-cohesive gold, cutting it transversely into small pieces that could be inserted edgewise between the teeth and consolidated by packing. After he had made his mats he continued with the other kind of gold fillings, such as he would have occasion to use during the week; blocks to be used in large proximal cavities, made by folding the tape on itself a number of times and then shaping it with the soldering pliers; cylinders for commencing fillings, which he formed by rolling the tape around a needle called a broach, cutting it afterwards into different lengths. He worked slowly, mechanically, turning the foil between his fingers with the manual dexterity that one sometimes sees in stupid persons. His head was quite empty of all thought, and he did not whistle over his work as another man might have done. The canary made up for his silence, trilling and chittering continually, splashing about in its morning bath, keeping up an incessant noise and movement that would have been maddening to any one but McTeague, who seemed to have no nerves at all.
After he had finished his fillings, he made a hook broach from a bit of piano wire to replace an old one that he had lost. It was time for his dinner then, and when he returned from the car conductors coffee-joint, he found Miss Baker waiting for him.
The ancient little dressmaker was at all times willing to talk of Old Grannis to anybody that would listen, quite unconscious of the gossip of the flat. McTeague found her all a-flutter with excitement. Something extraordinary had happened. She had found out that the wall-paper in Old Granniss room was the same as that in hers.
It has led me to thinking, Doctor McTeague, she exclaimed, shaking her little false curls at him. You know my room is so small, anyhow, and the wall-paper being the samethe pattern from my room continues right into hisI declare, I believe at one time that was all one room. Think of it, do you suppose it was? It almost amounts to our occupying the same room. I dont knowwhy, reallydo you think I should speak to the landlady about it? He bound pamphlets last night until half-past nine. They say that hes the younger son of a baronet; that there are reasons for his not coming to the title; his stepfather wronged him cruelly.
No one had ever said such a thing. It was preposterous to imagine any mystery connected with Old Grannis. Miss Baker had chosen to invent the little fiction, had created the title and the unjust stepfather from some dim memories of the novels of her girlhood.
She took her place in the operating chair. McTeague began the filling. There was a long silence. It was impossible for McTeague to work and talk at the same time.
He was just burnishing the last mat in Miss Bakers tooth, when the door of the Parlors opened, jangling the bell which he had hung over it, and which was absolutely unnecessary. McTeague turned, one foot on the pedal of his dental engine, the corundum disk whirling between his fingers.
It was Marcus Schouler who came in, ushering a young girl of about twenty.
Hello, Mac, exclaimed Marcus; busy? Brought my cousin round about that broken tooth.
McTeague nodded his head gravely.
In a minute, he answered.
Marcus and his cousin Trina sat down in the rigid chairs underneath the steel engraving of the Court of Lorenzo de Medici. They began talking in low tones. The girl looked about the room, noticing the stone pug dog, the rifle manufacturers calendar, the canary in its little gilt prison, and the tumbled blankets on the unmade bed-lounge against the wall. Marcus began telling her about McTeague. Were pals, he explained, just above a whisper. Ah, Macs all right, you bet. Say, Trina, hes the strongest duck you ever saw. What do you suppose? He can pull out your teeth with his fingers; yes, he can. What do you think of that? With his fingers, mind you; he can, for a fact. Get on to the size of him, anyhow. Ah, Macs all right!
Maria Macapa had come into the room while he had been speaking. She was making up McTeagues bed. Suddenly Marcus exclaimed under his breath: Now well have some fun. Its the girl that takes care of the rooms. Shes a greaser, and shes queer in the head. She aint regularly crazy, but I dont know, shes queer. Yought to hear her go on about a gold dinner service she says her folks used to own. Ask her what her name is and see what shell say. Trina shrank back, a little frightened.
No, you ask, she whispered.
Ah, go on; what you fraid of? urged Marcus. Trina shook her head energetically, shutting her lips together.
Well, listen here, answered Marcus, nudging her; then raising his voice, he said:
How do, Maria? Maria nodded to him over her shoulder as she bent over the lounge.
Workun hard nowadays, Maria?
Pretty hard.
Didunt always have to work for your living, though, did you, when you ate offa gold dishes? Maria didnt answer, except by putting her chin in the air and shutting her eyes, as though to say she knew a long story about that if she had a mind to talk. All Marcuss efforts to draw her out on the subject were unavailing. She only responded by movements of her head.
Cant always start her going, Marcus told his cousin.
What does she do, though, when you ask her about her name?
Oh, sure, said Marcus, who had forgotten. Say, Maria, whats your name?
Huh? asked Maria, straightening up, her hands on he hips.
Tell us your name, repeated Marcus.
Name is MariaMirandaMacapa. Then, after a pause, she added, as though she had but that moment thought of it, Had a flying squirrel an let him go.
Invariably Maria Macapa made this answer. It was not always she would talk about the famous service of gold plate, but a question as to her name never failed to elicit the same strange answer, delivered in a rapid undertone: Name is MariaMirandaMacapa. Then, as if struck with an after thought, Had a flying squirrel an let him go.
Why Maria should associate the release of the mythical squirrel with her name could not be said. About Maria the flat knew absolutely nothing further than that she was Spanish-American. Miss Baker was the oldest lodger in the flat, and Maria was a fixture there as maid of all work when she had come. There was a legend to the effect that Marias people had been at one time immensely wealthy in Central America.
Maria turned again to her work. Trina and Marcus watched her curiously. There was a silence. The corundum burr in McTeagues engine hummed in a prolonged monotone. The canary bird chittered occasionally. The room was warm, and the breathing of the five people in the narrow space made the air close and thick. At long intervals an acrid odor of ink floated up from the branch post-office immediately below.
Maria Macapa finished her work and started to leave. As she passed near Marcus and his cousin she stopped, and drew a bunch of blue tickets furtively from her pocket. Buy a ticket in the lottery? she inquired, looking at the girl. Just a dollar.